Saturday, November 3, 2012

Rise Up Hip Hop Nation: 2012 Voter Resource Guide


 


Unlike most voter guides, this “resource guide” does not advocate candidates or positions, but instead ideas, critical thinking and important video and article resources to review to get a well-rounded understanding of the social construction of politics and reality.


REAL CLEAR POLITICS

 
We are capable of bearing a great burden, once we discover that the burden is reality and arrive where reality is. – James Baldwin from The Fire Next Time

 
This is probably one of my favorite quotations…and I believe one of the most insightful words ever written. James Baldwin understood this country better than most ever will. He knew what most still have not accepted: until all Americans accept our history, this country is doomed for self destruction (from white delusion and black disillusion).

James Baldwin clearly understood that the system of reality most white Americans function in has never meshed with historical reality.[1] This system of reality is at a crossroads and this election will reveal the next trajectory in the journey.[2]


RAW POLITICS

 
The presidential election is almost over…thank God. Many variables may affect the results - including some that were not expected. The east coast is still trying to recover from a devastating storm and much of the nation’s focus is rightly on supporting that recovery highlighting the best of our humanity. But on the political side, we see some of the worst aspects of our humanity, our most cynical tendencies. Efforts to misinform, suppress and intimidate voters are ratcheting up. Reports of armies of poll watchers and election machine irregularity raise questions about the legitimacy of the actual result we do get. But despite all the possible variables, Obama will probably win….but I think it will be close. I think we may have reached an historical tipping point.

 

DEMOGRAPHIC POLITICS

 
Folks may think this election is about the economy...but this country's economic fate was sealed a long time ago...around the time that globalization took stronghold. If Romney wins, it will not be because of the economy...it will be because of RACE. This is slated to possibly be the most racially polarized election in history.[3][4] Gender will be an important factor as well, but not as much as it could have been if race was not THE factor.[5]

 
The Real 47%

As much play as the video of Romney dismissing 47% of this country got, there has been little discussion of the other 47%....the 47% that will NEVER vote for Obama because of his race. He could walk on water and turn water into wine, and they still would not embrace him. Of course, their disdain will remain veiled in coded language like ‘socialist’ ‘big government spender’, ‘Muslim’ etc., but what you can read behind all those words is the same thing....black.[6]

In some ways it feels like we are back to the Civil War era with sharp racial lines by geographic regions and polling data reveals this demographic reality.  Among working class whites, the breakdown by region = Midwest +8 Obama (manufacturing/union factor), West +8 Romney, NE +4 Romney, and the South  +40 for Romney breakdown. According to political scientist Prof. Frederick Harris, it is this racial reality that has allowed Obama to ignore the social and political needs of African Americans and has silenced African American criticism of said abandonment.[7]  It is true that many African Americans avoid discussing race in the Obama era…most notably, Obama (and purposely I would argue).

 

ELECTORAL POLITICS

So how will Obama win with this motivated majority against him?

I think his margin of victory will be smaller in blue states (loss of some white support). I believe his margin of defeat in red states may be much bigger (motivation of more whites to vote against him). It is entirely possible that he may lose the popular vote, and win the electoral vote.


His ability to win swing states depends on GOTV efforts. If enough women vote and he’s able to have a net + gender gap, he will win in Pennsylvania, Ohio, Iowa, Wisconsin, New Hampshire, and possibly Colorado and Virginia. If the percentage of Latinos voting is higher than 2008, he will win Nevada and possibly Colorado and Florida because of it.  If he does not get a net + in turnout for these demographic groups, he could lose any and all of the swing states based on the net – race variable.

 

My Prediction: The Electoral Map                                  


 

THIRD EYE (PARTY) POLITICS


"Media does not reflect reality, it defines it"... The corporate media blackout of the many presidential candidates not from the two-party corporate system serves as a constant reminder that democracy still does not exist in this society. Maybe one day we will actually know ALL the people listed on our ballots that are running for office. That day we will be able to say we live in a democracy. But that does not mean we will live in a progressive society. That will take much more time. Equality of opportunity does not equal equality of condition. Yes, the message and the messenger matter, but so does the recipient...context is everything...and in electoral politics, the context = constituent groups with polar interests.[8]

While many may choose to vote strategically in a flawed system, voting one’s conscious and one’s interest makes perfect sense always. I personally understand why folks do not want to vote for “the lesser of two evils” or a corporatist candidate in red or blue stripes. While I personally don’t agree with the stance to “not vote”, I can even understand that some people are so disenchanted with the system they don’t see how their votes in a national level election affect their daily reality. Lupe Fiasco got a lot of heat recently for stating that while he engages in local elections, he would not be voting in the presidential election. After learning that one of his major inspirations for his latest work was James Baldwin, I had a better understanding of where he was coming from….Lupe understands the burden of reality…Lupe is a realist.

