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In the past month, we've received many comments from BC Readers,
comments that are much too good to let molder away at the bottom
of our electronic Inbox!
Regarding Between The Lines: For
A True Fresh Start - Remove The Conviction Box, by Anthony
Asadullah Samad, BC Columnist in Issue #208:
I currently reside in Austin, TX. In Dec
2000 I was convicted of Class A Misdemeanor- Simple Assault
(30 days jail time). Since
then, I've completed college with a Bachelors of Science in Telecommunications
(2001), Due to background checks with now what seems to be about
80% of employers these days, I'm unable to find a job. I've been
lied to, discriminated against, terminated from employment without
cause while on the job. Since the conviction of 1999, I haven't
run into any issue with law enforcement; here it is 2007 and
I'm continuing to be unsuccessful. The past 7 years have been
almost impossible, just to even survive. I was wondering if there
is anything that I can do or somewhere I could go to help me
to help myself & family. -KR
This, from an Obama supporter, in response to the commentary of
Dr. L. Jean Daniels, PhD, Guest Commentator, Can
Obama Become the Person Some of Us Envision? in Issue #211:
Look Black Commentator, don't bash Brother Obama about passionate
or unpassionate speeches and where he stands on certain national
security issues such as the patriot act!
The man has a history in our community when it comes to fighting
draconian laws that violate the rights of Black citizens. So
that should give you some indication as to where he stands on
the patriot act. It is better for him to remain silent for now
on certain issues because of (white xenophobia). Remember white
folks are scared! So when a powerful, well educated Black phenomenal
wonder like Barack Obama speaks about issues of national security,
he has to be careful. In his case it's wise to be evasive on
some issues. We must remember that as a Black man he cannot afford
the presence of a Black bold and brazen militant appearance and
dare I say it, be seen with too many high profile Black civil
rights figures. Why? Because this will cost him that mainstream
democratic white, latino, asian, vote base that you speak of.
For once, there must be a silent alliance amongst Black leadership
figures and our people. We must use the stealth and cleverness
of Nat Turner, have the intellectual wisdom of Frederick Douglass,
and the sophisticated clandestine savvy of our Mother Harriet
Tubman. Anything less is failure. We as a people can not afford
to let Uncle Tomism or the Willie Lynch syndrome, stand in our
way, Black self hatred advocates, like Stanley Crouch, posing
questions like is Obama black enough? must be silenced! Men like
this pose a danger to our communities' survival.
In addition remember that the issue of Black reparations can
and will be presented to the main stream public and a possible
compensation settlement could be reached along with a formal
presidential apology for the enslavement of our ancestors. I
warn you we must do this for our own survival as a people. Black
Americans are fooling themselves if they think that Hillary Clinton
or any other white candidate will do this.
Vote Obama if you love your Black Mamma! -KJ
Next, reaction and response to Unapologetically Young, Black and
Female... To
Live and Drive in L.A., by Jasmyne A. Cannick, BC Columnist
in Issue #211:
Unfortunately, I see many disturbing and incredible things on
a daily basis, living in the Bronx, NY. The level of ignorance
amongst many of our people is quite staggering.
I agree wholeheartedly with your statement that not everyone
is socially, emotionally or mentally qualified to be parents.
From eleven year olds on the streets at 2:00 a.m. to small children
playing on subway platforms and near bus stops, I see many instances
of child neglect that makes me shake my head to myself.
As soon as we label the parents of children
like this as "ignorant",
people get deeply offended and always say "lighten up, it's
not that bad", but it is that bad and getting progressively
worse by the day.
It's quite a quandary to be in:
1) If I move to a "better community" where
I don't have to interact with ignorant adults and their equally
ignorant
children, how will things ever get better, for them or the communities?
2) If I remain in the Bronx, I will most
likely lose my mind one of these days, and it is true that
we can't "save the
world".
