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The Bush regime’s response
to global revulsion at its offensive against international order,
is to step up the tempo of aggression. Even the most naďve observer
should now recognize the monstrous design: to transform as much of
the globe as possible into an American “protectorate,” under the
banner of anti-terrorism.
“We need to drain the swamp,” said
U.S. Air Force Gen. Charles Wald. He was talking about Africa, the
site of unprecedented American special operations activities purportedly
targeting “Muslim extremists.” According to a March
6 Associated
Press report, “The Heritage Foundation, a conservative U.S. think
tank, is pushing for the U.S.-based Central Command to take over
responsibility for the entire continent.” Under the Bush regime,
the Heritage Foundation usually gets what it wants. Since much of
Africa remains in the French neocolonial orbit, Paris faces a choice:
final eclipse as an imperial power, or an entente with Washington
in the Black francophone world. Thus, France’s “perfect
coordination” with
the U.S. in snatching Jean-Bertrand Aristide from the power in Haiti – a
nation Paris considers part of its grand legacy 200 years after the
defeat of Napoleon’s colonial army – and depositing him in the Central
African Republic, a French client state.
To encompass the challenge
of the U.S.-French atrocity in Haiti, our March 11 Cover Story required
a three-part title: “Return Aristide to Haiti; Try Bush as a Global Pirate; Dismantle
Structures of Subversion.”
Question
Six of Reps. Barbara Lee and John Conyers’ TRUTH
Act (acronym: The
Responsibility to Uncover the Truth about Haiti)
could serve as a starting point in dismantling U.S. “structures” of
subversion: “Was U.S. bilateral assistance channeled through
nongovernmental organizations that were directly or indirectly
associated with political groups actively involved in fomenting
hostilities or violence toward the government of President Aristide?” The
answer is an unqualified “Yes.” The quasi-governmental National
Endowment for Democracy (NED) is a cauldron of subversion, created
in 1983 by the Reagan Administration.
The NED
took American intervention in the domestic affairs of foreign nations
out of the
shadows and made it respectable – a brilliant political coup. Most
sinisterly, the Trojan Horse NED subverts the AFL-CIO and the Democratic
Party, acting as a “point of contact” between these institutions
and covert U.S. operatives (although unionists and Democrats
will deny this, and some may actually be oblivious to the company
they
keep) and with corporate agents bent on further exploitation
of foreign lands. In Haiti and Venezuela, this American public-private-labor
project became inseparable from coup-making.
In the
case of Haiti, the International Republican Institute component of
the NED, under
the slogan “party building,” almost single-handedly constructed the “civil
society” political “opposition” that now advises the U.S. occupiers
in Port-au-Prince (and nurtured the armed elements in their Dominican
Republic sanctuaries, as well). But it was Bill Clinton who put Jean
Bertrand Aristide in a structural straightjacket on his return from
exile in 1994….
Democratic presidential
candidate John Kerry must be confronted on his plans for the
NED, the vile instrument that also corrupts Democrats and American
labor
in the process of making the world safe for multi-national corporations.
(See Stan Goff, “Time for Kerry
to Step Up on Haiti,” in
this issue.)
In our March 4 Cover Story,
“Godfather Colin Powell: The Gangster of Haiti,” we posed
a direct question to Black America regarding “hands-on” gangster
Colin Powell and the “Devil’s handmaiden,” Condoleezza Rice:
”Are these two conspirators
fit to speak at any Black gathering, ever again in life? Who
in the Black community will debase their organizations with the presence
of such “role models?” An invitation to Powell or Rice should be
viewed as proof of a moral deficit on the part of the inviter.”
Powell is personally culpable
in the kidnapping of President Aristide. Is it any wonder that
TransAfrica founder Randall
Robinson calls Colin Powell “the
most powerful and damaging black to rise to influence in the world
in my lifetime.”
Reader
Don Harris offers his own commentary on Powell and Rice.