But in hip hop, we also have progressive visionaries. The vision and groundwork to one day achieve a new reality of social equality must be done now and always. In electoral politics, independent (third party) political parties play an important role in that effort.  Hip Hop journalist Davey D penned an important article that challenges the idea that voting for a third party candidate spoils elections.[9]  Shamako Noble of Hip Hop Congress and the Green Party makes a very strong case that Hip Hop and the Green Party share similar visions and needs, and he provides concrete examples of how progressive movement from the relationship has already manifested.[10] Shamako shows that there is no reason to choose either/or; we must embrace a both/and strategy to community organizing and electoral politics. We need visionaries to reach a higher moral plateau. Martin Luther King Jr. was a visionary, and who knows where this country would be today without his leadership and service. For hip hop, we need visionaries like Shamako. He knows what work must be done today to achieve a better tomorrow.

 

MY POLITICS

While I always vote, and analyzing politics is occupational for me, electoral politics is not my primary strategic focus. I believe the only path to freedom is self determination. I follow Carter G. Woodson’s model of service over leadership to achieve community empowerment as laid out in his seminal work Miseducation of the Negro.  For me, organization and localization formulate the best strategy to combat the systemic oppression most people on the planet face daily.
 

That is not to say national politics does not matter to me. It does, but not for the reasons often debated. Politicians, by definition, are professional liars. They must tell people what they want to hear to gain their support. That system is inherently flawed. But within the system, there is room for true public servants that truly want to serve the public good; and a society as large and complex as this one desperately needs good public servants. Unfortunately due to the corporatization of the system (money in politics), most of our national representatives (in Congress and the White House) are now politicians and not public servants. Until we remove money from politics, this will remain the case.

 
But I still vote. Aspects of local, state, and even the national election matter to different aspects of my identity.  As a women, reproductive rights and Supreme Court nominations matter. As a social scientist, platforms that recognize that validity of research, data, and science matter. As a public employee & organized labor union member under attack, voting to protect my right to collectively bargain matters. As a community college professor, voting to protect public education matters. And for me personally as I stated in 2008, as an African American, rattling white supremacists like Rush Limbaugh was change enough for me to believe in…lol. I usually vote my union’s platform (which usually aligns with the Democratic Party), although in some cases I will vote for Green and/or Peace and Freedom Party as well. In California, that is often possible.

 


“Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will. Find out just what any people will quietly submit to and you have found out the exact measure of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them, and these will continue till they are resisted with either words or blows, or both. The limits of tyrants are prescribed by the endurance of those whom they oppress.” - Frederick Douglass

 
This is my other favorite quotation…I cite it often in my writing and recite it often in my classes.

For me this year’s presidential election is not about any of my personal reasons I listed above. While I believe Obama will win, I also believe Obama needs to win for more important historical implications. This nation’s entire history is a racialized one, and the national psyche has still not come to grips with its original sin. For this nation to have the best chance to finally address the question of the color line and progress, an Obama win is necessary.

If Romney wins (or Obama for that matter), black disillusion will not change. I know that Douglass speaks the truth when he says that power concedes nothing without a demand. My hope is that we as a people will resist, but my fear is that our endurance for oppression is great, and if anything our endurance has increased not decreased…and instead of resist, we will continue to endure as we have been.

However, if Obama wins AGAIN, white delusion of their supremacy will face yet another reality check, and as we have seen in the last four years, many white Americans will revolt. A second Civil War may ensue; it may stay safely in the Republican Party, or it may spill out to the streets of Arizona, or a courtroom in FL when the Trayvon Martin case begins. But there will be sparks to inflame the Fire Next Time….and for this country to truly move FORWARD, these sparks will prove necessary.  Like James Baldwin and Lupe Fiasco, I am a realist above all, and believe that MANY in this country are not ready for TRUE progressive leadership and will not be for a very long time because as Baldwin correctly understood, many Americans have not accepted history yet. Most (not all) people of color accepted this historical reality a long time ago …we had no choice.  But no progress can be made until everyone has no choice. Everyone must be forced to accept history or this country is doomed for destruction. Either way, we will know which one is more likely on November 7th.