I hope things turn around soon for our people, but somehow,
I doubt it. -CJH
Regarding A
Funny Phenomenon Among White Liberals and Progressives by
Dr. L. Jean Daniels, PhD, Guest Commentator in Issue #212:
I just read your article in the current issue of BlackCommentator.com
and as a white liberal or progressive I agree with you 117 percent.
I think this is something the "reformer" Left
will never get past. They always just re-create the same forms
as
the right, ones that don't threaten that privilege and prosperity.
They want to reform the system...which means, they don't want
to overthrow the system. They want to keep the system.
But look at the masthead of The Nation. The supreme being at
the top, away from everything else, then everyone else ordered
from most to least important. The janitors don't even make the
list.
The Nation or anything like it can't teach
me anything about democracy. They know nothing of democracy.
Those of the Left
are always creating these organizations and web sites and putting
themselves at the top rung. "Founder and Big Cheese." They
confuse activism with resume building. Activism can't be about
the self.
Anyway, I have been thinking about race in
a certain way and have a question for you about identity and
race. I think that
when we caucasians call ourselves "white", we are defining
ourselves in opposition to "Black" people. If so, then
racism would be at the core of our identity, somewhere near where
it gets formed. The solution would entail unraveling ourselves
almost all the way back to where identity is formed, where race
is introduced, where "difference" is recognized. (If
that's possible, assuming I'm right about my theory.)
The next generation might have it easier if we changed those
references. I can't tell anyone else how to define themselves,
but I can call myself something more appropriate (or accurate),
such as caucasian or European, or German.
Interesting point: when I first wrote the
previous sentence, I added, after the word "German," the clause; "....which
is my background." I used "background" instead
of race or ethnicity because it was difficult for me to even
consider that I have race or ethnicity, since I am "the
norm." It's others who have race and ethnicity.
By the way, I sometimes recognize how and when my subconscious
influences and even directs my decisions, but not always. That
little undetected influence, however, is probably what causes
those Liberals to keep making those decisions that keep that
privilege intact. -FWC
Thank you for your article about white liberals/progressives
and racism. As a white male I realize that by virtue of gender
and color I am among the most privileged in this society, not
because of who I am but because of what I am. This could only
be possible by the application over centuries of institutionalized
racism and oppression. Therefore I have always felt that I had
an obligation to fight against both racism and oppression.
This cannot be done from above by white liberals and progressives
for they have never been the victim of institutionalized racism
and so could never understand what it is like to be an African
American in this country today. Yes they may have the best intentions
and can quote statistics and the historical record but neither
of these alone qualifies them for leadership. African Americans
must determine the character of and lead the struggle and whites
must be able to understand and support this struggle because
it is far from over.
Hurricane Katrina and the shooting of Sean Bell laid bare for
all to see that despite voting rights, desegregation and affirmative
action, African Americans still suffer from racial disenfranchisement.
Only by accepting this reality and their place in it can whites
be effective in helping to bring about change. Not by avoiding
but by confronting the uncomfortable truth. -SC
Very good piece in BC. Coming on the anniversary of Dr. King's
birth, and this evening my local group (the Sierra Club here
in Portland) cosponsored a panel of New Orleans and Portland
people on what has been happening in N.O., reading your article
reminds me yet again that yes, it really is happening NOW. New
Orleans has once again become the staging point for the dispersal
of a community -- that painfully assembled itself from the fragments
of post-Civil War America, the legacy of Congo Square and the
disparate pieces of the Caribbean Diaspora. Being a white American
myself, I continue to observe the denial of many that this could
be happening.
Darryl Wellington puts this in the context
of the "right
of return" in his excellent article last
year in Dissent: And I recall once again that Dr. King said that
peace is not the absence of conflict but instead the presence
of justice. -FH
Carl Bloice's Left Margin commentary, More
Blood for Oil in Issue #212, elicited this comment:
Terrific piece on the Black Commentator Web
site. It seems that “insurgent” has
become frequently misused. One definition of insurgent: a person
who revolts against civil authority or an established government.
