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The longest strike and lockout “in
the history of
the supermarket industry” has ended, in southern
California. Seventy thousand United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW)
members are assessing the damage done to their families and union
by the Safeway, Kroger and Albertsons chains, which together control
70 percent of the grocery business in America’s 100 largest cities.
Like all face-offs between labor and capital in the U.S., it was
an uneven contest. Wall Street backed their boardroom brothers to
the hilt, boosting the chains’ stock prices despite hundreds of millions
in strike-related losses – a display of “class solidarity that would
make Mao Tse-tung’s Army blush a deep red.”
“Wal-Mart is coming, Wal-Mart
is coming!” cried the supermarket owners as they slashed away at
employee health coverage. Yet, as we wrote in our February 19 Cover
Story, “Remaking America in
Wal-Mart’s Image,” the supermarket
owners are eager to duplicate the Wal-Mart model:
Of course,
there is nothing intrinsically special about the cost of health care – for the company,
it’s just another labor expense, albeit a fat and growing one. If
Wal-Mart is the model – the leader of the pack – then “the industry’s
goal” is to bring all labor costs “more in line” with the
viciously anti-union trendsetter. The larger objective is to break
the union, as an organization or in spirit. From the current corporate
perspective, level playing fields can only exist when the employees
are flat on their backs. Executives from purportedly competing companies
conspire and collude toward that end, all the while pleading that “The
Devil (Wal-Mart) made me do it.”
Lydia
Thomas writes from Riverdale, Georgia:
I and
several of my friends are boycotting Wal-Mart because of its employment practices,
its complete and total disregard for US labor laws, its ultra-capitalist
mindset, and its refusal to coexist with other businesses
in the community. I simply can't contribute to such an
abuse of power and would hate to one day have Wal-Mart
as my only option for everything from sporting goods to groceries. This
Walmartization of America – and Bush – must be stopped!!
Wal-Mart is a global engine
of poverty – a buy-low, pay-low machine. While “the Walton
family spends millions on rightwing causes to undermine what’s
left of the social safety net, their corporation urges employees
to apply
for every available government assistance.” In Ms. Thomas’ state
of Georgia, the public program for uninsured children is “packed” with
kids from Wal-Mart employee families, according to the Atlanta
Journal-Constitution. A U.S. House committee study has found
that federal “taxpayers bear $420,750
in social services costs for each Wal-Mart store with 200 workers” – a
subsidy of more than $2,000 per employee per year to one of the
world’s
largest corporations.
More Wal-Mart evil-doing
The Walton family is the
most megalomaniac gene pool ever to emerge from the state of
Arkansas. Along with the arch-racist Bradley
Foundation, of
Milwaukee,
the Waltons invented and bankrolled the “movement” for
school vouchers – the wedge issue in their campaign to thoroughly
privatize American education.
The Walton family’s pet
project in New Jersey is called Excellent Education for Everyone
(E-3), a classic
front group. E-3’s most recent assignment
is a tricky one, as we reported in “New
Scheme to Sell Suburbanites on School Vouchers,” on February 12.
Having
spent tens of millions of dollars to convince the public that school
vouchers is an authentic “Black” issue,
the wealthy financiers of the “movement” now seek support from white
suburbanites, whose kids already attend the best schools. To move
this bloc of voters, E-3 and its rich benefactors are preparing a
campaign of fear: If voucher programs are not soon established in
the inner cities, the line goes, minority students will spill into
the suburbs, while taxes soar to pay the growing costs of urban education.
Vouchers are the brainchild of the Hard Right, accomplished fear-mongers
who specialize in racial manipulation. It was only a matter of time
before they returned to their accustomed themes.
In New Jersey as elsewhere,
the teachers unions are the biggest institutional obstacle to Wal-Mart’s
privatization schemes. Steve Wollmer is Associate Director for Public
Relations for the New Jersey
Education Association. These days, a big part of Wollmer’s job is
to deconstruct voucher propaganda.
Congratulations
to for
exposing yet another element of the E3 voucher agenda
in New Jersey. If E3 is to gain any traction, it’s going to need all the “public
support” it can muster. Right now, vouchers are “no sale” in
suburban districts, so inciting the fear of a minority influx under
the Bush administration’s so-called “No Child Left Behind” act
is just what the doctor ordered.