Underpinning
the historical saga of US and French imperialism in
Haiti is a racist contempt for the ordinary Haitian people. Today,
for instance, we have the evidence of the testimony
of Bob Shacochis (see Washington
Post, March 4)
that, according to an unnamed
US Ambassador, "Haitians are maggots." By
actively promoting this latest coup d'etat, Powell and
Rice have not only
shown themselves as collaborators in this heinous
travesty against all black people but (as you
correctly propose) made themselves persona non grata
in all venues
that we interact.
Powell's
actions in the past four years of serving the imperial
designs of the Bush gang not only confirm the truth of Harry
Belafonte's
evaluation (those of us who've watched his earlier
evolution would have surely predicted this outcome)
but also indicate a
steady metamorphosis into a severely diminished and tarnished
creature, dishonest, malevolent, petty in the extreme (witness
his response
to a lowly staff-person at the recent Committee hearings
in Congress), and lacking even the personal courage of a
Paul O'Neill to rescue the last vestiges of self-respect. All
of this, no doubt, for the irresistible reward of continuing to
rub shoulders
with the high and mighty. But at what cost? The
true measure of the man is that he would sell himself
and sacrifice
his people for such coin. History will not absolve him.
As
for Rice, you've said it all. "Skeeza is as Skeeza does."
Mr.
Harris is referring to an item in our April
3, 2003 issue, which deals with public reaction to poet Amiri Baraka’s
description of Rice as a “skeeza.” cannot
take credit.
Eric E. Peoples, of Oak
Park, Michigan, gives us props for seeing the crime coming.
You guys
have called this to a tee over the last year. Anyone reading your
publication, including
the massively enlightening work of Kevin Pina in
Port-au-Prince, was way ahead of the curve on this plot to subvert
Haiti once again. Thank
you for being you!
Keep up the good work! Get the truth out!
Civilized Canadians are
outraged at their government’s complicity in the U.S.-French occupation
of Haiti. Michael Belyea writes from the province of New Brunswick:
I just
read the article about the "Godfather" Colin Powell. This is staggering.
Except I shouldn't find it staggering, because it's quite normal.
Here in Canada, I'm starting to get the feeling that even those willing
to point out the truth about the US's and France's
criminal actions are not so quick to add Canada's part
in the whole mess. Traditionally, Canada will act--predictably
enough--in its own corporate interests; if these interests
coincide with US interests, and they usually do, then our leaders will happily go forth to save the "natives"...from
themselves.
Canada's non-alignment on Iraq was an exception to the general rule.
Now we're back on track, as obedient, lesser ally of the US machine.
It's depressing. But I'm glad to have read that insightful and honest
article.
Joanne Giza expresses her
disgust from Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Thank
you for the hard-hitting article about the US-led coup in Haiti and
the key role played by
Colin Powell. This administration is waging blatant class and
race wars all over the world, and won't be satisfied until they have
puppet regimes in place on a global level. In light of the
atrocities being committed everywhere, but most notably in Haiti
over the past few weeks, it is commendable that members of the Black
Congress are leading the fight for truth, transparency and accountability
in this administration of wealthy white lunatics. I have been
following the words of Randall Robinson, Hazel Ross Robinson, Charles
Rangel, Maxine Waters and Barbara Lee during this time, and I especially
enjoyed the excerpts from the questioning of the greasy slime devil,
Roger Noriega – both Waters and Rangel showed him for the filthy
little liar and coward he is.
I really appreciate the courage of your publication in telling it
like it really is - and Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice should be
ashamed of
the way they have sold their heritage and their souls
for the chance to be included in this white man's grab for global domination.
An American guy named Jim
writes:
Outstanding
analysis and exceptionally informative article
on Haiti, the Bush Gang's latest
aggressive misadventure in nation destroying.
Undermining
the authority and kidnapping a duly elected representative of the
Haitian people
is the latest diplomatic "tactic" perpetrated by America's
current D.C. based gang of thugs. I assume this act was
intended to put the government of Venezuela on notice that they may
be next (although thankfully the U.S's first meddlesome attempt at
removing President Chavez, i.e. regime change, was unsuccessful).
As egregious
as the above acts
were I am more concerned about the current administration's use of
the threat of international terrorism (demonizing Islam etc.)
to cover the dismantling of America's economy and their personal
financial gain i.e. Halliburton etc.
