Rep. Cynthia McKinney (D-GA) delivered the
following speech to the American Business Women's Association in Atlanta,
Georgia, April 30, 2005. Business Ladies and Gentlemen:
Congratulations for 33 years of excellence.
I am very happy to be here this evening with the Golden Dome Chapter
of the American Business Women's Association.
It is true that there is no "ship" like friendship.
First of all, I have to give my own personal testimony about how the
women of the American Business Women's Association are there for other
women and how, in particular, they were there for me.
After the 2002 election, I was in a quandary. I didn't know
whether or not I would complete the chapter in the book that had just
been written for me – or if I would take out my pen and write my own
book.
It was the women of the Hidden Hills Chapter of the American Business
Women's Association who gave me the paper and the pens and told me
to go and write my own book – step out on faith – that what happened
in 2002 was an aberration, part of the tough territory that comes
with speaking truth to power.
Specifically, I'm talking about Richie Morris, Barbara Campbell, and
Teresa Williams.
I took their pens and I took their paper and together we wrote our
own book and we continue to write that book.
However, I'm here to tell you tonight that for too long in our history,
others have had the luxury and the privilege of writing our story for
us. We have been timid and unsure of what we want
in a fast-paced, sometimes dangerous world. And sadly, as too
many squirrels have discovered, "He who hesitates, ends up as
roadkill."
In the political world, our hesitation about flexing our muscle and
standing firm for our Constitutional rights has made us political roadkill.
How else can you describe Republican audacity to roll back the voting
laws in our State to almost pre-Voting Rights Act times.
Georgia, whose leaders' words used to drip with interposition and
nullification at the time that Dr. King led millions in marches for
our rights, now has one of the most – if not the most – restrictive
voter ID bills in the country.
Georgia, whose electorate is fully 30% black, has a history of hatred
that is well chronicled in the annals of Supreme Court voting decisions.
Georgia, where crossover voting allows white Democrats and white Republicans
to come together to oust anyone not to their liking despite the overwhelming
presence of black Democrats in the Democratic primary.
Georgia, so sweet and clear as moonlight in the pines.
Leadership in a changing time. That's your theme tonight.
But tell me. From this just-passed Legislative Session, and everything
that you've witnessed in your lifetimes, tell me – what has changed?
Our story in this country has been one of struggle, optimism, faith,
belief, in the system, in the Constitution, belief in what the leaders
of this country have told us.
Our history in this country has been one of triumph and travail. And
through it all, we've had inspiring leadership and we've had not-so-inspiring
leadership.
We've had perfect victories and imperfect losses.
But what is so problematic today is that our imperfect losses are
about to wipe out the gains of our perfect victories.
Let me explain.
We have been told that civil rights is passé. The Atlanta
Journal and Constitution's big line on me was that I was a civil rightser. They
said that I was an agitator and that we no longer need agitators. That
my role had passed our community by and that it was time that the community
by-pass me.
There were some people who might have been persuaded by that message
especially when combined with my questioning of what the Bush
Administration knew in advance about the events of September 11th.
I know folks were saying, "What has Cynthia been drinking now? She's
up there drinking that DC water. No telling what's in it."
And here we are 4 years later and even Bush, himself, has admitted
to knowledge of foreign warnings that were coming in to the Administration.
But you combine a responsible question being asked by a black female
southern Member of Congress and you get the kind of vituperation that
we all experienced just a few short years ago.
However, what I went
through is nothing new. Strong black southern leadership, both male
and female, has had to withstand so much
stormy weather.
And why?
Because the main agenda of those who hold power is to not relinquish
it under any means except by force. And then to try to win back
that which they've been forced to concede.
For example, what about black leaders and what about our history?
Where are our leaders? Who are our leaders?
After the Civil War, blacks elected blacks to the highest offices
in our land. The United States Congress passed the Civil Rights
Act of 1866 to give African Americans the rights and privileges of
full citizenship. The Freedmen's Bureau was set up to help blacks
just out of slavery: from 1865 to 1872 it set up more than 100
hospitals, resettled more than 30,000 people, founded over 4,300 schools
including what are today Fisk University, Hampton Institute, Howard
University, and Clark Atlanta University.
In 1866, Congress proposed the 14th Amendment to the Constitution
which gave citizenship to blacks and guaranteed that all federal and
state laws would apply equally to blacks and whites. In addition,
it barred Confederacy office holders from ever holding high political
office again. In 1868, when the 14th Amendment had been ratified
by the requisite number of states to make it the law of the land, Georgia
had a peculiar reaction: it expelled 30 odd blacks who had been
elected to the Georgia Legislature because of their color. The
statue on the grounds of the Georgia State Capitol tells the story
of those who were expelled because of color. In 1870, the 15th
Amendment was ratified making it illegal to deny or abridge the right
to vote due to race, color, or previous condition of servitude.
