Recently, I found myself listening in on a
group of nine young Black high school kids who had been asked to comment
on Black history and the present state of Black America as they see it.
To my glee, most of the youth made knowledgeable and consistent historical reference
to Black men and women, ranging from Mary McCleod Bethune and Fannie Lou Haimer,
to Martin Luther King, Jr., and Malcolm X. Two kids even referenced, with obvious
pride, the Black Panther Party. I was ecstatic.
However, the second part of their conversation, which dealt with the state of
Black America today, was chilling and frankly a little disconcerting.
When they were asked if today, Black people in America had finally gained full
equality in US society, almost half of them replied, albeit somewhat hesitantly,
that things are "probably okay now", since as one of the young people
put it: "After-all it's not the sixties anymore."
It was all I could do to keep my mouth shut. Fortunately, the other five young
people replied in their own Black and hip high school manner that: "No way
are Black people treated equal in America!" They then proceeded to give
examples in support of their position.
The fact is that it is the 21st century and it really "isn't the sixties
anymore." Unfortunately, it's far, far worse for the vast majority of Black
Americans and most especially our youth, than it was in the sixties. Prisons
in the US are bustling with poor, angry, and disenfranchised Black, Brown, and
Red youth. Most Black and other people of color are without any meaningful health
care coverage. The so-called judicial / justice system - or more appropriately
the 'just us' system - is a disgustingly sick joke, where only Scooter
Libby and the like commit felonies and do not one day of jail time. While the
US military is busy selling deadly lies of false hope to Black youth, our seniors
- women and men - are discarded as so much used fodder by this racist, corporate,
capitalist system. No indeed, "it's not the sixties anymore;" it's
far, far worse.
What needs to be remembered about the sixties is not only what little we accomplished,
albeit with enormous sacrifice, but how very much we didn't. The ultimate sacrifices
made by so many dedicated activists in organizations including the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference (SCLC), the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC),
the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), the Black Panther Party (BPP), the Republic
of New Africa (RNA), and the Revolutionary Action Movement (RAM), etc., must
never be forgotten. However, if the sixties taught us anything it is that the
struggle of Black America is a protracted one that must be waged on many fronts.
It is this lesson that we must pass on to our young people.
There is absolutely no doubt that Black, Red, and Brown peoples and even some
seriously committed Whites can substantively, substantially, and systemically
change the course of America's bloody and hypocritical direction in the 21st
century. But this will not be easy.
No, it's not the sixties anymore. It's the 21st century, with challenges
that match and surpass those of the sixties. Our calling in Black America,
in this, the 21st century, is to remain actively determined to deal with
political, economic, and social issues at their root; something
which was not completed in the sixties. Let's keep it real by struggling
for root changes, not merely chopping at the branch. It's not the sixties
anymore and thank goodness it's not. The future beckons and the struggle
continues.
BlackCommentator.com Columnist
Larry Pinkney is a veteran of the Black Panther Party, the former
Minister of Interior of the Republic of New Africa, a former political
prisoner and the only American to have successfully self-authored
his civil/political rights case to the United Nations under the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Click
here to contact Mr. Pinkney. |