– Jeff
Johnson, America
Votes youth coordinator and commentator for BET’s “Rap City”
“We’re all activists. The question is,
what are we active for? Are we active to forward a rightwing
agenda in America,
or are we active for liberation?”
– Rosa Clemente, co-founder, National Hip
Hop Political Convention (NHHPC)
“Just as the Christian Coalition tapped
into an existing infrastructure of conservative churches,
we as a hip hop generation
are tapping into an existing infrastructure that has been created
by the hip hop movement.”
– Bakari Kitwana, author and co-founder,
NHHPC
American capitalism markets everything it
can package and discards or mangles the rest. As a result,
most “information” found in
the marketplace is, by definition, disinformation – a “product” molded
to suit a transaction, containing no reliable connection to the
truth.
In the absence of a mass Black political
movement, the generation born after 1965 has been named for
the culture it created, rather
than – as with the preceding generation – the political goals
for which they fought. Hip hop culture, the miraculous invention
of Black and Latino youth, is now marketed to the world by five
multinational corporations. The social “reality” and political
worldview of an entire generation (now going on two generations)
has been packaged for sale to both its creators and the larger
market: the planet.
Having been commercially defined as a raw
demographic – a cohort
of customers and product-modelers – the hip hop generation stares
into a mirror that has been purposely cracked and deformed for
somebody else’s profit. Its activists, as brilliant as
any produced at any time or place in history – and intent, like
all healthy young humans, on changing the world – find that they
must first confront the marketed version of themselves.
The 3,000 young people who attended the National Hip Hop Political
Convention in Newark, New Jersey, June 16-20, were determined
to define themselves through a politics of struggle – to
begin to redraw the map of the world through the prisms of their
own experience.
“We are here today as young people under the hip
hop umbrella,” said
Ras Baraka, the 34-year-old Deputy Mayor of Newark, New Jersey,
and one of the organizers of the event. “Politics
is about the seizure of power,” Baraka told the crowd. “Some
of us don’t understand what that means. Our kids think that seizing
power is standing on a corner and doing the things they usually
do.” Each of the 500 official delegates from 17 states had registered
50 voters to earn the right to represent their generation.
Baraka, who is also an assistant public school
principal, doesn’t
show up on the Right’s short list of hip hop generation “leaders.” By
cynically misinterpreting polling data that show Black youth
to be increasingly estranged from the Democratic Party (see , November
21, 2002), and through relentless national media exposure
of young, corporate-sponsored Black politicians, the Right attempts
to package the hip hop generation as essentially more “conservative” than
its elders. The darlings of the Right include Tennessee Congressman
Harold Ford, 34, the Democratic Leadership Council’s most prominent
voice in the Congressional Black Caucus, and Cory Booker, the
35-year-old former Newark Councilman who, with the backing of
the national conservative political and funding network, nearly
captured City Hall in 2002.
What the conservatives prove is that the
current younger generation contains its share of opportunists – just as did the last generation,
and the one before that. But opportunists only show up when they
get paid, and represent nothing but the finances of their sugar
daddies. The National Hip Hop Political Convention had no deep-pocket
sponsors, yet it succeeded on the strength of the organizers’ peer
credibility, and the near-universal desire among Black youth
to overturn the status quo.
Continuity of struggle
So vacuous has American political discourse
become, that corporate spin-makers posing as journalists find
it possible to produced
24-hour news cycles that reveal nothing at all except the political
preferences of media owners. The mass marketing of attitudes
and styles in place of issues and substance, seeks to drain the
language, itself, of the capacity to resist power. A generation
of Black youth that is imprisoned in astronomical numbers is
simultaneously deployed as lifestyle models for the privileged,
prison-immune classes – mass-produced insanity on its face. Yet
in the continuity of Black struggle, people and truths “crushed
to earth” inevitably rise again to confront oppression.
“I believe that we are in this room because
some slave willed us
here,” said Rev. Osagyefo Sekou, the 30-something Executive Director
of New York Common Ground, and a mover-and-shaker of the convention. “We
need a living wage for everyone. I call that a moral question.”
Moral people seek to end injustice, mass
media’s truly taboo
topic. Only by relentless avoidance of the continuity of injustices against
Black people can the media create the impression of vast chasms
between Black generations.
“Get the foot of oppression off our necks.” From the hip hop
perspective, 54-year-old Rev. Calvin Butts, of Harlem’s Abyssinian
Baptist Church, qualifies as an elder. Yet his irreducible demand,
delivered at a Town Hall meeting on the first full day of the
convention, was identical to that of his hip hop audience. Many
were aware of Butts’ history of broad brush criticism of hip
hop culture. However, in the context of a shared struggle against
historical oppression, differences shrink. “Organizing must be
done around a moral core. That moral core must respect all of
us – our women, our children, our elders,” said the preacher. “Without
a moral core, the revolution is wiped out.”
Who would argue with that?
Rich corporations mass-market immorality (after
all, they are the only ones who can), and then label their
products as authentic representations of hip hop generation morals.
Righteously, the organizers of the Newark convention gave primacy
to the morality of struggle – to the chapter and verse of resistance.
A secular elder, Ron Daniels, currently Executive
Director of the Center for Constitutional Rights and a prime
mover in over
three decades of Black political conventions, showed the seamless
connections between culture, morality, and politics. “Art must
be functional and committed,” said Daniels. “This generation
must come to the forefront and lead us to change America.” Nevertheless, “We
cannot, in the name of ‘realness,’ denigrate ourselves.”
“Denigration” was the last thing on these young people’s minds.
At the core of the convention were perhaps a thousand committed
activists – ranging from seasoned, 30-something veterans to promising
neophytes – who have the potential to do great damage to the
powers-that-be.