 
We cannot be free until they are free – James Baldwin from The Fire Next Time


“If we do not dare everything, the
fulfillment of that prophecy, re-created from the Bible in song by a slave, is
upon us: God gave Noah the rainbow sign,
No More water, the fire next time!” – James Baldwin

 

 



[1] MUST VIEW VIDEO: 1965 Oxford Debate between James Baldwin and William Buckley (the father of modern conservatism).  James Baldwin segment = 14:15-38:15 (24 minutes)
 
[2] Read my latest essay titled: 2012: A Year of Reckoning, Awakening, or Both?  Link = http://hiphopandpolitics.wordpress.com/2012/08/20/rise-up-hip-hop-nation-2012-a-year-of-reckoning-awakening-or-both/
 
[3] Read related article: a. How does race shape the vote? link = bit.ly/X5Cz8F
[5] White men will overwhelmingly support Romney which will balance out some of the gains Obama has with getting majority of women’s vote. Also, there is a decent % of white women voting race over gender. WATCH Video: Gloria Steinem on Politics Nation. Link = http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45755884/#49650012
Also READ Altenet.org article Why frightened white men love Mitt Romney. Link = http://www.alternet.org/election-2012/why-frightened-white-men-love-romney
 
[6] MUST see video: Ohio Romney Rally - Interviews with Supporters. Link =  youtu.be/nY0M7IdNl7U
**note the title play off of James Baldwin’s book The Price of the Ticket
[8] I wrote an essay in 2009 titled: DisUnited States of America: The Red, White, Blue...and above all Green. Link = http://riseuphiphopnation.blogspot.com/2009/12/disunited-states-of-america-red-white.html
 
[10] Read article: Jared Ball and Rosa Clemente Were Right by Shamako Noble. Link = http://hiphopandpolitics.wordpress.com/2012/11/02/jared-ball-and-rosa-clemente-were-right-by-shamako-noble/
 

Saturday, September 8, 2012

2012: A Year of Reckoning, Awakening, or Both?

Now that the RNC and DNC conventions are over....are you ready for some football? :) My friend and hip hop journalist Davey D had me on his radio program (Hard Knock Radio) a couple weeks ago to discuss my latest essay on Race and the 2012 election... I was also an invited panelist for a session (on same topic) at the American Sociological Association's annual conference in Denver last month, and this "essay" = my notes for that panel. The essay is pretty long, but if you are interested, please check it out!

link = http://bit.ly/RvuaK6




The Long Hiatus

Yes, I do still have a blog. Memo to self: Post more consistently...if only a quick thought, or an interesting link to share. I will try to get better :)

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Question - Is Red Tails worth supporting....REALLY?

SO all over my FB wall are posts about the movie RED TAILS. I am a strong advocate of supporting films with black actors in general, and i don't even hate on George Lucas cuz I like the original Star Wars trilogy :) Yoda is a life philoshoper...lol..


but I have serious reservations as I've been on a hollywood ban of any story about black people or people of color that insists on promoting either black subordination or white hero syndromes (Avatar, Blind Side,The Help, Precious, etc).

But the different opinions on this i've seen have been pretty interesting...As a student and teacher of AFAM history, I am particularly interested in our racialized understanding of not only that time in history but hollywood today...


This note is a reply to one FB post about Red Tails.

He posted:

"EXTRACT RACIAL PRIDE FROM THE DISCUSSION AND "RED TAILS" IS JUST A MOVIE ABOUT MEN KILLING PEOPLE."



part of my reply =

Context is EVERYTHING, and there is NO extracting from it. while i honestly do appreciate your humanist bend, ignoring "race" (which is a social construction) in a totally racialized world and history is not the answer. one of the reasons there was racial pride in the Tuskegee airmen = Jim Crow ruled at home and lynchings were commonplace....remember those? and trust me RACE MATTERED in lynchings. So black folks of that era lived in a context where their skin could truly be their sin still. so for you in one flip remark to say that folks should not feel pride in the history they have endured and still [I] rise above it all (literally for red tails )speaks more to your issues than theirs. The only reason you can now talk all the shit you talk so freely is because of SACRIFICES of PROUD BLACK PEOPLE that came before you that endured pain you'll never understand because of an "unreal" thing such as race that had very real consequences for their lives.

personally, i wasn't planning to see Red Tails because i don't need to see any more hollywood movies that insist telling stories of our history by throwing in white main benevolent characters to make it "marketable" and palatable to "mainstream" audiences...read white.