When the US or other country goes into a
foreign land and overthrows the government, any citizen of
the occupied country who resists
this action is labeled an “insurgent”. This is an
interesting play on words. -PB
Many readers wrote to tell us their thoughts on Dr. Martin Luther
King's speech, Beyond
Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence, Riverside Church, New York
City, 4 April 1967, reprinted in Issue #212. Can't you just hear
his voice?:
Once again, your site has given me an enlightened look at war.
I'm always glad to click into The Black Commentator, because
there are views and perspectives I can't get anywhere else. I
appreciated particularly the Dr. Martin Luther King speech on
the Vietnam war. I was amazed to find that we had supported with
money and arms the French fight against Vietnamese independence.
Even my husband, a Vietnam Vet, didn't know that.
I hope that our country will turn back to the philosophy of
Dr. King and quickly retire from the war-mongering that has led
us into Iraq, Somalia, and Afghanistan. -JM
Thank you so much for putting this piece
of artwork on the web [29's drawing of Dr. King]. I'm grateful that artists
are willing to share their passion with the rest of the world. I
will be using this piece on an agenda for a Service Unit Meeting
for Girl Scouts. -CM
Regarding Bill Fletcher's Cover Story in Issue #212, Reconsidering "Black
Politics":
Regarding the piece on Black politics: its
appropriate that this essay appeared during the week of MLK's
birthday/holiday.
In that regard it is instructive to consider MLK's politics when
we try to discern just what "Black politics" really
means. As a starting point, let us consider the contextual parallels
of MLK's ascending politicization in the late 60s to current
conditions. Dr. King called out the connection of the U.S. imperialist/racist
incursion in Vietnam with the ongoing exploitation of Black and
other poor Americans. Now consider the striking parallel of the
Iraq tragedy and the growing economic inequalities in the U.S.
which of course disproportionately affect people of color - post-Katrina
New Orleans is just the most glaring example. Like Dr. King,
we must structure Black political thought around a critique of
a system that invades, oppresses, enslaves, & exploits to
further its interests. Assimilation into that system is not an
[integral part of] Black politics at all, in fact it is the antithesis
of the tradition of Black political thought from Nat Turner to
Frederick Douglass to W.E.B. DuBois to Dr. King to the Black
Panthers to Cornel West. Can we honestly say that Condaleezza
Rice or Barack Obama or Colin Powell embrace anything close to "Black
politics"? Here in Ohio it was none other than former secretary
of state and republican gubernatorial candidate Kenneth Blackwell
who systematically disenfranchised thousands of African American
voters to help G. Bush steal the 2004 election. He's another
Black politician, but is he even close to subscribing to "Black
politics"? Genuine Black political thought is that which
is grounded in the rich historical context of the Black struggle
for liberation. Anything short of that is a capitulation to the
racist/classist/sexist domination system. -PEF
I wanted to thank you your penetrating article
on the importance of Reconsidering "Black Politics".
The fact is - a fact that unfortunately most Americans (Black,
white, Latino
et. al.) don't appreciate, is that when Black folks - back values,
back priorities, and back leadership catch a cold, the country
gets really sick.
Today we really are a sick country which
points to serious confusion (and worse) within the Black body
politic. Indeed,
we've only really been well from about after the death of MLK
to 1980 when Ronald Reagan uncorked the old stupid white genie
that has run amuck domestically since 2000 and is now running
amuck around the world. That means we were only "good" for
a very short period of time and are back to our old ways.
My point is that not only are you right
in describing the phenomenon of a ..."politics that [is] at the service of Black people
[worshiping] at the alter of the Republican idols of privatization,
aggressive war, tax cuts for the rich, and racist oppression..." -
but that unless and until this issue is turned right side up
- the country is in danger of permanently flushing itself down
the toilet of history. -AJR
and Bill's response:
Thanks so much for your note. I have been pleased with
the responses that I have received. I agree with your basic
thesis.