Fight the Power
In what now seems the Golden Age of socially
conscious hip hop, Public Enemy’s Chuck D demanded that his audiences “fight the
powers that be.” Born in 1960, Chuck D and his peers, the inventors of
the culture, are the political and chronological links between
the so-called “Black Power” and hip hop generations. Currently
a host on radio’s Air America network, Chuck D recalled the suppression
of hip hop. “From 1979 to 1992, there was a sheer abandonment
[of hip hop music by Black radio programmers],” he said. They
banned it.”
During that period, hip hop broke out of
the neighborhoods and fueled the founding of a host of independent
(mostly white-owned)
record labels – an explosion of musical creativity and social
commentary of all kinds. But not until the early Nineties, after
mega-corporations moved to swallow up the genre, did Black-programmed
radio embrace the music of Black youth. Programmers ponderously
intoned that hip hop fans were too young to attract advertisers,
that they were not a valuable demographic – an amazing claim,
since the R & B music that carried Black radio to new heights
in the Sixties was also the music of youth. But many in the hip
hop industry understood the real deal: Black programmers were
afraid of projecting a street “image.” Essentially, hip hop had
an intra-Black, class problem. Don Cornelius wouldn’t touch it,
even though his “Soul Train” TV audience skewed to the younger
demos.
In one of the great ironies of African American
cultural history, Black radio finally embraced hip hop in the
early Nineties – precisely
when the huge corporate record labels shifted to gangsta rap.
Industry researchers discovered that hip hop’s most “active” consumer
base was composed of 12- and 13-year-olds – tweens – a cohort
that is drawn to repetitive profanity and, not having reached
the sexual pairing-off stage of development, revels in misogyny. Artists
and recordings (A & R) executives put great pressure on rap
acts to become more “real” – a word that became a euphemism for
egregiously profane and abusive language. In no time at all,
the industry began churning out music geared primarily to younger
juveniles. Black radio, which had had such a problem with hip
hop before the corporate-guided ascendance of gangsta
rap, dived into the cesspool with wild enthusiasm. The airwaves
became filled with edits, bleeps and audio interruptions that
did nothing to hide the “denigrating” content.
Black middle-class propriety was trumped by the servile imperative
to follow the (white) corporate leader. No one can measure the
accumulated arrested development afflicting youngsters raised
on a profane corporate formula designed for tweens.
New Times, New Tasks
However, the music industry’s version of “real” hasn’t blotted
out reality for the entirety of the hip hop generation. Mutulu,
of Dead Prez, sees the world, clearly. “We gotta keep going,” he
urged the Newark convention. “If we don’t keep going, rap will
continue to be drafted into the capitalist world, the crack world,
the prison industrial complex.”
With a seriousness that wholly contradicts
hip hop stereotypes, conventioneers fanned out in the scorching
sun over three connected
campuses – Essex County College, Rutgers-Newark and New Jersey
Institute of Technology – to attend 50 workshops on every conceivable
aspect of organizing.
The “movement” that was largely demobilized by an upwardly mobile,
self-conscious “leadership class” in the late Sixties, was getting
an update. (See last week’s Cover
Story, “There Needs to be a Movement: Political Action in
the Hip Hop Era.”)
“We looked at cities that have higher levels of Black cops,” Monifa
Bandele explained to a workshop titled: Why Vote? Community Voices
on the Criminal Justice System. “What we saw, clear as day, is
that high levels of Black cops is not the solution.”
Bandele is a Brooklyn leader of the Malcolm
X Grassroots Movement, which also has chapters in Alabama,
Mississippi and California – all
represented at the Newark convention. Black cops are often an
active or passive problem, she said, as was revealed in the 1997
torture of Abner Louima. “You would be shocked to know how many
Black cops were there, in the precinct [where Louima was sodomized
with a mop handle], and they said nothing, they did nothing.”
At a workshop on Our Schools, Our Kids and
the Money, gray-bearded Junius Williams, a legendary Newark
scholar/activist who directs
the Rutgers Abbott Leadership Institute, spoke of a brief period
when street youth were drawn to political warfare rather than
mindless gang-banging. “Had these men been around 30 or 35 years
ago,” said Williams, referring to local gang members who had
spoken to the convention the night before, “they would have been
in a group like the Black Panthers or the Young Lords.”
Whether as neo-Panthers (the New Black Panther
Party was represented at the convention), as hip hop advocacy
journalists (former Source
Magazine executive editor Bakari Kitwana co-founded the convention),
or among the numerous young teachers gathered in Newark under
the hip hop “umbrella,” what’s crucial is that youth become engaged
in struggle of some kind. Rather than whine about older
politicians who refuse to get out of the way, convention co-chair
Angela Woodson exhorted: “Don’t wait for the old guard. If you’re
ready, run!”
Electoral politics, the route taken to the
exclusion of all others by critical elements of a previous
generation’s movement,
has demonstrated its hollowness in the absence of year-round,
grassroots organizing. “Electoral politics is futile, until they
put revolution on the ballot,” said Dead Prez’s Mutulu, 32. But
he says it without prejudice to those who choose electoral political
action – as long as they act!
Very late on a Saturday night, hours behind schedule due to
failure to anticipate a flurry of amendments, the exhausted delegates
to the National Hip Hop Political Convention adopted a Five-Point
Agenda on Education, Economic Justice, Criminal Justice, Health
and Human Rights. (See full document, below.)
This week, hip hop music blared at the entrance to a downtown
Chicago park, where a huge food- and drink-tasting festival was
underway. The local chapter of the National Hip Hop Political
Convention was busy, registering voters. All across the country,
they are taking action.
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National Hip Hop Political Convention
Five-Point Agenda
(The final amendments to the document were not available to .
This is the document submitted to the assembled delegates, without
amendments.)
One. Education