In fact,
E3 will do anything to mislead the media and the public about the
level of “support” vouchers
enjoy, as long as the impression of a “movement” is sustained. The
truth has never stood in their way.
On two
occasions – November
2001 and again in April 2003 – E3 purchased a question
on an Eagleton Institute/Rutgers University poll, and
on both occasions, claimed
more than 60 percent of New Jerseyans support school
vouchers. A well-read observer might ask: How could
that be true, when voters
in every other state overwhelmingly oppose vouchers?
The answer
was in the wording of the question: “Would you vote for or against a system
of giving parents the option of using government-funded school vouchers
to pay for tuition at the public, private or religious school of
their choice?” In November, 2001, I immediately contacted the
Eagleton Institute pollster who conducted the survey. He admitted
that the question, as worded, did not measure whether New Jerseyans
support spending public tax dollars on private and religious schools – the
essence of a publicly funded voucher program.
The problem
is the inclusion of the word “public,” since there is never likely to be a voucher
program in New Jersey – or anywhere else – that allows all students
to simply enroll in any public school system in the state. Of
course, that’s not what E3 is telling urban parents – and suburban
voters. It’s more than willing to play the
race card when it suits their purpose.
E3 is
engaging in what is called “push-polling” – using a poll question
to drive up support (false support, in this instance) for its position.
That enables
E3 to claim that “two-thirds of New Jerseyans support vouchers,” despite the
fact that it’s simply not true. Here’s a suggestion for E3:
In your next poll, tell people that by voting for vouchers, they’ll
also get free groceries and a new car. That ought to get support
up near the 90 percent level.
New Jersey’s legislature
is under court order to spend all the money it takes to bring urban
schools up to suburban standards – a unique circumstance. Nowhere
in the nation have suburban jurisdictions volunteered to share their
wealth with inner city schools. Rebecca DiLiddo, from Shirley, Massachusetts,
has spent a lot of time pondering the problem.
If the
Bush administration were really interested in improving public
education it could start
with requiring that all states that receive federal funds for
education:
-
must have a state system
for funding public education that is equitable, does not rely
on real estate taxes, and sets a minimum spending level that
reflects the cost of educating each child in the state to meet
student learning goals. Revenues
would be collected and distributed
by the state to assure that more
revenue rich districts
did not receive more than their share.
-
must
show that all teachers in all classrooms meet the minimum requirements
for licensure
within the state or hold a bachelors
degree in an appropriate subject and be under the direct supervision
of a fully qualified
mentor teacher. Until schools
can meet this standard, there
is no hope for them reaching the NCLB standards.
- must develop a paradigm
for educators that provides a career
ladder from the receipt of one’s high school diploma or its equivalent through becoming
a district CEO. This paradigm should allow for training
paths that require the combination of work experience, classroom
training, and internship to progress from one professional level
to the next. The paradigm must form an integrated link
between the teacher training classroom and the public school
classroom. No educator should be
able to move from one level to the next
without demonstration of competence in situ.
This new
paradigm is essential to meet the recruiting realities of the near
future and to assure
that members of communities that have not
traditionally produced educators for their children can do so.
I live
in Massachusetts. We
have something called Educational Reform on which we have spent millions
and have little except a growing drop out rate to show for it. I
am an administrator at a state college. In the Fall of 2003
the first class of students who had to pass a series of standardized
tests reached us. This class of “tested performers” had the
same percentage of students who tested at the developmental levels
in writing and math as we had for a decade before. So what
did teaching to the test and mandatory test get us? Bigger
classes at the community college and
hundreds of minority students who will
never, despite 12 years of classes, graduate
from high school.
Let’s spend our dollars
on the teachers and the students and forget about the tests.
It is
no longer possible to view commercial news media as mere servants
of the ruling rich – they
are full members of the presiding corporate pantheon. General media
consolidation has created an integrated mass communications system
that is both objectively and self-consciously at one with the Citibanks
and ExxonMobils of the world. Media companies act in effective unison
on matters of importance to the larger corporate class. For all politically
useful purposes, the monopolization of US media is now complete,
in that the corporate owners and managers of the dominant organs
are interchangeable and indistinguishable, sharing a common mission
and worldview….