The truth
is that the Bush Gang has committed "high crimes and treasonous activities" against
the American people that dwarf in magnitude any alleged crimes
committed by the leaders of any
nation anywhere in the world today.
Thanks
for another excellent, incisive, informative article on the facts
behind the facade of America's present domestic/foreign policy decisions
and actions.
Kevin McLaughlin sends greetings
from San Francisco.
I happened
upon The Black Commentator a few weeks ago, subscribed to the weekly
newsletter,
and I've been thoroughly appreciative
of your work ever since. I have particularly appreciated your in-depth
reporting on Haiti. You
present a very balanced and reasonable
perspective; the articles are thorough, original and clear; and quite
obviously you provide
a voice that is so sorely lacking
in the corporate media. I don't know how you fund it, but please,
continue on!
TV journalism dead
American media superimpose
themselves on the real world, forcing
the rest of us to bear witness to their internal dramas. Freedom
Rider columnist Margaret Kimberley
reviewed the latest act in the race-play
starring Jayson Blair, featuring his self-flagellation on the book
promotion circuit, during which
Blair invited dim bulbs like Katie
Couric to join in the whipping. Ms.
Kimberley called her March 11 piece
“Jayson
Blair – Return
of the Prodigal.”
Ms. Couric
did her best hard hitting journalism with statements like, “You sound like an
obnoxious jerk to work with.” Blair just looked embarrassed and agreed
that he was, “a pain to work with.” However,
the would be investigative reporter
did not tell viewers that her
colleague at sister network
MSNBC, Mike Barnicle, was fired
by the Boston Globe for committing
the same infractions as Jayson Blair.
Katie
Couric inadvertently exposed more than she realized. Real journalism
just doesn’t exist
on television anymore. If Katie Couric was going to spend her time
talking to Jayson Blair she could have asked serious questions about
his substance abuse and bipolar disorder. She might have asked if
he had advice for functioning addicts who reach the inevitable point
where they cannot function. Unfortunately, “how do we know you aren’t
lying now” is all that Ms. Couric can manage.
The New York Times’ Judith
Miller remains on the payroll, despite having collaborated with Iraqi
exile Ahmed Chalabi to make “the case for a war that has killed 12,000
Iraqi civilians but a year after the invasion and occupation of Iraq
no WMDs have been found,” wrote Kimberley. Something’s rotten in
this story, says Joseph Osorio, a frequent correspondent of Native
American ancestry.
Freedom
Rider's piece on Jayson Blair was excellent. She humanized someone
who I'd thought
was just a spoiled punk,
and she put things into perspective. White people really did jump
all
over this one, as I recall many of them
used the incident as an excuse
to trash affirmative action. Her comparison
between Mr. Blair plagiarizing stories and Judith Miller
prostituting herself to publish Chalabi's lies showed
who really disgraced the
New York Times.
Meanwhile,
from the department of pride against hopeless odds – my family
and I are all voting Peace and Freedom this year. Leonard Peltier
is their candidate here in
California. I realize with
the need to get the Pirates out of the White House such a gesture
is not only futile but maybe stupid. Nevertheless,
we will support our Native
Brother. Leonard
has been behind
bars for 28 years while the murdering
rapist [former congressman
and prosecutor] William Janklow
who railroaded him went on
to political
success (cut short by drunkenly
killing a motorcyclist).
When the White man takes
everything else, futile gestures
are all we have
left!
Take care
my friends and keep up your great work.
On February 26 Ms. Kimberley
took Black Memphis Congressman
Harold Ford to task for failing to grasp the ongoing need to study
Black History. Rep. Ford inflicted his
shallow analysis on students at Miles College.
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.
Phillip Giannikas has his
own Harold Ford story.
How ironic
that on the day that I get your issue commenting upon Harold Ford,
Jr., he should
be speaking in town
here in Nashville at the gathering of the Music Row Democrats.
I went to hear him speak.
Listening to him was an exercise in patience. The whole time
he was coming out with tired Kerry/DLC talking points and rhetoric,
my sense of
inner disheartenment did nothing
but grow.
