Thursday, May 3, 2007

Humanity's Struggle

(MG) One of the most profoundly gratifying results of my adventures into the blogosphere has been the support and encouragement given to me by bloggers / authors whose works I have posted and commented upon. By way of disclosure, Mr. Larry Pinkney, the author of this article from the May 3 edition of the Black Commentator has been incrediby complimentary to and helpful about my blogging. My heartfelt appreciation and thanks, sir.


The Time Is Upon Us: Reclaiming Our Blackness in Humanity's Struggle

Recently, I sat and found myself entranced by the lyrics of the song entitled, Black Is, as sung by the rich, searingly-powerful, soulful voice of jazz singer extraordinaire Debbie Duncan. "...Black is sky--so stars can shine/Tiger stripes and butterflies/Black is brushed on sparrows wings/Black is many things...." Indeed.

The depth of Blackness is mirrored by a very real, active, political and social consciousness, reflecting what it actually means to be Black, especially in America. In other words, we Black people have an obligation not only to ourselves to be consciously and actively Black, but also to our own political and social struggle in which all of humanity is a part. It is this that is the very essence of Black consciousness and political struggle in America. The stakes for Black people, other people of color, and humanity as a whole are incredibly high; and nothing short of an active reawakening of our political and social consciousness will do, in this time in which we live.

In this vein, let us briefly consider some intensely relevant areas of concern and importance to Black people that this column will be addressing in the future, with a view towards active involvement in humanity's struggle, which is in fact, our own. For the sake of our Blackness, thought and action are required. To some, this call for thought and action might seem a bit disquieting and even uncomfortable, but we must not be deterred, for comfortable people do not make change. It is real systemic change that is necessary for the collective survival and betterment of Black people and this planet.

Included in the varied topics to be addressed in the future by this column:

We shall study Berrien County, specifically the de facto apartheid-like town of Benton Harbor, Michigan, where on a daily basis the myth of democracy in America is being played out in the form of voter intimidation, suppression of Black voting rights, and the wrongful and ruthless prosecution by racist authorities of Black voting rights activist Reverend Edward Pinkney. In Reverend Pinkney's own chillingly descriptive words, "All world citizens should know how corrupt Berrien County's legal system is. It is a danger to every traveler, visitor and guest worker, and to anyone who takes the risky step of entering Berrien County territory." The human rights of Black, Brown, and poor peoples, in the corporate-owned town of Benton Harbor, (Berrien County), Michigan, are akin to the fake rights and democracy being accorded to the people of Iraq and Palestine, etc., by the US.

We shall also address details of the increasing incarceration rate of poor people in America, with a particular emphasis upon Black, Brown, and Red people in the US, as big corporations continue to suck the life blood out of families and communities throughout this nation.

Additionally, we shall make the connections as to why, for example, currently in the case of the San Francisco 8 (San Francisco, California), the US authorities engaged in outright physical torture to extract confessions, and continue to utilize psychological torture and malicious prosecution of former members of the Black Panther Party, for their alleged involvement in the murder of a police officer 36 years ago. Yet, these same Department of 'Justice,' US authorities have not, to this day, charged, prosecuted, or convicted anyone for the overwhelming amount of brutal murders of scores (some reports have indicated hundreds) of Black people whose tortured and dismembered bodies were ingloriously dredged up from the southern Mississippi River in the 1960s.

Further, the enormous significance and negative impact upon Black people in America, at the hypocritical recent release on bail by US authorities of self-confessed terrorist Luis Posada Carriles, whose extradition has been unsuccessfully sought by the nations of Cuba and Venezuela, and who is known to be directly and inextricably linked to a number of bloody terrorist attacks--including the bombing of a Cuban civilian airliner--killing all 73 passengers on board. Black, Brown, and Red peoples know only too well that certain kinds of terrorism which serve the corporate interests of the US are, and have repeatedly been, quite acceptable to America.

Finally, this column will look at and link the various insidious forms of genocide being perpetrated upon Black people and other people of color inside America and around the world--from white racist gentrification in many US cities, to the many other kinds of extinction--as calculatedly and callously being carried out under neocolonialism, in many parts of the world.

It is my sustained hope that this column will serve to inform, challenge, and inspire.

The time really is upon us to be actively conscious, and in so doing, reclaim our Blackness as an integral part in and of humanity's ongoing, uncompromising struggle for justice. To be sure, the stakes are very, very high. Yet, the consequences of not doing so are unimaginable to us as Black people and to humanity as a whole.

BC Columnist Larry Pinkney is a veteran of the Black Panther Party, the former Minister of Interior of the Republic of New Africa, a former political prisoner and the only American to have successfully self-authored his civil/political rights case to the United Nations under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Click here to contact Mr. Pinkney.

(MG) The issues Mr. Pinkney raises carry dire implications for poor peoples all over the world. In the US, it is so easy to be willfully ignorant of the misery of the least of these -- the homeless, the mentally ill, the prisoner, the poor, the abused, the neglected, the abandoned -- but facts is facts, and MOST US citizens are but one devestating major illness, major injury, job termination, or law suit away from poverty.

(MG) The housing market is going South, and will do so rapidly. Homes cannot "appreciate" 15% per year while wages stagnate. If you're lucky enough to be amongth them that's got theirs, you ought to bow down and kiss the ground upon which you walk, saying, "Thank you Lord, for the tests of wealth you have bestowed upon me. May I do my best to uplift the downtrodden -- to feed the hungry, to shelter the homeless, to be hospitable to the foreigner, to care for the widows and orphans, to visit and comfort the prisoner."

(MG) And if this sounds suspiciously like some liberal project, well, quite frankly it is. The liberal project first enunciated in the Book of Exodus, echoed down through the writings of the major and minor prophets, and finally lived fully in the life of Jesus, the carpenter, rabbi, healer or Nazareth.

(MG) And if peoples of color will not heed the call -- they may rest assured that the anglos holding it over them NEVER will. Too much comfort breeds contentment, and until the lot of the least of those amongst us is such that they ALL have sufficient shelter, nutritious food, clean water, and a safe / secure environment where they and their children can learn, prosper, and rise above their meager lot, there is not one person anywhere on the planet who deserves to sleep safe and soundly at night.

(MG) We're all on this boat together, folks. Voyaging about the galaxy, like a tiny sailing boat on the ocean. We must love one another, or die.