The Republican Party made it clear at their 2008
convention that they have no love for community organizers.
The overwhelmingly white crowd in Minnesota
cheered at the speech made by Alaska Governor Sarah Palin - GOP
vice presidential candidate and Trojan Moose - mocking Senator Barack
Obama’s community organizing experience. “I guess a small-town mayor
is sort of like a ‘community organizer,’ except that you have actual
responsibilities,” Palin told the party faithful in Minneapolis-St.
Paul. Although her remarks were directed toward Obama, it is clear
that her ultimate target was community organizing itself. And the
GOP is no friend of community organizing, particularly when community
organizing helps the poor, the powerless, the disenfranchised, and,
especially, people of color.
And while the GOP standard bearers - including Palin,
the Manchurian candidate Senator McCain, 9-11 pimp Rudy Giuliani,
former sleeping presidential candidate Fred Thompson, and empty
suit Mitt Romney - have given little indication that they have worked
an honest day in their life or improved the human condition, they
would sit in judgment of those who have dedicated everything, and
sometimes sacrificed their lives, in the name of social justice.
Now, I should say in the interests of full disclosure
that my wife and I have a background as community organizers - she
has worked in children’s health, political and labor campaigns,
while I have experience in racial justice, police brutality, voting
rights and media justice. It is hard work, and perhaps the most
fulfilling you will find. You are helping real people solve real
problems in their lives, and you see and feel the direct results
of your actions.
Community organizing helped bring us an end to slavery,
Jim Crow and apartheid, voting rights for women and African Americans,
and humane working conditions. Harriet Tubman and the Underground
Railroad were a perfect example of effective community organizing,
as was Dr. King’s Montgomery Bus Boycott, or Gandhi’s ability to
bring the British Empire to its knees through
nonviolent civil disobedience. When you think about it, Moses and
Jesus were community organizers as well.
Conservatives
throughout the ages have done what they could to stop this brand
of community organizing, for the sake of staying in power, getting
paid, keeping others down, keeping the whole pie for themselves,
whatever. And today’s conservative crowd in early twenty-first century
America, a frighteningly bankrupt coalition of entrenched interests,
scam artists, profiteers and the Christian Taliban, is no exception.
They thumb their noses at the New Deal reforms and the regulatory
state, even though their own regime of deregulation and upward wealth
transfer (also known as unbridled greed) has destroyed the American
economy for the second time in eighty years. They spit at the civil
rights legacy and programs of diversity, at a time when the ranks
of the Brown, non-Christian, foreign language speaking and foreign
born in the U.S. is increasing in dramatic fashion.
And most of all, they yearn for judges who are strict
constructionists in interpreting the Constitution (translation:
Black folks picking cotton, women
in the home, LGBT people ostracized and invisible, etc.). They
are more than aware of the transformative nature of community organizing,
and they would erase all the positive effects that community organizing
has had on public policy, legislation and court decisions.
These counterfeit mavericks, reformers and compassionate
conservatives who claim to put country first, whatever that
means, want to take us back to the days before the people woke up,
and they are counting on you to go back to sleep.
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board member, David A. Love, JD, is a lawyer and journalist
based in Philadelphia, and a contributor to the Progressive
Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune
News Service, In These Times and
Philadelphia
Independent Media Center. He contributed to the book, States of Confinement: Policing, Detention, and Prisons
(St.
Martin's Press, 2000). Love is a former Amnesty International UK
spokesperson, organized the first national police brutality conference
as a staff member with the Center for Constitutional Rights, and
served as a law clerk to two Black federal judges. His blog is davidalove.com.
Click here
to contact Mr. Love. |