So by any standard, 200 years after we landed in this country on slave
ships, black folks could have said that they had reached the promised
land. That struggle, war, and more struggle had paid off and
that we didn't need any more rights because they all had been equally
guaranteed to all without regard to race.
But we know that just wasn't true. Despite the elevation of
certain blacks, and some "making it" into the black middle
class; and others even being able to "pass" for white and
escape the indignity of being black in America – any leader who suggested
that the struggle was over would have been laughed out of the community. In
fact, the community picked someone who could pass for white, Homer
Plessy – 7-8ths white and only 1-8th black – only Louisiana would count
it that closely. Well, Homer Plessy was the test case for the segregated
rail cars. And
it was the Plessy vs. Ferguson case, decided by the Supreme Court in
1892, that made apartheid the law of the land in America.
The white backlash to black advancement had been swift. Black
Codes swept across the South and in the face of all that land of opportunity
was the stark reality of white resistance. Two hundred years
of progress gone with the stroke of a pen.
And resistance flourished until 1954 when the Supreme Court ruled
American-styled apartheid – what we call segregation – unconstitutional.
The pace of the resistance quickened, but so too did our resolve to
secure what was ours; that is – first class citizenship of this country.
With stiff backs unbent so no man could ride them, our agitators and
civil rightsers shook America's trees of opportunity and brought home
an impressive basket of fruit: the Civil Rights Act, the Voting
Rights Act, and the Fair Housing Act. The bounty of America
was its biggest when we stood the firmest.
But now that the fruit of our forefathers has been realized in our
very successes, we are plagued with the idea that out of that success,
America has changed. Ladies and Gentlemen of the American Business
Women's Association, I would say to you that America has not yet changed – enough.
Otherwise, the statistics would not be as they are. In fact,
on some indices, racial disparities are worse today than they were
at the time of the murder of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. We don't
have to wonder why despite the election of over 4,000 blacks to office – making
public policy – that Martin Luther King, Jr. Drive in almost any given
city is exemplary of the very disparities that the movement sought
to eliminate.
The advancement of a few at the expense of the many has not been heralded
in the past and should not be so today.
The sad fact of the matter is that increasingly those who rise now
are the strangest, most contorted fruit of all of the sacrifices of
my parents. Colin Powell, Condoleezza Rice, Clarence Thomas,
Ward Connerly, and the host of other "success stories" paraded
before us are not the kind of leaders that my father agitated for.
They
are not the measures of our real success. We are being tricked
from within.
The Black Commentator writes eloquently about the incision deep into
the Congressional Black Caucus of a core corporate far right group
who represent interests other than the traditional black consensus
on civil rights and pocketbook issues for black Americans. The
Black Commentator even talks about the dissolution of the Congressional
Black Caucus as we know it.
Leadership is important. Authentic leadership is even more important
for a community that is under siege as I believe black America is today. Today
we have the internet, cell phones, satellite TV, and car wheels that
go backward. But Plus ca change, plus c'est la meme chose. The
more things change the more they remain the same.
We are witnessing a rapid consolidation of power unlike that witnessed
before. In 8 years of Bush, and no resistance from us, the task
will be complete. We shouldn't be fooled into thinking that there
is an easy way out of this mess. It's not easy and it's a big
mess. From the poverty of our children, the fact that they're
not graduating from high school, that our young men are in prisons
making items like graduation gowns (ironic, since so many of the inmates
haven't graduated), baseball caps for Little League, electronic boards
for high-profit corporations wanting to add that Made in America tag
to the items we all buy. Add to that the fact that now we also
have leaders who aren't really our leaders at all. And it's up
to us to decipher who is and who isn't our friend.
These are indeed perilous times. And at the same time, what
we need to advance our country forward – while the time is critical – the
answer ain't rocket science.
We know what is needed.
We did it when we organized to get folks elected after the civil war
to the highest levels of government.
We did it when we organized to get those landmark pieces of legislation
passed in the mid 1960s.
We are not doing it now and that's why we have not responded to the
rollbacks to the Voting Rights Act and to Bakke, Croson, Adarand, Shaw
v. Reno, and Getz.
We've lost so much ground and that loss can be directly attributable
to our lack of vision, leadership, and our ambivalence toward applying
pressure to keep the forward motion.
I'm proud to stand here as your Congresswoman. And to stand
with the other Congresswomen like Maxine Waters and Barbara Lee who
aren't afraid to stand. I thank you for giving me the honor of
serving once again with them. And it is fitting that we women
stand with other like-minded women who are unafraid to stand for all
women, men, and children in our country.
But America is in deep trouble and as a country and as a community
we need strong leadership willing to stand up and that is unafraid
to challenge what's wrong.
I guess what I'm trying to say is that for some of us, maybe personal
circumstances have improved. But when as a community, our children
and our futures are still on the front lines, too many things just
haven't changed for us to rest on our laurels. We cannot afford
to "believe the hype." So don't. Don't believe
the hype.
Congratulations to the awardees.
Thank you so much for inviting me to share with you tonight and I
look forward to serving you tomorrow.
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