There is a movie i just watched (again) that is of the same era and gives you a great sense of why race matters...The Great Debaters.Whites played the roles they should have played in that story...as subjects in black life: as oppressors, as authorities (sheriffs), as fellow community members that they lived amongst in the South (sharecroppers) but there was NO white hero...no significant white character. And unlike Red Tails, Black women were represented.


But even more importantly, a serious message was conveyed...and lynchings, organizing, and civil disobedience were the juxtaposition of that message. On the one hand, it showed the efforts to organize sharecroppers (white and black together) into unions in the 30s...class consciousness. It also showed the reality of college students in the south, well accomplished and affluent but still powerless when it came to Jim Crow. Coming upon a lynch mob with a black man's burning body hanging from a tree...all they could do was hide in their black professor's middle class car and hit reverse before they suffered the same fate.



And upon reflection of that lynching event at the final debate in the movie, the youngest debater in defense of civil disobedience explained that there is no justice to depend on for a black person in the Jim Crow south. As black people we have chosen to try to excel in the system (like these debaters and the tuskegee airmen) or fight it through words and civil disobedience (like Frederick, Martin, Malcolm, SNCC etc)...The young man recalled the lynch mob they came up on, seeing the black body (strange fruit) hanging and having to run away before they were next, powerless to help that brother came to the conclusion that...AMERICA SHOULD BE GRATEFUL THAT WE CHOOSE CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE AS OUR MEANS OF PROTEST...that's the truth no one is ready for...but the reality of our humanity shines. you should show due respect for that humanity.



From the Great Debaters

James Farmer Jr.: In Texas they lynch Negroes. My teammates and I saw a man strung up by his neck and set on fire. We drove through a lynch mob, pressed our faces against the floorboard. I looked at my teammates. I saw the fear in their eyes and, worse, the shame. What was this Negro's crime that he should be hung without trial in a dark forest filled with fog. Was he a thief? Was he a killer? Or just a Negro? Was he a sharecropper? A preacher? Were his children waiting up for him? And who are we to just lie there and do nothing. No matter what he did, the mob was the criminal. But the law did nothing. Just left us wondering, "Why?" My opponent says nothing that erodes the rule of law can be moral. But there is no rule of law in the Jim Crow south. Not when Negroes are denied housing. Turned away from schools, hospitals. And not when we are lynched. St Augustine said, "An unjust law is no law at all.' Which means I have a right, even a duty to resist. With violence or civil disobedience. You should pray I choose the latter.




Recommendation for the week: (Re)watch The Great Debaters.




Tuesday, January 17, 2012

2012...

...it's all about self determination, not self interests....and understanding the very REAL difference. 


easily distracted = easily manipulated = easily controlled. Seize power, don't cede power....i.e "self determination"...how?


“Take no one’s word for anything, including mine – but trust your experience.” – James Baldwin


Must read for the week:


Letter from a Birmingham Jail [King, Jr.]
www.africa.upenn.edu


‎"To put it in the terms of St. Thomas Aquinas: An unjust law is a human law that is not rooted in eternal law and natural law."

Sunday, September 11, 2011

An End of an Empire ...or an Opportunity for a New UNITED States of America? Time Will Tell.

In 2008, I wrote a blog titled:

WARGAMES - The Fall of Empire


Basically, the status the U.S. has held as world superpower is eroding and eroding quickly. I would argue that this has been a self-inflicted fall, and a long time coming. While it will be painful, and most painful for the most vulnerable, I also believe it to be an opportunity for us to build a more perfect union....time will tell.

But times are a changing. 