I will give him credit for this: He is very good and very slick
with spouting the John Kerry/DLC bullshit.
Perhaps all politicians are this way in the end. However, it is clear
to me that there is only one thing that this guy cares about: His
own political ambitions.
What was most disheartening, however, was seeing how he "wooed" a
crowd of people with
his crap. Obviously, most people don't know
him very well. Otherwise,
there would have been more
knowledge about what he's about. But
it is sad to see such an ignorant,
herd mentality take place among
human beings.
Ford was one of only four
members of the Congressional
Black Caucus who supported George Bush’s Iraq War Powers Resolution,
in 2002.
Bush Burgers
With
manufacturing jobs
nearing extinction, administration spin masters have floated the
idea that burger flipping should count as blue
collar employment – part
of the hamburger assembly
process. Last week,
we featured South Carolina
Black Congressman James
Clyburn’s
Guest Commentary, “Is
Building a Burger Manufacturing a Product?”
Combining
that all-beef patty, special sauce, lettuce, cheese, pickles, and
onions on a sesame seed bun may require a form of production, but
it doesn’t constitute a product. Would Mr. Bush differentiate
between the fast food employees who make the sandwiches and those
who ring up the orders? How about between the ones who cook
the French or “freedom” fries and the ones who “bust” the tables? That
sandwich may be as popular as a BMW but it is not assembled in a
factory and shipped to outlets, creating jobs for truck drivers,
railroad employees and air and sea workers. For most Americans,
a trip to a fast food establishment is an abbreviated visit to a
full-service restaurant. What can we expect to see next, the
job of making a Singapore Sling reclassified to one of manufacturing?
Bill Campbell thinks the
Republican proposal is ridiculous enough on its face.
I enjoyed
the article. But
Congressman Clyburn might want to remember there is a title and job
description for what those employees of fast food restaurants do. They
are short order cooks, and what they do is called cooking. I
think that is the nomenclature that was used in the 40’s and 50’s. I
appreciate the distinctions he is making tongue in cheek, but labeling
the activity by its rightful appellation, I believe, obviates any
argument the Bush administration might try to make as to what kind
of jobs are done, and what they should be labeled as at fast food
restaurants.
By not making a declarative sentence it gives these slimy weasels
just the opening they need to raise an argument. Plain talk beats
the heck out of whatever obfuscation these men try. The more
convoluted they become, the plainer and straighter we should be.
The color of Jesus
It is
impossible to avoid
media hype of Mel Gibson’s movie, “The Passion
of the Christ.” Like
the rest of us, Miles
Willis has seen the
promotional clips.
Despite the Aramaic,
Latin and Hebrew
dialogue, the film
offends
history, Willis wrote
in his March 11 Think
Piece, “The
Passion of the Whites.”
The fact is that white people desperately want to believe
that Jesus was white….
Throughout
Europe there
remain a number of places of worship which feature paintings, statues
and frescoes of a dark-skinned Jesus and His
mother Mary
such as the cathedral of Moulins in France, the Church of Annunciata,
the Church of St. Stephen at Genoa, the St. Francisco
at Pisa, the
Church of St. Theodore at Munich, etc. While not conclusive, these
facts offer at least as much proof that Jesus was a man of
color as any
that may support his having been a fair-skinned, flaxen haired
Caucasian, but you’d never know it. Ironically, the only
person I’ve heard discuss the issue of the film’s casting of a
white actor portraying Jesus is NBC‘s "Tonight Show" host
Jay Leno. To paraphrase, Leno insisted that only a black man could
have been arrested, tried, convicted, sentenced to death and executed
within twelve hours!
Reverend Jeanette M. Pollard’s
take on the film is…an inspiration!
I went
to see the "Passion" shortly
after its release. I was struck by the obvious difference in how
Jesus looked, compared to even his disciples. Many of the film's
actors certainly did not look Afro-Asiatic; but at least their hair
was not thin, straight, and could easily blow in the wind! The
actor who played Jesus had a thin pointed nose, thin lips, pale skin,
and long thin straight hair. The only alteration to the usual European
look of Jesus was the absence of blonde hair.