There
is no question that Blacks and progressives must establish alternative
media outlets,
and not just on the Internet. However,
there is no substitute for confronting the corporate media head-on,
through direct mass action
and other, creative tactics. The
rich men’s voices must be de-legitimized
in the eyes of the people, who already suspect that they are being
systematically lied to and manipulated.
Bill Homans is a journalism-trained
entertainer, a reader,
and deep thinker.
It's been
18 years since I earned my degree in journalism and history from
the University
of Oregon. I've just read your
commentary on the destructive power of the corporate media, and I
just want you to know that I was aware
of what I was going into from my first week in J-School.
Professor
Duncan MacDonald (don't know where he is now) told his class
in Mass Media in Society: "You
young (I was 35, markedly
older than most of the class, and had served in Vietnam in 1969-1970)
would-be journalists probably think that
your first imperative as
reporters will be to satisfy some perceived people's need or right
to know. You are wrong. Your first imperative
will be to make the publisher
a buck."
I went ahead and finished
my curriculum in journalism anyway,
and have been published sporadically in small outlets since then.
But I have no illusions that there is
any real place for the stringer,
the free-lancer, the independent investigator in the profession, though we may occasionally be found in print.
The economic concentration
within the media industry has
(as Professor MacDonald told us it would back in 1984, and as you
said in this fine overview I have
just finished reading) become
complete. Ted Koppel isn't just a top-level gatekeeper, he now
is a partner in the ownership of the gate!
Bob Dylan
wrote the line, "money
doesn't talk, it swears"; I don't have any idea how to confront
that many billions of dollars worth of aggregate media power, which
is no longer worthy of being called "The Fourth Estate",
but is totally at one with the corporate structure of interlocking
directorates. There is no use for an antitrust division within the
Department of Justice any more, because globalist corporatism – and
specifically globalist media corporatism – has
transcended all the old
definitions of monopoly
to which Clayton and Sherman
had relevance.
We are like the first
mammals, under the feet
of the dinosaurs of the Cretaceous epoch. Like those little ones,
may we survive.
Mr. Holman is also known
as the bluesman, Watermelon Slim.
Dave Hardy would “like to
hear more on this subject.”
Excellent,
excellent job on, “The Awesome Destructive Power of the CPM.” This is by
far the clearest, most literally effective synopsis I’ve seen regarding
the unprecedented power of the corporate media and it’s consequences
to democracy. You hit on it with force from every angle.
Most criticisms
of today’s
media are overwrought in technical jargon and simply fail to speak
to the urgency of the situation, partly due, I think, to the fact
that most mainstream journalists – left and right – are wrapped up
in the spectacle and allure of television and don’t know how to separate
themselves from TV’s effect. It
is an addiction of
monumental proportions.
You are
definitely getting somewhere with your distillation of the facts. What
you speak out about is at the leading edge of activism relative
to an enormously
serious problem we face.
The last
two paragraphs of the piece are beautifully written:
“No
society in human history has confronted an enemy as omnipresent as
the US corporate media. Yet there is no choice but to challenge their
hegemony.
The world can be changed,
but only by changing the way others see their world.”
Indeed. I ask, how
do we challenge?
The publishers
of are
media veterans, and know from intimate experience that mass broadcasting
and print are the weakest links in the chains of power. Their product
is public credibility, a fragile quantity. Relatively small numbers
of determined activists can snatch it from them. They are uniquely
defenseless against demonstrations, inherently so. We have seen managers
cower at the mere thought of being visited by angry activists – not
because of possible threats to their FCC licenses (although this
was once a consideration), but in fear of being exposed as just another
business on the make.
Freedom Rider
Readers of The Black Commentator
are aware that
Rep. Harold Ford – the Black, Blue Dog and Democratic
Leadership Council
politician from Tennessee – is not our favorite
congressman.
Ford leans heavily to whichever side of the fence he believes funding
and fame can be found, and was among the few Congressional
Black Caucus
members to support George Bush’s
Iraq War Resolution.
(See “The Four Eunuchs of War,” October 17, 2002.)
Thus, the publishers of
smiled
upon receipt
of our colleague
Margaret Kimberley’s
February 26 Freedom
Rider column,
“Harold
Ford, Jr: Don’t Know
Much About History.” Ms.
Kimberley noted
that, during
the 2000 election
campaign, Ford
backed off opposition
to a memorial
honoring Ku Klux
Klan founder
and Confederate
General Nathan
Bedford Forrest,
in Nashville.