In 2007, I wrote an essay I titled The Fire This Time

It was an analysis of post-Katrina community organizing, specifically around the Jena case of racial injustice. By using Spike Lee films as metaphors, I argued that this generation (hip hop) had matured and was ready to take the front line in the struggle. I argued that while power dynamics had not changed, and our history had always been one of resistence to repressive dynamics (particularly re: white supremacy), times have changed and now we are able to sustain a people based movement. My reasoning was based on the following:

1. Change would be cultural based.... A cultural generational shift would be part of the catalyst. Jeff Chang wrote an important essay about this cultural and generational shift: http://colorlines.com/archives/2010/11/jeff_chang_interview.html

2. The critical realization that "they don't care about us" so we must take care of ourselves (so poignantly expressed on live TV by Kanye West when he stated that Bush doesn't like Black people). While many may have given lip service to the notion before, the images from TV showed the reality of it...and there was no choice but to fully embrace self determination as the only path to survival...and freedom. Depending on the government or other people's "better nature" gets you "status quo". 

I tell my classes that the main lesson I want them to learn is that "they don't care about you"... "they" can be substituted by "power" or  "the status quo social structure".  So we must ACT to secure what is in our best interest and the interest of our families and community.

The road to hell is paved with good intentions... and the road to freedom and salvation is paved with ACTION (good deeds, acts, and service). And those that think they can get to the "promise land" through the actions of others, be it a leader or their "Savior"... will find that promise land forever elusive....

3. The changing world order has undermined the U.S empire's power..and Bush's overreaching policies (wars and more privitazation) actually helped accelerate the downfall. Multinational corporations now trump the power of nation-states ...market supremacy has replaced white supremacy as the #1 global organizing principle. Everyone is in a race to the bottom which is now within reach with the highest concentration of wealth among only a small percentage.

4. The other side of the same coin is changing world dynamics, specifically re: technology. Globalization has opened up the world...and made it much smaller at the same time. Disney was right: It’s a small world after all. :) Technology has forever changed the power to control information. Propaganda is still a viable tool via media framing, but with technology, information comes quickly and much more freely via a number of sources.  The status quo power structure will have to take more drastic means to maintain its control; hence more infractions on civil liberties, police state, corrupt politics, etc.

5. But Bob Marley explains the root of all change: A hungry mob is an angry mob. The concentration of wealth is unsustainable and when people get desperate enough, they will fight back. and, you get....Revolution. And today that is in the Middle East. Tomorrow? It could be anywhere. It could be here.


This past week was all about JOBS. On September 8, 2011, President Obama delivered his much anticipated jobs speech to Congress.





A friend also sent me an article that was buzzing around the internet titled: Are Jobs Obsolete?  This article is an important read for anyone who is interested in a more just world. Its premise is provocative, but Rushkoff (author) provides an interesting vision for the future. It is worthy of a serious dialogue.  After reading it, I thought of all the reasons it  makes good sense for this country given the crossroads we are at. In many ways, I see the roots of his premise already at play in countries like Jamaica and in cultures like Hip Hop, where traditional opportunities have always been scarce (read jobs) but survival depended on human ingenuity and self productivity.

I also thought of the objective reality we face that will make this vision difficult to realize  in the near future. The fact that on a finite planet, resources are finite and in a social structure where resources are unevenly distributed, material sustenance is not treated as a basic right, but is instead, used as a hegemonic tool to promote fear over freedom.  As long as material sustenance is always at risk, people can be manipulated via hegemony to the benefit of those controlling the resources. And until the masses control the resources, this manipulation is certain to remain. The present reality in the U.S. is also not the global reality. While the U.S. standard of living is in decline, "emerging markets" around the world are now experiencing a new standard of living and are now only gaining the [false] benefit of being an emerging power in the race to the bottom.  
So while Rushkoff's vision for the future is actually a reality for many already on a micro-level, to achieve macro implementation will mean that not only have we secured a world where all have basic human rights of food and shelter with no fear that they will lose them, but we have also secured a world where all will want no more than those basic human rights.  Cooperative systems will get us the former... they may not be able to guarantee the latter. I'm not sure what will... for that reason, the struggle continues...continuously.

Monday, August 15, 2011

Who is Our REAL Enemy?


I am starting to use my TWITTER acct more often....please follow me!  http://twitter.com/#!/gtwright​s1

Here is a collection of article links, retweets and posts you'll find!

@gtwrights1: It is time to read or re-read James Baldwin's classic, The Fire Next Time...written almost 50 years ago, the FIRE NEXT TIME is upon us NOW..

RT @MMFlint: Chase Bank foreclosed on Oregon soldier yesterday-the day he returns from Iraq! So I ask: Who is our real enemy?

