If
you really change your ways and your actions and deal with each
other justly, if you do not oppress the alien, the fatherless or
the widow and do not shed innocent blood in this place, and if you
do not follow other gods to your own harm, then I will let you live
in this place, in the land I gave your forefathers for ever and
ever. But look, you are trusting in deceptive words that are worthless.�
-Jeremiah
7: 5-8
Until
the philosophy which hold one race superior
And another
Inferior
Is finally
And permanently
Discredited
And abandoned -
Everywhere is war -
Me say war.
-
Bob Marley, War
The corporate media thugs snarled: The Rev. Jeremiah
Wright is a racist! �Their keyboards spelled out: Anti-American!
They turned to the Black presidential candidate, and he pointed
his finger at Rev. Wright: You must are banished! Out of my life!
And when I called Trinity United Church in Chicago
to speak with Rev. Wright, indeed, he had banished: He�s out
of the country!
What
did Rev. Jeremiah Wright say? He followed his calling�to remind
government of its responsibility to humanity and the Earth and to
challenge its use and abuse of power. Echoing Rev. Martin Luther
King, Rev. Wright exclaimed: The U.S. is the greatest purveyor
of violence!
A few days after the attack on the World Trade Center
in 2001, Rev. Wright asked his congregation to consider the origins
of this violence:
We
bombed Hiroshima, we bombed Nagasaki, and we nuked far more than
the thousands in New York and the Pentagon, and we never batted
an eye�We have supported state terrorism against the Palestinians
and black South Africans, and now we are indignant because the stuff
we have done overseas is now brought right back to our own front
yards.
In 2003, he asked: Why should we sing �God Bless America
[?]� He answered: �No, no, no, God damn America, that's in the Bible
for killing innocent people� God damn America for treating our citizens
as less than human. God damn America for as long as she acts like
she is God and she is supreme.�
Of course, no one listened.� He�s a crazy old man,
a Black radical, militant, spewing, as one presidential candidate
aide said, �inflammatory rhetoric.�
Then we here this on December 1, 2009 from the now
President Barrack Obama, Commander and Chief and Peace man:
After further review, the U.S. will send 30, 000 more troops to
Afghanistan! My administration is taking responsibility�for war!�
Thirty thousand more troops for more war in a country where it is
said that empire�s come to die!�
Inflammatory
rhetoric?
Someone failed to real understand U.S. history from
its origins!
Someone
owes Rev. Jeremiah Wright an apology!
Everyday there is more.
�On
the night of June 10, 2006,� writes Glenn Greenwald, �A New Report
Questions �Suicides� at Guantanamo� at Salon.com, �three
Guantanamo detainees were found dead in their individual cells�Without
any autopsy or investigation, U.S. military officials proclaimed
�suicide by hanging� as the cause of each death, and immediately
sought to exploit the episode as proof of the evil of the detainees.��
These detainees were �evil� people, and their suicides were proof
they were �committed jihadists,� according to a Guantanamo official.
Greenwald continues: How is it possible �that three detainees kept
in isolation and under constant and intense monitoring could have
coordinated and then carried out group suicide without detection,
particularly since the military claimed their bodies were not found
for over two hours after their deaths.� People are questioning theses
deaths�and they should.
Guantanamo officials announced an investigation to
begin immediately.� Two years later, in August 2008, a �heavily
redacted� report appeared confirming �suicide as the cause� of all
three deaths,� writes Greenwald.
One of the young men was 17 years old when taken to
the Guantanamo camp. He was 22 when he died. The men were participants
in �hunger strikes� at the camp �to protest the brutality, torture
and abuse to which they were routinely subjected,� Greenwald writes.
Another of the men who committed suicide was scheduled for release
that month!
Greenwald continues: On Monday, December 7, 2009,
the Seton Hall University School of Law report was released regarding
this case.� The report seriously doubted the �military�s version
of events and the reliability of its investigation.� According to
Greenwald, the �heavily documented,� 54-page report states that
the men �died under questionable circumstances and �that the investigation
into their deaths resulted in more questions than answers.� The
report concludes with this statement: �[W] ithout a proper investigation,
it is impossible to determine the circumstances of the three detainees'
deaths.�
Parents of 2 detainees have filed lawsuits in federal
courts, writes Greenwald, but the Obama Department of Justice is
using �every Bush tactic�and inventing whole new ones�to block the
lawsuit from proceeding.� Greenwald cites Daphne Eviatar�s report
in The Washington Independent (October) in which Eviatar
charges the Obama administration of endorsing �the same legal positions
as its predecessor.�
According to Eviatar, the current administration claims
that �there is no constitutional right to humane treatment by U.S.
authorities outside the United States, and that victims of torture
and abuse and their survivors have no right to compensation or even
an acknowledgement of what occurred.�
�In addition, Greenwald writes, the Obama DOJ�s brief
demands the �dismissal of the case�--�in classic Bush/Cheney fashion
-- that merely allowing discovery in this case to determine what
was done to these detainees would help the Terrorists kill us all.�
�I�m convinced that our security is at stake,� Obama
told U.S. citizens on December 1, 2009.
