As the systemically corporate-driven Bush/Cheney
US ship of state begins to founder in its self made sea of insatiable
greed, callousness, opportunism, and cynicism; the system nonetheless
continues mercilessly to grind the poorest people in US society and
around the world. If nothing else, the federal conviction of Scooter
Libby, and the announced high-level resignations of Karl Rove and Alberto
Gonzales, as the system grinds on, demonstrate that it is systemic,
fundamental structural change that is seriously needed, not mere name
or political party replacements. Name changes and/or the changing of
the guard mean absolutely nothing without systemic change.
A short while ago, there was a collective sigh of relief on the part of justice-loving
people world wide when the outrageously unjust death sentence upon Kenneth
Foster, Jr. that was based on the flawed and racist so-called "law of
parties " in Texas, was commuted. However, the very fact alone that Foster,
who neither planned nor committed the offense for which he came within hours
of being murdered by the state, was imprisoned and sentenced to death at all,
speaks volumes. In fact, Foster, practically speaking, was not even present
at the scene of the crime as he was approximately 80 feet away and unaware
of what was occurring. Nevertheless, under the "law of parties," this
Black man was charged, imprisoned, and sentenced to death. The Kenneth Foster,
Jr. matter, which despite the last minute commutation of the death sentence
to life in prison, is far from over. The Foster case is an incisive, accurate,
and chilling commentary on precisely how morally bankrupt and racist the entire
US judicial and prison systems continue to be in the 21st century. Indeed,
if a similar so-called "law of parties" were today applied to white America for
its crimes of slavery, genocide, and lynchings against Black and Red / Indigenous
peoples, the verdict against white America, collectively, would be one
of resounding guilt, whether or not each and every white American was present
at the specific scenes of these horrendous crimes.
Despite very important, limited successes thus far, the cases of the Jena 6
in Louisiana, Reverend Edward Pinkney (no relation) in Michigan, and the San
Francisco 8 in California, to name just a few, represent a continuing nationwide
pattern of systemically racist judicial and prosecutorial persecution and harassment
throughout America. It is no wonder that this nation incarcerates so many political
prisoners including Jamil Al-Amin (H. Rap Brown), Leonard Peltier, Mumia Abul-Jamal,
Marshall "Eddie" Conway, and a virtually endless list of lesser known
men and women throughout America. Nor is it any wonder that the US imprisons
more Black, Brown, and Red men, women, and children than any other nation on
earth. We beg your pardon America. Excuse us while we puke.
Furthermore, let us remember that the overwhelmingly Black, Red, and Brown
hurricane Katrina victims of US Government malfeasance continue to this very
day to suffer appalling displacement, and physical and emotional neglect and
murderous degradation. Moreover, racial, and economic justice, particularly
for people of color in America,
is well known to be a pathetically sick joke. Additionally, the overwhelming
majority of people in this nation of both genders and of all colors
and ages remain without decent or affordable health care. Home foreclosures
and homelessness in America continue
to increase at an alarming rate, especially as it impacts people of color and
children. America’s
tax-dodging, bloated corporations of the wealthy elite and its “economically
drafted” war machine of the poor, ravage people throughout the planet. Internationally,
many are viewing America with stark horror and contempt
as they see her for precisely what she is, as this nation wantonly depletes
and dishonors our mother earth. We beg your pardon America; excuse
us while we puke.
America will
never be changed unless and until the system which props it up is thoroughly
dismantled and rebuilt upon a foundation that is devoid of white racism and
all forms of social and economic exploitation. The unjust and deplorable scenario
that we are witnessing and experiencing today in America is not
new. This US system,
which at its core is built upon massive and horribly debilitating slavery,
genocide, and the thievery of a continent, will not change of its own accord.
Real, systemic change, if it is to be made a reality will ultimately have to
be led by, and emanate from, the people on the bottom, not the privileged at
or near the top.
Those with color and/or economic privilege are the primary beneficiaries of
this system, and far too few of these beneficiaries are willing to recognize,
much less address and struggle against, their own systemic color and/or economic
privilege. This also is not new. The scenario was very similar in the US prior to the 21st century, including during
the so-called Vietnam era.
While the US war against
the Vietnamese people in Vietnam was
raging, it was well known inside the US itself
that young men of color and of course economically poor young men were being
massively and disproportionately drafted into the US military.