RT @CommonCause; Stop Coddling Me and My Super-Rich Pals, by Warren Buffett:

RT @tavissmiley: The new poor is the former middle class. 

RT @CatalystHouse: Meet the Global Financial Elites Controlling $46 Trillion In Wealth -

RT @Debra129: Large Corporations Are Getting Tax Cuts to Send Jobs Overseas and Pocket Bigger Profits: It's That Simple http://t.co/Bz1LfQD

RT @RBReich: Richest 1% have largest share of nat'l income and wealth in 80 yrs.

RT@mrdaveyd: "extraction. what corporate entities are doing w/ economy. End result = wage slaves in US..booming middle-class elsewhere" - exactly!

RT: @InjusticeFacts: In 2009 the average CEO pay with stock options was $11 MILLION, the average worker pay was $31,000.

The record is clear. Corporate fascists are the real enemy.  This is powerful people v. people power, the 21st century edition...Rise UP!

Powerful People v. People Power: The 21st Century Edition by  link =  please RT

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

What Can Work….And What Never Will





Over a century ago, a struggle for the souls of black folk raged between different leaders with different approaches to black liberation. While all shared similar goals (of black freedom and self determination), these leaders embraced different and often deemed opposing ideological bends on how to achieve those goals. Should we work within a social structure and meet people where they are and build from there? Should we demand full human rights for all - always, regardless of the entrenched power interests whose very existence depends on denying us that humanity? Or would our efforts be best spent uniting as a people to build a nation to rival any that might try to oppress us?

With each leadership approach, victories were achieved, and defeats were inevitable. Washington, DuBois, and Garvey may not have had all the answers, and could not have individually achieved black liberation, but unlike many, they dedicated their lives to this necessary cause - our freedom.  No more could have been asked of them. To the all important question, “what did you do to bring about change?” these men had answers. But the question never is: “what is s/he (leader) doing to bring about change?” The only relevant question is: “what is each and every one of us doing to bring about change?”  The reason black liberation eluded them is because so many individuals then could not answer that question. Many still can’t.

This recurring ideological debate regarding the path to liberation has plagued us since day one. It flared up again during the triumphs and tribulations of the Civil Rights Era, and its most recent reincarnation can be seen in the debate between Dr. Cornel West and Reverend Al Sharpton over President Obama and his leadership (or lack thereof).

Dr. West has expressed great disappointment in President Obama, seeing much of Obama’s policies as an embrace of elite moneyed interests and American imperialism over the welfare of the mass majority of Americans, particularly African Americans who suffer disproportionately from all the plagues of poverty. Many progressives and left leaning academics agree with Dr. West’s portrayal of President Obama, voicing their frustrations daily on blogs and via social media sites.

On the other side of the debate, Reverend Sharpton avoids placing blame at Obama’s feet. While he agrees that the interests of the mass majority are not represented in the current power dynamics, unlike West, Sharpton does not see Obama as a “puppet of Wall Street oligarchs”. He believes Obama is working within a hostile political environment but will act on behalf of the majority when the majority actively engages him. Instead of seeing him as “the” problem, Sharpton chooses to work with Obama to try to build solutions.

Neither approach (West’s criticism of Obama or Sharpton’s support of Obama) seems to be getting us closer to the goal of progressive change. Again, nothing about this debate is new. The struggle for the souls of black folk rages on, with divisions forming and positions staked in concrete. While the debate has been respectful, it has monopolized a good amount of time and energy that one can only believe would be better spent in action, instead of debate.

 

What Can Work: Action

In his leadership and his humanity, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. provided a model of what can work.  While the struggle for the souls of black folk raged during his era as well, Dr. King rarely criticized those that opposed him and his approach. For example, Dr. King refused to publicly debate Malcolm X when challenged. King would not debate, his secretary told Malcolm, because "he has always considered his work in a positive action framework rather than engaging in consistent negative debate." (http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/malcolmx/peopleevents/e_civilrights.html).

Dr. King was a true visionary because this "consistent negative debate" still takes up critical time today that could be spent
serving and organizing our communities.  While history teaches us what leaders have achieved on their individual paths, we will never know what could have been achieved had “rival” leaders (Washington/DuBois/Garvey; Dr. King/Malcolm X) joined forces with a continuously engaged citizenry to collectively pursue a progressive path to freedom.