Bush�s claims to �executive power, immunity and secrecy,�
writes Greenwald, once condemned by Democrats and Obama alike, are
now �invoked to insist that federal courts have no right to adjudicate
claims that the Government violated the Constitution and the
law.�
At the helm of this government is a Constitutional
lawyer!
The
U.S. government is still the U.S. government�a government that sells
its lessons from the practice of violence.� What has this government
learned from scalping Native Americans, women and children, too;
from castrating enslaved Black men or whipping enslaved Black women
so as not to harm the property in their womb? What lessons has it
learned from providing security in the Philippines or dropping the
bomb on whole populations in Hiroshima and Nagasaki? What lessons
did it garner from the Phoenix program or COINTELPRO? After subsequent
years of a police state in urban areas and on reservations and years
of mind-numbing teaching labeled �education� for Red, Black, Brown,
and Yellow children�Can anyone tell me what did Rev. Wright say
that was so wrong?
Maybe Rev. Wright does not possess that wonderful
rhetorical flare that makes gory war sound like the �necessary�
passage to glory for Pax Americana.�
The U.S. floats on the blood of millions and, worse,
depends on the numbness of the living. It is all one seemingly unstoppable
adventure of Pax Americana beginning with the each American who
believes in the �deceptive words.�
I
watched Bill Moyers� interview with filmmaker Oliver Stone (Platoon
and Born on the 4th of July) last week (December 5, 2009).�
Asked about the Obama administration, Stone does not hesitate to
offer criticism: �You cannot win the hearts and minds of people
if you invade their country with soldiers,� Stone answered. War
is not the answer. When Moyers asked Stone about President Obama�s
decision to send 30,000 additional troops to Afghanistan, Stone
shook his head. �This is a key question. And I think many people
are asking themselves that today. Why? He was the reform candidate,
the agent of change. And here he's pursuing Bush III policy.�
Yeah.� This all sounds good until Moyers asks about
Stone�s own reasons for fighting in Vietnam.
��What were you fighting for?��
��Our lives,�� Stone said without hesitation. ��Survival.��
You
travel halfway around the world to fight for your life? To survive?�I
think.
��Why did you go?��
��I wanted to.��� Stone was a classmate of George
Bush Junior at Yale. He did not want to sit next to Bush Junior
in 1968.� He knew he did not belong there�at Yale with Bush.� But
he belonged in Vietnam, toting some guns and looking for �gooks.�
Then Moyers asks him about a book (Oliver Stone:
A Child�s Night Dream) he wrote before he left for Vietnam.�
The book begins with the line: �I killed a man the other day.�
This book with images of war and death�how did it
come from?� Stone mumbles something about his mother, television
and film�
But
there�s this line: �I killed a man the other day.�
Okay. Stone had �fantasies of war.� War was �an adventure.�
War
is an adventure! First, attempt to blame mom and then we have war
as an adventure!
What is so frightening to me is that Stone�s explanation
for going to war comes across as so normal while Rev. Wright�s warnings
frightened American citizens.
He remembered Jack London, Joseph Conrad and Ernest
Hemingway.�
��So I had to go to Vietnam,�� he said.� He had to
save other fellow soldiers there; to do a job as a soldier; to stand
with those ��real�� guys, what he called �the Salt of the Earth.�
The
aggressor names himself The Salt of the Earth! And what of the Wretched
of the Earth�the victims of U.S. air raids, village burnings, hundreds
of dead children from napalm and agent orange, executions, My Lei
massacres discovered and others here and abroad still covered up?
What divinity appointed the U.S. and its citizens the right to explore
adventures and dream up war fantasies, capture, detain, torture,
and kill other people on their lands?�
And it just goes on: Now, the world�s leading imperialist
representative receives his Peace Prize after the discovery of the
�Danish Text� by the Circle of Commitment (another name for the
U.S. and allies, the �developed� on the �undeveloped� nations) and
their narrative scheme to continue the callous disregard of Red,
Black, Brown, and Yellow people and the Earth itself.�
Will
someone apologize to Rev. Wright!
Where are all those North Americans who cried�hush,
hush, he�s a Black man running for U.S. President? Hush, now. Black
man on deck!
Americans
owe Rev. Wright an apology�before the ship sinks!
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 Loyola
University, Chicago. Click here
to contact Dr. Daniels. |