The challenge that faces us is actually
moving from reconsidering Black politics to reconstructing
it in ways that will be quite
different than we experienced in the past. This begins
with the immortal notion of "Who are your enemies? Who
are your friends?" -Bill Fletcher
from another BC reader, on the
same Cover Story:
Don't you think that the ascension of five African-Americans
as House committee chairs, as well as the defeat of Steele,
Swann, and the Rep candidate in Ohio whose name I forget, will
settle the issue of which party represents Blacks, at least
for awhile?
Anyway, this is a very old issue. In the
19th century, the Democrats and even the segregationists
could always find some
Black man to front for them, just as the Republicans could
find an Irishman or Democrats a northern Protestant clergyman.
Your class angle is interesting, but as, e.g., Michael Dawson's "Behind
the Mule" shows, few A-A's even now feel secure enough
to separate by class in politics. -JMK
I read with keen interest your expose on the on-going conflict
within the Black Community in America, in relation to the politics
surrounding the whole evolution of Black renaissance as it
were. While I am no expert myself in American politics, there
is a striking similarity between the phenomenon you highlight
and the struggles countries like Zimbabwe are facing today,
and here is my rationale:
Right wing politics has successfully repositioned to try
and look 'in touch ' with the needs of Blacks of Africa, for
example - particularly Zimbabwe. In so doing the so-called
growing middle class in this country has been psychologically
trapped into thinking they can be the torch-bearers for 'democracy'
and other similar ideologically skewed views of the right.
In the process, funds have been channeled to the extent of
funding 'opposition parties' whose sole raison detre would
appear to be the exacerbating of the gulf between the Black
mass and the selected 'few' middle-class Blacks who ferment
trouble for the cause of the right wing agenda.
The results are are all there for the world to see - economic
embargos on the poor Zimbabwe, sustained demonization of R.G.
Mugabe, and other forms of repression that are intended to
create strife in this country so that those God 'ordained'
to permanently rule over us can reinstate their vision with
little or no questions from the mass. Meanwhile the mass are
misled into thinking that there is Black advancement going
on through a handful of ineffectual commercial positions that
do not translate into any meaningful power and authority for
decision-making.
A related development that points to this phenomenon is the
recent directorship appointments made by institutions like
Barclays and others - where Black participation is virtually
non-evident as if to suggest we do not have either the qualities
or the acumen to perform at the pinnacles of these organizations.
And yet if anybody dared look closely at these companies they
would realize that they (companies) are awash with Black talent.
I could go on and on but I do not want to bore you.
The bottom line here is there are are those among us who
think that the very ideals that our forebears set out to achieve
belong in history, and what matters is what they can get from
this repressive right wing regime that is at the helm of every
evil in this world now. From a Black person's viewpoint, our
struggle has only begun. More than ever we need to revisit
our own values and rally around them if we are not going to
defeat the purpose for which our predecessors of Black struggle
so tragically tasted demise. Their vision has to be carried
over with a view to furthering our fair share of economic power
and not be at the whims of skewed agendas that use us for cheap
vote-buying political maneuvers.-NB
On Jane Stillwater's Sidetracked piece, Section
8 Housing - An important issue for African-Americans in
Issue #212:
I'm a sociologist teaching race, gender,
and social movements at the University of New Orleans. I
woke up this morning before
dawn and thought "Today is the day, it's time to start
chronicling the heroic efforts of housing project residents
and grassroots organizations to resist HUD's latest decision
to demolish 4 housing projects in New Orleans." I've been
reading about HOPE VI in an effort to understand what is happening
to this already beaten up city, and sat at my desk most of
the day trying to start to pull it all together.