General Forrest
commanded the
troops that massacred
hundreds of Black
union soldiers
at nearby Fort
Pillow, in 1864.
Rep. Ford at
first demanded
that presidential
candidate Al
Gore denounce
the proposed
Forrest memorial,
then decided, “"I
don't want to
offend the Sons
of Confederate
Veterans, or
anyone else,
and the matter
is dropped!"
Still, Harold Ford is considered
a “role model” in some quarters of the community. His Black History
Month speech to students at predominantly Black Lane College drew
Ms. Kimberley’s attention:
Mr. Ford
opined that he isn’t “a fan” of Black History Month because he looks forward to
the day when it will no longer need to be celebrated. It is unclear
what utopian age in the future would make it unnecessary to remember
American history. Even if our ancestors’ dreams are realized and
we reach the nirvanas of equality and justice we will still need
to ponder the past….
The Congressman
has achieved quite a lot at the age of 34 but he wants to be a United
States Senator.
His calculations
have told him that the Sons of Confederate Veterans are not to be
trifled with, but the Sons of Fort Pillow can be easily
disregarded.
Sandra Draper is also no
fan of the man that People Magazine named one of the Most Beautiful
persons in the world.
Ms. Kimberley,
thank you for a very insightful look at Harold Ford Jr. And you should
know
that
there are those of us who were born and raised in the City of Memphis
who feel as though this man has no right at all being a representative
for our
city. After all, he only won the seat after his father relinquished
it, and
many of us are very upset that he never even lived in the
city
growing up. How can he justifiably speak on behalf of Tennesseans – no
one who grew up there even knows him! For him to bask in the limelight
at every opportunity as "the Congressman from Tennessee" bothers
me every time I see him! Thanks again for your article. Please expose
him as a fraud whenever you have the opportunity.
Leutisha
Stills keeps track of Congressman Ford from her computer in Oakland,
California.
I
read
your Freedom Rider piece and thought to myself "Someone
just broke out their can of whoop ass" on the Tennessee Congressman,
LOL (pardon the slang, but I think you get my point).
I saw him on Charlie Rose show right after the initial primaries and
when he was introduced, the first thing that came out of his mouth
was "First
of all, I'd
like to say that I'm a PROUD Democrat." I was thinking, "Why
did he feel
a need to say that? Are those articles in publications
like getting
to him?" And
lo, and behold,
here comes
your article,
which spoke
the truth to
power on a
whole 'nother
level.
On the other
hand, I'm a
softie and
I feel sorry
for him, trying
to weave between
two worlds
(trying to
act like a
Democrat while
thinking
like a
Republican)
and not seeming
to accomplish
very much,
'cause he doesn't
want to offend
anybody.
The Rape of Haiti
We titled last week’s Cover
Story
on Haiti, “Bush, Call Off Your
Dogs.” On Saturday night,
George
Bush’s rabid pack invaded President Jean-Bertrand Aristide’s
living
quarters and, in “perfect coordination” with French imperialists,
Shanghaied
him to the Central African Republic. These dogs have no shame.
Events have overtaken both
our February 26 Cover Story and many readers’ responses. However,
Dr. Kweli Nzito and a few other writers’ comments are, as we say
in the news business, “evergreen.”
The varied
commentaries on the tragedy unfolding in Haiti are right on the
money. It
is a rebellion with White America written all over it. Bear
in mind that the color of the American predatory imperium is manifestly
white, in stark contrast to its reluctant subjects. Besides,
to our knowledge, Americans of color have not been handed governments
of their choice to overthrow. The U.S. has made no secret of
its scorn towards Aristide and his leftist ways and it was only a
matter of time before racist machinations would rear their ugly head. We
are still smarting from the dizzying array of lies intended to justify
a racist criminal war against defenseless Iraqis. The world
is now being persuaded that the more than 15,000 innocent Iraqi civilians
murdered (5 times more than the just as innocent victims of 9/11
terror) is a price to be paid for an unsolicited "democracy" whose
worth is comprehensible only to a White American elite.