Dr. King understood that the biggest threat to the civil rights movement did not come from those burning crosses (adversaries) or those with different approaches to the same goal (ideological rivals). The biggest threat to progress came from the MANY that stayed safely away engulfed in their own lives, complacent, and often distracted (inactive). These are the ones that cry how horrible oppression and inequality are but do nothing to change it. It comes down to choosing to remain comfortable or to sacrifice, and unfortunately many stay comfortable. Progress takes sacrifice...progress takes ACTION.

 

What Never Will Work: Insanity

Some define insanity as doing the same thing over and over again expecting different results. While positive actions can work to achieve progress, some things never will work and it is time we come to that realization.


What won’t work?
·         Scapegoating – Whether it be Muslims, “illegal immigrants” (read Mexicans), gays, “big government”, or Obama (from the right of the political spectrum), or Republicans, Wall Street, American imperialism, racists, or Obama again (from the left of the political spectrum), blaming others for our woes is standard practice.  Instead of working actively towards progress, scapegoating allows us a convenient fall guy to point to when no real progress is achieved. The problem with scapegoating is that it provides excuses, but no solutions. So while Dr. West may be correct in his analysis of President Obama’s policies, once Obama is no longer president, his critique will just shift to the next “leader” who maintains the same policies and status quo power structure. An understanding of the problem may be achieved, but a solution to it never will.


What won’t work?
·         Idealism - Depending on people's "better nature" gets you "status quo". There is no doubt that corporate fascists and their paid cronies in government will do what they must do to maintain power... that is a known entity that is solved and needs not revisiting.  Being surprised at corporatists and politicians for being corporatists and politicians is as effective as being mad at a dog for being a dog and barking.  The time we spend criticizing, disillusioned and disgusted from unrealistic expectations is baffling and can only be understood as gripping on to idealistic tendencies that counter progress. While it reveals our basic humanity to want to believe in our fellow mankind, that humanity could be better revealed through service and action. Instead of wishing for better from others (Obama, elected politicians, corporations etc.), we must demand better from ourselves! We must use our energy to seize our power and ACT! It's one or the other - they either control us, or we control them, and while critiques will not change power dynamics, actions will.


What won’t work?
·         Negative Framing – In framing progress, we should be against nothing...just be clear what we are for (Iyanla Vanzant). When we concentrate on what we are against (racism, sexism, white supremacy, capitalism, fascism, homophobia, etc.), we frame the struggle in terms of negatives and sooner or later can lose the true purpose of the struggle...LIFE.  If we frame the struggle in terms of life affirming principles - peace, justice, love, and sustenance, our eyes remain on the prize. 

What won’t work?
·         Ceding our power to “saviors”.  Whether we are taught powerlessness (see Carter G. Woodson’s Miseducation) or whether it is an inherent quality of human nature, most choose not to become personally invested (engage in action) until they feel in some way personally affected (self interest). Many might see the five alarm fire next door but few act unless they are immediately in danger from the fire – but by then, it is possibly too late. If not immediately in danger, we tend to cede our power to so-called “authorities”…leaders, experts, and other “saviors”, instead of acting on our own behalf.  We need to realize that functioning out of self interest just gets us status quo (survival)....functioning from self determination (seizing our power) can lead to progressive change.

It has been said that the road to hell is paved with good intentions. While the hell of slavery has ended for our people, the heaven of freedom still eludes us today.  If the road to hell is paved with good intentions, the road to heaven (the “promise land”) should be paved with POSITIVE ACTION (good deeds, acts, and service). Those that believe they can get to the “promise land" through the actions of others, be it a leader (Obama) or a Savior will find that promise land forever elusive. If we truly want to realize black liberation and end the struggle for the souls of black folk, the only relevant question we must ALL ask and answer = “What are YOU doing to effect change?” When we ALL have an answer to this question, progress will be realized. Yes WE can…but the struggle continues….continuously.


 “Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will. Find out just what any people will quietly submit to and you have found out the exact measure of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them, and these will continue till they are resisted with either words or blows, or both. The limits of tyrants are prescribed by the endurance of those whom they oppress.” - Frederick Douglass


"The time has come. This is it. People are always saying.. 'Oh they, they'll take care of it.' 'The government will do it. They'll' ...They who? It starts with us. ..it's US. Or else it'll never be done." – Michael Jackson