Then I received "The Black Commentator" post,
scrolled down to your article, and when I saw that you live
in Berkeley
(I grew up there and spent much of my life there) decided on
a whim to write you. I'm going to try to contextualize all
the recent federal nonsense and brutality about public housing
in the history of federal housing initiatives, but am in over
my head as I'm no public policy expert. There is just so much
incredible organizing happening on the ground here, and I don't
want it to get lost. So this message is just a hello, and a
thank you for writing about Section 8. I'm going to have to
look back over past issues and see if you've written other
columns on housing. -RL
Jasmyne Cannick's column, Unapologetically Young, Black and
Female... The
Nightmare on My Street, Issue #212, brought us these comments:
What are your suggestions for the situation? Like you, I'm
moving from my neighborhood to one nearby with a slightly higher
rent and in a predominately White area. My current apartment
is in a neighborhood that has some of the same problems you
cite. Prostitutes and drug dealers transact business openly
at a nearby corner. A crack-house is located down the street
from me. We can't stop the activities of the thugs, and the
local law-enforcement has been indifferent to the problem.
I seriously would like some thoughts on what can be done. -GH
I read your article in BC on your neighborhood dilemma. I
wanted to share my empathy and hope that I am able to offer
you some encouragement with my own words. I grew up in New
Orleans in a neighborhood that sounds all too familiar to yours.
I grew up with the crack house on my block and the white neighbors
who are regentrifying. I want to tell you to stay put and buy
a house in your neighborhood, but if you are afraid for your
safety then you must do what you feel is best to protect your
life. Self-preservation is the number one rule in the jungle
(not that a city boy like me would know what a jungle looks
like). Here is my advice to you. If I were in your situation,
I would buy a home wherever white people are regentrifying.
This is a sign that the real estate is low and the market is
rising. Buy low/sell high.
Now as far as the crack house is concerned...
I am not being sarcastic, but I would get to know my neighborhood
junkie.
I am not suggesting that you invite them over for dinner, but
rather make sure that they know you and they need to know that
you know them and are not afraid of them. In my neighborhood
for example, I would play football with their children being
sort of a big brother to their kids. My neighbor went as far
as buying their children coats for Christmas. It is more difficult
to hurt someone who has been good to you than it is a complete
stranger. But please keep something in mind. Our actions were
calculated. I wasn't playing football with the kids in a "Leave
it to Beaver" all is good with the world type manner.
I was very rough and ignorant sometimes with these kids so
that they would get the point, and when my neighbor gave his
presents it was made clear that his actions were not to be
taken for a weakness. Now, my neighbor and myself are both
men and because of this fact, we were probably able to convey
a sense of threat and retaliation that really wasn't there.
But here is the point: we knew their names, and so they chose
to rob people who didn't know their names. They chose to rob
the white lesbian couple next rather than the Black family
who they suspected of being "gansta", if you will.
Once when I was a cab driver, I met this woman who told me
that the neighborhood crackhead stole her air-conditioner.
I asked her what did she do, and she told me that she told
the neighborhood crack dealer. The neighborhood crack dealer
proceeded to whip the crackhead's ass and she got her air conditioner
back. Now I know sister, that you shouldn't have to go through
all of these extremes, but in the meantime in between time,
until you are able to get your little piece of Black paradise,
I hope that you will find my words to be sincere and encouraging.
But if you move, I wont be mad at you and I will certainly
understand. Good luck sister, stay strong and don't give up
on your Black brothers. There are a few us of still left who
haven't given up. -JA
Excellent article by Ms. Cannick in this week's Black Commentator.
I have two daughters and two grand-kids in these type neighborhoods.
I worry about their safety and security. Like Ms. Cannick,
I'm trying to assist my daughters into moving to more secure
regions.
It's a terrible tragedy to watch some Black communities disintegrate
into chaos and crime. -MS
Dr. Rose Brewer, PhD is currently at the World Social Forum,
2007 in Nairobi, Kenya. Her initial article, Is
Another World Possible for African Peoples? in Issue #213,
brought these thoughtful comments:
I read your recent article in the Black Commentator and found
it of interest - especially the question raised as to what
the meaning of this forum will do for the African continent
and its peoples. As a Black man in America I am interested
in the plight of my brothers and sisters on the continent as
well as here at home. -FMA
Yes, another world is possible for African people. I am advocating
an African World Summit to bring together African leaders from
all over the world to come up with a Strategic Economic Framework
for the economic development of the continent for the benefit
of the African people all over the world.