In reviewing the film's
credits, it
was amazing that Mel Gibson used one and only one theological consultant
in the production of this film. Perhaps this is why some
of the sequences of events in the film were not as they appear in the
Gospels. Interestingly, the sole theological consultant was a
Ph.D. Catholic Jesuit priest. Mr. Willis was absolutely correct
that religion has played a major role in fostering racism and supremacy. Dr.
James W. Peeples, publisher of The Original African Heritage Study
Bible (1993), names just two of untold numbers who used religion to
lift up one race and put down another race: Catholic priest Bartholomo
de las Casas ( Preface, pg. 1), and Bishop Reverend William Mead (Preface,
pg.9).
Although the film makers
made it a point
to have Jesus portrayed as white as possible, they inadvertently sent
a subtle message I know others besides myself picked
up. The character cast as Simon of Cyrene was obviously African,
as should have been; after all Cyrene is in Africa! Initially forced
to help Jesus carry the cross, Simon showed more compassion for Jesus
than anybody else who didn't already have a relationship with Jesus. So,
the next time some white person wants to try to say that Jesus was
white, I'll just remind them that it was a kind hearted Black man who
helped Jesus carry His cross while the white folks were kicking Jesus'
behind!!!
Finally, there are enough Black people with millions ($) in the film
industry to do an accurate historical, cultural, and theological film
on the life
and death of Jesus to shut everybody up!!
David Swanson has been decompressing
since January, when he resigned as press person for Dennis Kucinich’s
presidential campaign. Since then, Swanson has been writing on subjects
of his own choosing (see examples at www.davidswanson.org), no longer subject
to the demands of campaign strategies. Swanson even finds time to
read for his own pleasure, these days.
Miles
Willis
has done us the favor of drawing out a big lie that all sides of
a popular debate are agreed upon, by asking not "Was it the
Jews' fault?" or "Did they have to show Jesus being hurt?" or
some other incoherent pseudo-question, but rather "Why did they
make Jesus white?" I commend him.
I think
I can top him. I
think there's a question that even Willis hasn't asked, namely: Why
are we supposed to care more about the details in the life of a
single admirable person who died millennia ago than about the
lives of people living today and the lives of the many moral leaders
that have passed before us or are sharing the planet with us now? Why,
after the passage of these millennia, do we insist on pretending
that death isn't really death and refuse to acknowledge that we're
on our own and had better start living up to the fact? Living
up to that fact should include banning the dumping of millions of
dollars into any movie, regardless of the casting, while
children
are starving.
We are
morally weak, and religion helps keep us that way, helps sanctify
the status quo while
diminishing
the importance of "this existence." Let's
grow up, shall we.
Down – and
out – by law
University
of
Dayton law professor Vernellia R. Randall has authored the most
thorough
guide we’ve seen to help prospective minority law students
avoid
being discriminated against. We featured Prof. Randall’s
piece, Race, Racism
and the Law,” in our March 4 issue.
It is
not intentional, in your face, “we don’t want Blacks” in our law school, kind of discrimination. No,
it is that hard to understand and even harder to eliminate institutional
racism.
Institutional
racism occurs where an institution adopts a policy, practice, or
procedure that
appears
neutral on its face but has a disproportionately negative impact
on a racial or ethnic minority group.
In the
case of law schools, the discriminatory practice is the misuse of the Law School
Admission Test (LSAT) in the admission process. Specifically,
it is estimated that at least 90% of law schools, have admission
practices that presumptively deny applicants based on how they fall
on a grid formulated around LSAT and Undergraduate Grade Point average
(UGPA). It is this misuse of the LSAT that has a discriminatory impact.
Prof. Randall’s site is
a treasure trove for both scholars and students.
Leutisha Stills, of Oakland,
California, once aspired to the law. Here’s her story.
I was
a law student at John F. Kennedy University Law school in Walnut
Creek, California
in 2001-2002. Apparently, at the time I was admitted, the school
was under pressure to admit more minorities and women, because some
student raised a stink about the lack of diversity in the Law School.
