April
17, 2008 - Issue 273 |
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Democratic & Republican Parties
Propping Up Capitalism: Systemic Terrorism Against the Poor Keeping It Real By Larry Pinkney BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board |
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So you want change, do you? It is the year 2008, and while the
Democratic and Republican parties in the The fastest growing class of people
in the It is time that we people in this nation understand and acknowledge that there can be no revolution without the hard work of making revolution real and the concomitant sacrifice entailed in so doing. To believe otherwise would be tantamount to a farmer expecting to have crops without carrying out the physically grueling revolutionary process of tilling the soil, etc. To state what should be the obvious:
No candidate/s of the Democratic and Republican parties
can nor will bring about the kind of change in the Notwithstanding increasing homelessness
in There will be no real systemic change unless it is a revolutionary one, which has nothing substantively to do with mere color or gender, but rather, everything to do with dismantling and replacing this entire capitalist system, which is fundamentally based upon enticing and encouraging an insatiable human greed - instead of building, nurturing, and fulfilling human needs, and our positive potential for political, economic, and spiritual growth and development on this planet. Up until recently when a significant number of Black Americans, nationally, threw their political lot in with the pro (apartheid) Zionist, Wall Street-backed Barack Obama for U.S. president; Black Americans could, with enormous legitimacy, say to the peoples of the world that they were fundamentally different - that they generally did not support apartheid, Zionism, and blood sucking U.S. corporations. However, for the moment at least, it would appear that this may have all changed. Even as I pen these words the government
of the The U.S. empire’s corporate / military / prison apparatus correctly saw and see in the U.S. presidential candidacy of Barack Obama the opportunity to, at least historically momentarily, ensure that Black Americans are seen by the world as significantly complicit in our own political, social, and economic systemic oppression, and that of peoples around the globe at the behest of the United States. What will a significant portion of Black America say to the peoples of the world when they say, “But you supported the candidacy of those from the very system that you say is oppressing you as its victims. Why did you not say no to that racist, oppressive system?” Why, indeed. Despite the fact that de facto racism in the United States is rapidly increasing for the vast majority of Black people, and other peoples of color (and will continue to do so); Black Americans will now be hard pressed to say with any degree of congruent legitimacy to the world that they oppose such exploitation at home and abroad, for their significant support of the pro (apartheid) Zionist, Wall Street-backed Barack Obama may seem to say otherwise. As painful as it might be for some to accept, it is absurd to expect that Barack Obama or any other candidate of the Democratic or Republican parties, will be anything other than what the war mongering capitalist machinery that produced them intended. To believe otherwise is, quite frankly, delusional. The atrocities such as what occurred
to James Byrd in We are not helpless. The adage that says: “If you’re not outraged you’re not paying attention” is correct. More to the point however: If we simply change the person heading the system without first changing the system itself, then it is we who have acted outrageously, for in reality nothing of substance will have been changed. We are not helpless. It’s time for critical thinking. It is time for systemic change in our quest to keep it real. BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, 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. In connection with his political organizing activities in opposition to voter suppression, etc., Pinkney was interviewed in 1988 on the nationally televised PBS NewsHour, formerly known as The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour. For more about Larry Pinkney see the book, Saying No to Power: Autobiography of a 20th Century Activist and Thinker, by William Mandel [Introduction by Howard Zinn]. (Click here to read excerpts from the book) Click here to contact Mr. Pinkney.
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