It is believed that African Americans control in excess of
$600 Billion dollar economy and if a part of that can be invested
in developing the African continent, it would turn Africa into
a major economic power of the 21st century. The biggest market
for African American cultural products is Africa and African
Americans must be encouraged to tap into that market place.
There is a new scramble for Africa and the Chinese and Indians
understand it. African Americans can not stand-by while these
other nations are positioning to reap the riches of the continent.
I have always believed in the biblical story of Joseph and
that prophesy has come to bear. African Americans have proven
themselves ready in acquiring wealth and wisdom and it is time
to focus on the continent. New advances in Information and
Communications Technology (ICT) give us the opportunity to
run and manage businesses in Africa without leaving the USA. -SB
My heart bleeds for Africa, a new revolution may be necessary
to unsit the forces of neoliberalism that seem set to further
consume the little that remains of Black African people - both
of those on the continent now and in the Diaspora. It is inconceivable
that those of us in the Diaspora still struggle to feed our
immediate families because one does not enjoy the same equal
opportunity as anyone else in Europe by reason of being Black
African, and yet our closets are running over with qualifications
that we were made to believe would usher in a new era of competitiveness
and opportunity. It is a shame to note that despite occasional
utterances of political correctness on the part of our former
colonial masters and their fellow right wing plunderers, the
conditions of the majority of Black Africans on the continent
[are such that they] have to endure hardship while their wealth
continues to find its way to lands so far away. It is patently
obscene to see the number of poor Black Nigerians losing their
lives trying to [eke out] a share of the only precious resource
they should rightfully claim a stake in without having to shed
a single drop of blood - oil!
The traditional cycle of aid to Africa has been an instrument
of expropriation of Africa. Those who dare question the right
wing agenda - like the Mugabes of this world, are demonized
to oblivion in a manner that seems to want to send a clear
message to would-be followers that 'hear no evil, see no evil'
in what the 'God-ordained' masters choose to do.
And I am saying, let this forum come up with practicable
ways by which Africa can start to be independent again on its
own terms. I am ready to be a useful member of mass action
that is aimed at reasserting Black Africans' rightful place
in contemporary sociopolitical economy -NB
Regarding
Roots of Latino/Black Anger: Longtime Prejudices, Not Economic
Rivalry, Fuel Tensions by Tanya K. Hernandez, Guest Commentator,
Issue #213:
I deeply appreciate Professor Hernandez'
article. As a diversity consulting practitioner, I have spent
the last 16 years sitting
in discussions about race. While I know from experience that
there is plenty of 'color ism' among Latinos, this article
provides solid documentation. I also found her article ( a
pdf file) on the internet "Latino Inter-Ethnic Discrimination
and the "Diversity Defense" which has all the citations
for the research data. I am very grateful that Black Commentator
has published this pivotal article. -MB
Please thank Prof. Hernandez for her fine and important article.
We are going to use it in several courses at the Institute
for Conflict Analysis and Resolution of George Mason University. -RER
Lastly, a British tourist sent us this:
I have read a couple of your articles in the above magazine
which are both very interesting and informative. As a British
tourist who is a fan of Blues, its related genres, together
with the some knowledge history of African Americans, I am
very concerned of the lingering of racial attitudes of which
are seen almost everywhere in the South.
Be aware that there are also many fair minded whites in the
UK who have a social consciousness who support the stance of
Black Americans, I for one on my last visit to Memphis signed
a petition to remove the statue of NBF [Confederate General
Nathan Bedford Forrest - ed] in Confederate Park,
and was shocked at the plight of those displaced (and still
are) from Katrina. -AC-C
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