So the school gets a hired gun by the name of Michael Guarino, a
former DA from Los Angeles, to come in and beef up enrollment of
minorities and women. I
know for a fact that the
LSAT was not a
contributing factor in
my admission because I
scored 135 on the last
LSAT I took, eight years
before I was admitted. In
other words, the school
ignored my LSAT score because
of their need to get the
EEOC off their backs,
and it was an easy way
for them to get cash
(i.e., federal student
loans).
I
was diagnosed with severe
anemia in 2002 - this condition
affected my ability to
perform in law school. Subsequently, I was disqualified
because
of low grades. I was told to re-apply, but in being considered
for
re-admission, I would have to take the LSAT. Yet there were white
students
who flunked out of JFK and cited illness as their reason, and were
re-admitted to the school. They didn't have to take the LSAT
to be readmitted, either. Additionally, at the time
of my rejection, a former law professor (African-American) who taught
at JFK had just published the
results
of studies he had done to prove that the LSAT was, and is, a tool
designed to systematically screen out African-American and Latino
students.
The professor made a
valid argument for the test to be tossed. In fact, one of my classmates,
a Latina, was also disqualified after citing illness as her reason
for flunking out (she had a liver condition and had to be hospitalized
on a couple of occasions).
When you take the LSAT, even the test designers and administrators
tell participants up front that the test has NOTHING to do with assessing
one's
ability
to do well in law school; but that they were asked by law school
deans to
design
an admission
test
that
was designed
to screen
out minorities
and reduce
the numbers
of minorities
being
admitted
to law
schools. So
the deck
is stacked
against
an African-American
or Latino
before
he hits
the door.
Once
Dean
Guarino
got the
numbers
up for
the school,
the academia
repaid
him. He
made
the mistake
of actually
being
concerned
about
the students
that
he was
tasked
to recruit;
he wanted
to see
them
succeed. Once
I put
together
the pieces
of this
pie,
I filed
an EEO
complaint
with
the U.
S. Department
of Education. They
rubber-stamped
the position
statement
given
to them
by the
school,
without
doing
a thorough
investigation
(in fact,
the investigator
told
me because
the Bush
Administration's
attitude
towards
civil
rights
didn't
make
discrimination
issues
a "priority" my
case
would
not be
processed
vigorously). I
forwarded
a copy
of my
complaint
to my
then
Congressional
representative,
Pete
Stark,
and to
his credit,
he demanded
they
re-open
my case. That
was two
years
ago,
with
no response
forthcoming
from
Education
Secretary
Rod Paige's
plantation....
The
LSAT
is a
racist
test
designed
to ensure
that
the admission
of minorities
to law
school
remains
low. It
is also
a good
indication
that
Bush's
amicus
curiae
brief
supporting
the plaintiff's
position
in Bollinger
v. Grutter
(Univ.
of Michigan
Law School
Affirmative
Action
case)
was not
necessary
because
the Hard
Right
already
has tools
in place
to continue
facilitation
of discrimination. Tools
like
the LSAT. And
the Law
Schools
go along
with
this
until
they
are embarrassed
and forced
to defend
their position while trying to posture as an equal opportunity facility.
As Walter Cronkite would say "And that's the way it is...”
Just wanted
to take a moment to let you know how much I appreciate the thoughtful
content
and easy style of your Web-forum. Not only do I share articles
(and suggestions to subscribe) with my Black friends and colleagues,
but also with colleagues and friends across the cultures and classes. Even
when I don't agree with a particular writer's viewpoint (or should
I say, if I did disagree), I feel that there is a capacity on the
site to be as inclusive as possible in the debates that may be unleashed.
Most important, I would like to thank the various writers who contribute
material,
taking the time to construct and contribute so many of the same thoughts
and feelings I, too, would share -- if I could write that well and
if
I had the time!
Thanks again, and I hope that your site is doing well in the parallel
universe.
Claudia Dweck is almost
as excited about us as we are with ourselves!
What a
pleasure to read The
Black Commentator! In this period of irresponsible
reporting, your views are particularly necessary. Well
pointed and well written--great combination.
www.blackcommentator.com
Your
comments are welcome.
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