March
12, 2009 - Issue 315 |
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The U.S. Doesn’t Need a Conference
on Racism: |
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The President Barack Obama doesn’t want to look back. Racism is dead. Let’s move on! So the It plans to
boycott the United Nation’s World Conference on Racism scheduled for
April 20-25, 2009 in According to
the Associated Press, “Obama’s administration decided to assess the
negotiations before making a decision on “The Let’s see.
Could the The Conference
document would have to remove “references to deformation of religion
which the Is it a violation
of “free speech” to discuss Christianity and Jewish responsibility for
the deaths of Muslims and not just Muslim attacks on the The document would have to remove “language on reparations for slavery.” Well, that’s just too much! The In other words,
let’s not look back to the past. That’s just not the AIPAC praises the Obama decision. Black Americans
have few “allies” if this new administration is allowed to continue
the policies of previous imperialist administrations and ignore the
Recently, I
came across an article written by Roger Pulvers and published at Commondreams.org, March 1,
2009, titled “Obama
Please Note: Those Who Fail to 'Master the Past' Are Guilty, Too.” Pulvers
refers to History - history - is a record of “human rights’ abuses”
and “political crimes.” Consider As Pulver notes, when abuses (Abu Graib) and crimes (lying to invade
Hold an election and change the personnel in Pulver refers to Bernhard Schlink’s Guilt About the Past, in
which the Why not? Its white supremacy
that has allowed the No, the The new administration
is busy trying to restore capitalism to its past glory! Few have
heard the news that the Black Americans are the target of drug enforcement, Jamie Fellner, author of the report, “Decades of Disparity: Drug Arrests and Race in the United States, told Amy Goodman, Democracy Now!, even though white and Black citizens use and sell drugs in equal numbers. “Most arrests are for possession.” Four in ten arrests are for marijuana possession - not for the incarceration of drug dealers or drug smugglers. “Police aren’t going into white homes, white bars, white neighborhoods, white offices.” But they are in the Black neighborhoods! It is not coincidental. I think that there is a deliberate use of drug laws to - I think that there’s something in this country which can be called structural racism, which doesn’t require any individual policeperson or prosecutor or judge or anyone else to have malign intent. Nevertheless, there is what’s called a conspiracy of forces, of assumptions, of attitudes, of behaviors, which end up with the result that blacks get the short end of the stick." Black Americans
are conveniently identifiable and easily located in the And the so-called
“war on drugs” in The prison industrial complex has been financially profitable, too. For Upstate rural areas, predominantly white communities, employment and revenue is too profitable to pass up. Upstate prisons acquire free labor from Black Americans. In addition, the largely urban Black population incarcerated in these Upstate prisons count in the census as “residents,” according to Caitlin Dunklee, Coordinator of the Correctional Association’s Drop the Rock campaign and interviewed on Democracy Now! These “residents” help Upstate legislatures maintain the numbers necessary to hold a district. These “residents” also “channel anti-poverty money from the federal government into Upstate districts,” Dunklee said. According to the Pew Center Report, the prison industrial complex “was the fastest expanding major segment of state budgets, and over the past two decades, its growth as a share of the state expenditure has been second only to Medicaid.” As a result, “state corrections cost[s] now top 50 billion” annually. Now, faced with budget deficits, the states, the Pew Center Report suggests, need to reduce taxpayers dollars while “improving public safety by reducing recidivism.” And this is
happening in a nation that will not attend the Conference on
Racism in How do you change
a theoretical perspective that begins with recognizing “evil” in others?
(Poverty is Black; cocaine and marijuana is Black; crime is Black in
the But the So no, the It’s not enough for Black academics, entertainers, politicians, and activists to stand before a microphone and report with glee that they have “escaped” the “hood” and the missiles of drugs, guns, police brutality, and incarceration as if the reign of attacks is acceptable, adaptable. It’s not enough to toot your own horn and stand on the deck of the Titanic, waving the past away while holding the controls of the lifeboats in your hands, listening to the voice on the loudspeaker say: We all sink or we all rise together? When has that been the case in the history of this nation? Black Americans need allies who are free to see us restored to our rightful place in history. We have allies who are struggling to be free from the imperialist’s stranglehold. We need to say, collectively, that we exist and that the Conference on Racism matters to us! 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)
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