We are after 50 years after the
March on Washington. There is nothing wrong with having a Dream. The Dream of
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. should be respected since all of humanity should be
treated with dignity, respect, and equality. Human beings of numerous backgrounds
marched to the nation’s capital as a means to seek freedom, jobs, and justice.
The vast majority of the masses of the people in both marches (in 1963 and
2013) sincerely wanted justice. They had love and compassion. Yet, justice is
not done by marching alone. The act of marching or protesting is not immoral,
but solely doing marching is not effective. We have to embrace positive
militancy, independent organizations, and independent programs to help our
society. I love Bernice King's speech. Her oratory ability is out of this
world. She is a better orator than many folks in her family. Bernice King is a
genius. There were many other activists, ex-Presidents, celebrities, and others
have spoken about issues and about the Dream. Also, the President Barack Obama delivered his
speech recently. The President is a great orator in his own right as well. His
speech discussed about the wider agenda of American society instead of explicit
policy agendas. His speech oratory wise was very strong. Here is my critique of the President's speech. Now, President Barack
Obama even admitted that he can't speak like Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. His
administration has a long way to go in being like the true human rights ethos
of Dr. King and so many other heroes. It is ironic that the President spoke his
words in the time that U.S. warships in the eastern Mediterranean are preparing
to rain down bombs on another impoverished mostly Arabic nation. Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. wanted to mobilized workers and humanity in the South and
across the Earth to advance democracy and equality. The White House is still
too much tied to the military intelligence apparatus and Wall Street. He can
talk about the middle class, but not explicitly on the plight of the poor. The
President praised those going to jail to protest unjust laws and cells swelling
with freedom songs back decades ago. Yet, the current administration wants the extradition and
prosecution of Edward Snowden and he condemned Private Bradley Manning for
years in prison. He advances the unconstitutional surveillance program carried
out by the National Security Agency or the NSA, which is similar to the spy
programs of the FBI (that carried out illegal spying against Americans back
then and still today like against the Occupy Movement). The White House abhors
civil disobedience now, but he praises it when civil rights heroes did it. If
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was alive today, he would have opposed the war on terror. Not to mention that back then Dr. King was harassed by the FBI. The establishment called Dr. King a
threat since he was opposed to American foreign policy. King called the US war
in Vietnam “one of the most unjust wars that has ever been fought in the
history of the world,” and one that had “torn up the Geneva Accord” and
“strengthened the military-industrial complex [and] the forces of reaction in
our nation.” He or Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. quite accurately called the US government “the greatest
purveyor of violence in the world.” President Barack Obama admitted that we
have seen the growth of social and economic tensions in America: “[W]orking
Americans of all races have seen their wages and incomes stagnate,” he said.
“Even as corporate profits soar, even as the pay of a fortunate few explodes,
inequality has steadily risen over the decades. Upward mobility has become
harder. In too many communities across this country in cities and suburbs and
rural hamlets, the shadow of poverty casts a pall over our youth, their lives a
fortress of substandard schools and diminished prospects, inadequate health
care and perennial violence.” Yet, we have to understand that the Wall Street
banks are having record profits at the expense of wage cuts and cuts in social
services in America. The President was wrong to blame the victims of oppression
instead of the oppressor for our modern oppression with this Booker T. Washington lite quote that he
loves to do: “Legitimate grievances against police brutality tipped into
excuse-making for criminal behavior,” he declared. “[What] had once been a call
for equality of opportunity, the chance for all Americans to work hard and get
ahead,” he continued, “was too often framed as a mere desire for government
support…as if poverty was an excuse for not raising your child...” That is
funny since the real source of the social crisis are not excuse making or the
poor, but the system of white supremacy and its arms of cartel capitalism, war,
socioeconomic attacks on us, etc. Dr. King criticized capitalism since he
questioned class oppression and wanted social equality via his Poor People's
Campaign. We need revolutionary changes not a reform of capitalism. We must not
turn into the Richard Nixonian token black capitalism, but revolutionary
changes to address war and social oppression. We must reject the mainstream
political establishment. We must be independents and reject banker and
corporate exploitation of our communities and workers in the world. This day
should motivate us to do better and be better human beings. We all wished that
he or President Barack Obama would talk about police brutality, imperialism, the War on Drugs, the evils
of white supremacy, etc. but he said many words that were legitimate and real
that dealt with economic disparities in America. Ironically, the President has
many neoliberal, centrist positions yet the irrational reactionaries still view
him as a super socialist Muslim (which is a slander). The Dream calls us to
oppose war, oppose police state methods, and oppose the harm to the living standards of all
humans. We should follow the agenda of the people not of the ruling class. We
know that the CIA and the FBI are terrorist organizations. The DHS violated
human rights and they are not to be trusted as well. I do believe that the White
House is completely wrong in following the neo-conservative path on foreign
policy issues. We should be Independents politically. Regardless of what you
think of the White House, we can't just issue legitimate critiques of the White
House (which is fine). We should also advance solutions in our communities too
and help out our neighbors as well like so many are doing now (including those
in the younger generation). We should continue to use action as others have
said. The older Brothers and the older Sisters in the world are right to say that the March of 1963
suppressed numerous militant black voices (even John Lewis censored his words
by force) as a means to wrongly stir much of the movement into the establishment 2
party system (to gain concessions not revolutionary changes. A concession can
be eliminated and the Supreme Court has harmed many of our concessions. Much of
the establishment civil rights movement has been infiltrated by Big Corporate
Foundations like the Rockefeller Foundation). Still, there are still real
Brothers and real Sisters in the Civil rights movement and the black liberation
movement in general. So, I want to make that clear. Today, we should be
comprehensive in our approach. We should fight for our liberation in our
communities via boycotts, using self defense when it is necessary, being morally upright, fighting for laws to be changed, organizing with our
people, funding real businesses, funding real black conscious
organizations, advance global pan-Africanism (as we oppose the wicked system of white supremacy), improving our health, having mentorships, developing more skills including trades as a
means to harness our power base, and to advance the dignity of Black Men and
Black Women (including Black Children). We have no choice but to act constructively.