The US Army would draft virtually any young man it could, as long as he could
breathe and walk; and most especially, if he were Black, Red, Brown, and/or
poor. It was during this period in the late 1960s that I became of military
draft age and, despite my personal and publicly known political stance against
that war, was sent a draft notice from the US Selective Service System, that
was personally hand-delivered to me at my place of employment by two suit & tie
wearing, gun toting US agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).
Thus, I decided to show up for induction where, to the shock and dismay of
the authorities, I openly and vociferously refused to be inducted, loudly
and clearly stating that I would "not participate in a racist,
imperialist war of aggression against the Vietnamese people or against any
people; and that the struggle for people of color and all justice-loving
people in the US is right here in America!" When some other young inductees
at that military induction facility, none of whom I knew, heard what I was
proclaiming and joined in with me, the senior US Army officer present had me
whisked away to a different part of the induction facility and after unsuccessfully
making assorted threats against me, mysteriously decided that I was "not
medically fit" for military service. In fact, thanks to my having met
and spoken with brother Malcolm X years earlier in 1962, and then some years
later having joined the Black Panther Party, I was in fact "not fit" in any
way for the murderous tasks that the white American power structure's military
had intended that I, like so many other young men, carry out against the people
of Vietnam and Cambodia as a part of an unjust, bloody, illegal American war
of aggression, in the name of democracy.
Yet, systemically, today in the 21st century, the same story continues. America has not
changed. As the US infrastructure
[i.e. schools, public libraries, highways, hospitals, etc.] increasingly erodes,
the more militarily belligerent this nation becomes. White America has become
even more hypocritical and even more barbaric at home and abroad in the 21st
century.
Instead of resisting service in America's huge military war machine, certain
primarily white American categories of persons, who were considered by the
US military to be supposedly "undesirable" in the 1960s, have insisted
in the latter part of the 20th century and the beginning years of this 21st
century on "the right" to, of all things, join and be a part of America's
bloody international military war machine. Today, these heretofore so-called "undesirable" categories
of people, including men and women, can do their bit as part of the US military
killing machine to torture, maim, murder, fire missiles, drop bombs, shoot
people, destroy shrines, burn homes, and decimate villages and cities in Iraq
and elsewhere in the world, all in the distorted name of "equality" and
democracy. Indeed, America has systemically
gone from bad to worse, and hypocrisy is its operative name. This murderous
systemic cycle must be recognized for what it is and broken.
America continues
to wage direct and indirect bloody wars of aggression against people of color
internally and externally around the world. It is presently waging a direct
war "of aggression" against the peoples of Iraq and the entire so-called
Middle East, including Palestine, and indirectly against peoples in Africa,
Bolivia, Venezuela, Cuba, Haiti, the Indigenous peoples of Mexico, and an endless
list of other places - all in the name of a "democracy," of which
the vast majority of Black and other people of color are deprived, right here
inside America. Democracy indeed. We beg your pardon America; excuse
us while we puke.
It should be remembered that during the period of America's
intensified war of aggression against the people of Vietnam,
and other parts of Asia, the ghettos, barrios, and reservations inside America were
increasingly turned into violent internal demilitarized zones. Even more so
today, with America's external
wars of aggression, the Black, Brown, and Red communities across America have
been economically and socially marginalized by this racist, capitalist system
and in large measure have become daily low-intensity killing fields. As a reader
of The Black Commentator poignantly wrote to me, "The war in Iraq is
on my block!" How true. This reality, however, is not a mere coincidence,
nor is it self-induced. It is an integral part of callously and deliberately
maintained, systemic, economic, social, and color oppression. It is a catalyst
for frustration and despair that, in turn, ensure and perpetuate destructive
habits and internal violence within our communities. I reiterate: this is no
coincidence. Hating our people and ourselves is not the answer. Respecting
and loving ourselves, based upon knowledge of ourselves and our true history,
coupled with consistently studying and understanding the systemic causes as
to why it is, for example, that "the war in Iraq is on [our] block[s]," is
an urgent and important component in proactively addressing what we must do
individually and collectively to reverse and eradicate this deliberately maintained
systemic insanity. This is an important part of our answers, for there
is no single answer. Wars, be they on our block or in Iraq, are nonetheless
a form of insanity and what we need to remember is that the war on our block
is, in actuality, an extension of the war in Iraq, or of any other military
'adventure' being waged by America.