So, is
it surprising that an elected leader in Haiti is being ousted by
a band of thugs subsidized
by
the Americans with a little help from the Dominican Republic, (now
a fully certified satellite state) cheerfully doing its master's
bidding? So what else is new? Stand by for more action-packed
drama coming soon to a theater near you: Venezuela and a cast of
millions – another target for racist "democracy." Interesting
that countries with popularly elected leaders should require a further
dose of prescribed "democracy." Where there is no
oil and risk to (white) American lives is minimal, a few dollars
handed out to obliging gangsters, and you are assured of "democracy" promptly
delivered to your doorstep. You must hand it to the White foot
soldiers of the imperium: their seemingly infinite creativity in
fomenting death and mayhem among people of color is truly astonishing. Yet
more astonishing is our inability to learn to identify the donkey. Only
then can his tail be well and truly nailed.
Dr. Nzito, an
assistant professor and scientist at the University of Miami,
has authored several Guest Commentator pieces for . His
last contribution was titled, “Imperial
Racist Fantasies and Digitalization of Colonialism,” August 14, 2003.
A reader who goes by the
pen name Whimps fils-aime shares his thoughts:
I am a
careful observer of the turmoil in Haiti. What is happening today
is a result of the
direct and indirect involvement of the US government in Haiti. Georges
Bush, father and son, have always hated Aristide and it is clear
why. And what is the bizarre coincidence that under both Bush regimes
Aristide got hit by his violent foes? The rebels are trained by
who? Who had provided these great uniforms, arms and ammunition – way
better that what the previous army had got? When Guy Philippe said
that his troops are waiting for orders, where did that order is coming
from?
Elaine Jenkins writes from John's Island, South Carolina.
While
Haiti burns, Uganda is awash in the blood of the slaughtered,
southern Africa starves, the inner cities of America are
fast deteriorating, and our Black institutions are in crisis
(colleges and university,
newspapers, church, etc), African Americans hold yet another
eight-hour talk-fest on the State of Black America. With
all due respects to Tavis
Smiley, Tom
Joyner
and the distinguished
panelists, I am really
exhausted by the annual
talk-fest on the
state of Black America
that doesn't translate
into a national movement to galvanize Black America.
With
the advancement in technology, why aren't we organizing, galvanizing,
and motivating the African American constituency in ways that
Moveon.org, e-activist.org, commoncause.org and other progressive
groups are
organizing and mobilizing their groups?
We
are 35 million strong; we have more elected officials and persons
in policy-making positions than ever before; and we have more
Blacks who have moved into the middle class (however tenuous
that hold
may be) than ever before. Yet, these numbers have not appreciably
bettered the conditions of Blacks in Black America nor have they
impacted policies toward Africa and other Black nations. In
fact, George W. Bush
refused to meet with
the Congressional Black
Caucus for three years!
We
are 35 million strong! All it takes is one dollar from each
of us annually sent to a national organization that would dispense
it to our HBCU's who are in trouble; to pay for our own lobbyists;
to assist Black
nations like Haiti;
to control our destiny
so that we are a force to be reckoned with!
I
am neither an intellectual nor the most articulate of persons. Like
the late Mrs. Fannie Lou Hamer, I am just sick and tired of being
sick and tired about the condition of Black folks in the world. Randall
Robinson has left the United States, and I think Black America
and America are all the less by his absence. I don't have
the luxury or the desire to leave America. I choose to make
my stand here.
We were delighted to hear
from Pedro Perez Sarduy, of the invaluable AfroCubaWeb.com site:
Your articles
are supreme. We in Diaspora need clear minds like yours. I wish you
all the best.
Letter on Zimbabwe
Last summer we published
six articles rolled into one, under the heading “The
Debate
on Zimbabwe Will Not Be Stifled.” The multi-part piece featured
a range of analysis and commentary on the evolving crisis in the
southern
African nation – albeit heavily weighted to ’s
own viewpoint. Dr. J. Matare wrote to tell us that the July 31
issue holds up well.
Thank
you for being there. I am a black Zimbabwean professional in the
Diaspora. I thoroughly
enjoyed your interview with Morgan
Tsvangirai and it made
my day. Subsequently I e-mailed the article to several pals
of mine. Thank you
Richard Ross decided to
make our day at .
He succeeded.
I just
want to say thank you for writing as you do. Your articles are
so poignant and informative
they bring joy to my heart and tears to my eyes. Yours is a “voice” that
should be heard by all Black people. We need you to keep on keepin’ on.
May Almighty continue to bless with the gift that you use so
well.
Aboru, aboye, abosise. Ache.
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