January 24, 2008
- Issue 261 |
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A Liberation
Narrative - Not More Imperialism with a Black Face! Represent Our Resistance By Dr. Lenore J. Daniels, PhD BC Editorial Board |
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It’s criminal to ask someone to give up identity, their cultural heritage. It’s not right for anyone to be that - being whatever is necessary. Worse, it’s criminal for people to expect that others will accept the denigration of their own identity or cultural heritage. Yet, this pattern of behavior is increasingly becoming the normal. Black Americans are expected to acquiesce to success at all cost, profit, corporatization, greed, IMPERIALISM. So while the American public, at
once, awaited the new season of American Idol and worried about their
pocketbooks (who knows which first), Senators Barack Obama and Hillary
Clinton called on them to remember Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., even
while they couldn’t recall what, specifically, was important to remember
about King. The “greatest purveyor of violence” - that is what King
said of America - brought death and destruction to the Vietnamese abroad
and to the Black, poor and working class people at home. Black men “crippled
by our society” were sent “eight thousand miles away to guarantee liberties
in Southeast Asia which they had not found in southwest King recognized that there’s no good
way to relate to imperialism except to stand in opposition to it. Imperialism
is violence. It employs “Manichaean racism” in which the other is denied
“his or her human status” (Patrick Taylor). In the era of Pax Americana,
the face of American imperialism is white. The implementers and beneficiaries
of imperialism have been white Americans. The world has come to know
of white American might in places like White citizens, invested with racial, political, economic clout, nod with approval at concocted narratives of internal and external terrorism. Someone or something is always “coming to get” their “freedom” (RED ALERT!) while the Black communities endure police harassment and surveillance and more democratic nations are subject to pre-emptive wars. These citizens can’t face contemplating the criminality of imperialism - and worse, they refuse to consider the sacrificial measures needed to realize a true democracy. But what is the occupation of Isn’t it criminal to fund and arm
the undemocratic regimes of Pinochet, Battista, BeBe Doc and Papa Doc?
To kill duly elected Patrice Lumumba and to kidnap duly elected Aristide
isn’t a crime? The killing of Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse, and Denmark
Vesey aren't crimes? Passes and white only signs over there and ID cards
and white only signs here are not crimes? Embargoes against babies of
Millions upon millions of dead bodies, massacred, bombed, shot, tortured, rotting away in Black site prisons, drowned in flood waters, diseased by toxic waste, and contaminated water. Millions killed by the indifference of an American public concerned more with their own pocketbooks and receiving the latest news bulletin about Lindsey Lohan, Brittany Spears, and Nicole Ritchie on HD big screen televisions. So we don’t see the flag-draped coffins of young men and women who sacrificed for the imperialist ambitions of corporations that control the broadcast airwaves and the air itself?! The face of imperialism is white. Is this face about to change color? They educate Babamukuru and his offspring not to question the masters! Senators Barack Obama and Hillary
Clinton defecate on the terrain in which neither contributed sweat or
blood. They call on the spirit of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and place
his very name within the vile language of imperialism. They ignore King’s
people in Senator Clinton speaks of her thirty-five
years as the wife of power. She deserves to sit in the White House -
built by slave labor. She tells the world: King’s dreams have been “realized!”
Look at her career as a woman! Senator Obama’s reading of his own
ascendancy in King’s dream of justice and equality dangerously confuses
economic equality for Black Americans with the economic policies of
imperialism. Obama’s advisor, Joseph Stiglitz, prophesizes about a new
world if and when Before Obama and Clinton declare the concerns of King addressed, the issues of racial disparities solved, they’d have to come to grips with the “greatest purveyor of violence.” Both Obama and Clinton have shown that they are more than willing (it is a given!) to engage this imperialist (domestic and global) agenda of violence, and they expect the American public, particularly Blacks, Latino/as, working-class, and poor to ignore the implications of Black president’s or woman president’s commitment to corporate militarization of the globe. In the meantime, their friends in
corporate media, while they name the topic of discussion, limit if not
prohibit, conversation on domestic policies as they relate to the lack
of economic equality for Black Americans. Obama permits this game of
naming the topic and then restricting the dialogue every time he is
congratulated for being the Black man who “transcends race.” Romney
and Huckabee speak of consolidating business interest and the rights
of southern states to wave the confederate flag, and this not-so-covert
language of exclusion is normal for good old boys - born in good old
We can’t pretend that imperialism is not an indulgence in criminal behavior. One hundred and fifty years of moving forward and then thrown two steps back, moving forward and thrown back three steps…serving the interests of white Americans who have long feared sharing with Black Americans equal power. “We must come to see now that integration is not merely a romantic or aesthetic something where you merely add color to a still predominantly white power structure” (my emphasis) (The Other America). We’ve seen the suit-wearing, shoe-shopping
articulations of white-lite imperialists, Colin Powell and Condi Rice,
speaking like drones of the Will the face of IMPERIALISM - the face of American militarization - become Black? Black Americans have struggled against enslavement, exploitation, injustice, inequality, and imperialism. Black Americans have struggled to maintain a narrative of liberation against the inhumanity of imperialism. To offer change would be to recall and live toward realizing the goal of a liberating narrative. For a “liberating narrative grounds itself in the story of lived freedom, the story of individuals and groups pushing up from below…to reveal the ambiguity and multilayeredness of reality” (Taylor). It looks to “new and open-ended relationship to history and to humanity.” Is Obama’s narrative of “hope” in
keeping with Black America’s “liberating narrative?" How does his
rhetoric of hope measure up to Black America’s historical struggle to
engage a “new and open-ended relationship to history and humanity?”
Are we to see our already marginalized narrative of liberation eviscerated
by a Black face that espouses the aggression of militarization? This
government, whether lead by the Republicans or Democrats, is a violator
of human rights! The evisceration of the liberation narrative in the
We need to jettison the liberation
narrative with our own commitment to unite and aggressively defend our
right to the realization of King’s “radical revolution of values” (Beyond
Vietnam: An address sponsored by the Clergy and Laymen Concerned about
Vietnam BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member Lenore Jean Daniels,
PhD, has been a writer, for over thirty years of commentary, resistance
criticism and cultural theory, and short stories with a Marxist sensibility
to the impact of cultural narrative violence and its antithesis, resistance
narratives. With entrenched dedication to justice and equality, she
has served as a coordinator of student and community resistance projects
that encourage the Black Feminist idea of an equalitarian community
and facilitator of student-teacher communities behind the walls of academia
for the last twenty years. Dr. Daniels holds a PhD in Modern American
Literatures, with a specialty in Cultural Theory (race, gender, class
narratives) from
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