The struggle for social, economic, racial, and political justice that some
mockingly refer to as being from "back in the day" in fact continues
today. This previous struggle is inextricably linked to the ongoing struggle
for systemic change by Black people in the 21st century. We must never forget
that the racist American genocide of Red / Indigenous peoples, the demonization
of them and concomitant thievery of their lands is precisely that which far
too many in white America today, regardless of their espoused ideologies, have
clearly demonstrated their support, contrary to the desires of the vast majority
of people of color in this nation and on this planet. We politically-conscious
Black people and other people of color must never allow white America to
succeed in culturally, physically, and politically annihilating us. It is imperative
always to remember who the original occupants of this land, now called America,
were when white slavers tore our noble ancestors, men, women, and children
away from mother Africa and brought them in bloody chains, while enduring unspeakable
horrors and degradation, to this stolen so-called "land of the free." Moreover,
we Black, Red, and Brown peoples must seriously find and build common ground
with one another, not only because it's the right thing to do, but because
our very collective survival is at stake. We Black Americans are bound together
in blood and history with our Red and Brown brothers and sisters, despite consistent
efforts by the US media and "educational" institutions
to have us believe otherwise. We must not fall prey to the dangerous divide-and-conquer
tactics of those who would see us politically and economically weak, and ultimately,
culturally and/or physically annihilated. It's all about effective, collective
struggle on every conceivable level, for justice and systemic change.
It is the 21st century and white racism in America is
even deadlier and more insidious than ever before. It is in this vein that
certain privileged whites in America apparently see it as their appointed right
to publicly and viciously attack progressive elected Black spokespersons. Malcolm
X warned of this very kind of divide, conquer, and control tactic on the part
of whites when referring to his own position vis-a-vis an earlier US Congress
member Adam Clayton Powell, who like Congress member John Conyers, was detested
and/or publicly disrespected by many in white America.
While addressing the second rally of the Organization of Afro-American Unity
(OAAU) brother Malcolm X stated, regarding Adam Clayton Powell, "I would
never criticize him for the joy of white folks. They just go crazy when they
hear you knock at Adam. If I thought he was wrong I wouldn't say so, I wouldn't
give them that pleasure. In fact I'd go for him as long as they don't go
for him." I shall always remember, when I met brother Malcolm X some years
earlier, that he stressed the need for unity amongst progressive Black
people and the necessity of resolving our differences whenever possible "in
the closet," not in public. Many, if not most, privileged whites
in America couldn't care less about this need for Black unity because they
do not have or seriously share the interests of Black and other people of color
and are busily enjoying their own systemic color privilege that our disunity
assures them. Malcolm X, as a contemporary realist and a visionary, truly understood
the demonstratively divisive and treacherous nature of white racism in America,
and the unending actions by certain whites today (irrespective of their claimed
ideologies or supposed objectives) to disrespect, divide, and control Black
people, along with our Red and Brown brothers and sisters. We beg your pardon America;
excuse us while we puke.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, there are certainly some examples of
white Americans, albeit all too few, who have consistently attacked systemic
white privilege and racism in the name of both justice and indeed their own
humanity. Thus, in the book entitled, Saying No To Power [Introduction
by Howard Zinn] written by white political activist, former fellow at the postdoctoral
level of Stanford University's Hoover Institute, and veteran broadcast journalist
of over fifty years, William Mandel, this all-too-rare side of white American
humanity and persistence in struggle is clearly delineated for all to see.
In so doing, this book also makes specific reference to various Black political
activists, including former "Black Panthers" Fred Hampton, George
Jackson, Mumia Abu-Jamal, and myself (Larry Pinkney), in the context of the
past and ongoing political struggle for justice. Moreover, as Howard Zinn wrote
regarding William ("Bill") Mandel, "His life story is
not only dramatic, but instructive and inspiring." In an even more detailed
statement, Robert L. Allen, senior editor of The Black Scholar, and
author of Black Awakening in Capitalist America wrote, "Bill Mandel
is well-known for his courageous defiance of HUAC [the House Un-American Activities
Committee] witch-hunters, but his autobiography also reveals his decades-long
commitment to anti-racist struggles such as his defense of Angelo Herndon,
Paul Robeson, the Martinsville Seven, Dr. W.E.B. DuBois and black political
prisoners including Mumia Abu-Jamal." In short, William M. Mandel, as
a time-tested and for-real White person is of that rare and sorely missed breed
in America, of seriously committed whites, as shown by his repeated and unflinching
part in the continuing struggle as 'the people's warrior' that he is. For well
over 70 years he has personally and repeatedly shown that even politically the
adage, "The proof of the pudding is in its taste;" is accurate. He
consistently has demonstrated that it is actions that are truly supreme,
not dribbling, intellectual, white liberal bibble-babble. For this, Bill Mandel
is to be saluted, honored, and respected, but most of all and most importantly,
emulated. We Black and other people of color do not begrudge him his well-earned
place in this struggle.
So yes, there have been and continue to be some few white Americans who are
seriously and actively committed to structurally changing the system and ditching
their systemic white privilege, both in the name of justice and their own humanity,
but be very clear about this: they are few and far between.
Our Brown brothers and sisters are also busy intensely organizing and carrying
on the struggle for justice and dignity as has been consistently demonstrated
by the hard work being carried out by the autonomous chapter of the Watsonville
Brown Berets, Watsonville, California. Moreover, the specific 'Black
and Brown Unity' activities on the part of the Brown Berets is awesome, inspirational,
and increasingly effective. They are demonstrating what some may have doubted:
that the perceived viable unity between our peoples, based upon mutual respect
and a clear historical and political understanding, can, in fact, be
made into reality. In this matter too, the struggle continues, as there will
assuredly be those who will attempt to thwart unity between Black, Red, and
Brown peoples. We must not allow these unity efforts to be thwarted.
Let none of us speculate about the depth of love we must have for our fellow
humans, irrespective of color; and as such, the incredibly deep love we must
possess and show for our own brothers and sisters of color. We must
not doubt for even a second the legitimateness, rightness, and necessity of
loving ourselves and our own Black, Red, and Brown peoples, as we persist in
political, social and economic struggle.
People's struggles are, by their very nature, long, protracted and often dangerous
affairs, which can last from decades to centuries. It is no simple task to
struggle for systemic change, especially when there are those who have done
and will continue to do all within their means to retain their color and/or
economic systemic privilege. As brother Martin Luther King, Jr., wrote, "Lamentably
it is an historical fact that privileged groups seldom give up their privileges
voluntarily." The renowned physicist Albert Einstein, was even more blunt
when, some years earlier, he declared at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania,
that, "Racism is a disease of white people." This remains the case,
and despite the failure of white America, including, unfortunately,
much of the so-called white left, to address its own racism, color privilege,
and the accompanying ongoing systemic racial and economic disparities perpetrated
upon Black people and other people of color; we must not despair, or cease
- even for a second - in our struggle. As the late Prime Minister Maurice Bishop
of Grenada, (who was assassinated
under the auspices of the US during the Ronald Reagan regime
but whose revolutionary spirit lives on) repeatedly said, "Forward Ever.
Backwards Never!" This struggle continues and intensifies today. Denmark
Vesey, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Jr., Fannie Lou Hamer, Rosa Parks, and
so very, very many others before and after them did not struggle in vain, nor
do we.
In fact, we don't beg your pardon America, and we most assuredly do not ask
to be excused by you as we struggle to keep it real. It is white America that
must ultimately beg the pardon of and atone to, the entire world that it has
and continues to ravage, in the name of this American hypocrisy so erroneously
referred to as democracy.
We conscious Black people know that the active spirits and histories of Malcolm & Martin,
Fannie & Rosa, Geronimo & Crazy Horse, Sandino & Zapata, Che & Tanya,
John Brown, and so many other freedom fighters, are ONE. Do what it may, racist
white America will not succeed in
crushing & harnessing these spirits or in relegating to oblivion our collective
true histories. For these histories belong to the people anywhere and everywhere
on this planet who demand and insist upon justice. There is no higher calling
than the continuing struggle to 'keep it real.'
We must remain steadfast, absolutely refusing to allow our hopes and yearnings
for justice and real social, economic, and political equality and freedom
to be forever kept from us. Never! The "dream" as Langston Hughes
might say, may have been temporarily "deferred," but it grows stronger
every day and it will never be destroyed. It must, and it will be, brought
to fruition. There is no acceptable alternative.
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.
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