The White House is considering a
military strike in Syria. The White House claimed that intercepted phone calls
document that Bashar Al-Assad was behind the chemical weapons attack in Syria.
The phone calls were made by the Syrian Ministry of Defense. They were
intercepted by the Mossad and passed to the U.S. It revealed that Syrian
government officials, “exchanged panicked phone calls with a leader of a
chemical weapons unit, demanding answers for a nerve agent strike that killed
more than 1,000 people,” in the hours after last week’s attack. Why would the
Syrian Ministry of Defense make panicked phone calls demanding answers about
the attack if they had ordered it? The reality is that the highest levels of
the Syrian government apparently had no knowledge of the attack. This strongly
suggests that they did not directly order it. There is a worst case scenario of
being that the attack was “the work of a Syrian officer overstepping his bounds,” writes Foreign Policy’s
Noah Shachtman. “We don’t
know exactly why it happened,” a US intelligence official told Foreign Policy.
“We just know it was pretty f____ stupid.” Right, we do not have a lot of the
details about what happened, why it happened, or who ordered. We have the
sabotaging of the UN's investigation of the incident. Now, the U.S. is about to
launch cruise missile attacks and this could enflame the whole region. The
evidence now suggests that the Syrian government doesn't know who was behind
the chemical weapons attack. There has been leaked other phone conversations
that emerged earlier this year between two members of the Free Syrian Army
contain details of a plan to carry out a chemical weapons attack capable of
impacting an area the size of one kilometer. We know that are much video
footage shows U.S. backed rebels preparing and using chemical weapons. The U.S.
government once lied that Iraq had massive weapons of destruction. The Iraq
caused thousands of human beings to die as a result of the Iraq War. The Syrian
government called for an international and scientific investigation backed by
the United Nations to find out who has achieved the chemical attack. Also, it
would to not intelligent for Syria to use chemical attacks against their own
citizens since that would give the West the justification to strike Syria.
There is no military strategic logic in the use of weapons of mass destruction.
And, more recently, we could again witness how the United States misled and
misused the United Nations when the American government used Resolution 1973
(the establishment of a no-fly zone and the use of “all means necessary” to
protect civilians within Libya) to carry out regime change in Libya. The
violation of international law and the reactionary foreign policy of the West harm
real international diplomatic actions. John Kerry made the error in saying that
Syria refused UN investigators to visit the site of the attack. On Thursday,
Reuters reported: “The United Nations demanded Syria give its chemical weapons’
experts immediate access on Thursday to rebel-held Damascus suburbs where
poison gas appears to have killed hundreds just a few miles from the UN team’s
hotel.” In fact, according to an exchange at a news conference at the UN today,
the UN did not make a formal request of the Syrian government until Saturday
and the Syria government responded positively the next day. Syria is having a
civil war and it is not a threat to America. The war crimes of the rebels are
ignored by the West, but the Western elite (including their allies found in
Israel and Gulf Monarchies) have members who desire a military strike in Syria. At the final analysis, we
should be opposed to Empire that is backed by the ruling 1%. So, we will always
be opposed to imperialism and any form of oppression.
Rand Paul recently made extreme
statements. Many Republicans refuse to respect the 50th Anniversary of the
March on Washington situation. Senator Rand Paul compared food stamps to slavery,
which is an old reactionary lie. My ancestors suffered slavery. Slavery
dehumanized humanity. Slavery murdered and brutalized innocent human beings
because of their background or race. Slavery caused psychological, physical,
and emotional turmoil in the lives of human beings too. There is no comparison
between food stamps and slavery at all. Food stamps and the social safety net
prevented many Americans from facing starvation in the USA. Rand Paul wants no
government intervention even if it can be constructively used to help the poor.
“As humans, yeah, we do have an obligation to give people water, to give people
food, to give people health care,” Paul allowed, “but it’s not a right because
once you conscript people and say, ‘Oh, it’s a right,’ then really you’re in
charge, it’s servitude, you’re in charge of me and I’m supposed to do whatever
you tell me to do.” His views are Randian. The reality is that good government
is made up of the people. Since the people represents government then the
people via government can help humanity if government is fair and just. There
are many human rights explicitly not mentioned in the Constitution. Just
because something is not mentioned in the Constitution, doesn't mean that
something is not a human right. I have the human right to not be harmed, but
that right is not explicitly mentioned in the Constitution. Also, humans are
forced to do things sometimes. Humans are forced to not do murder. Humans are forced to
not commit perjury. Humans are forced not to do pedophilia. So, these
legitimate restrictive actions are meant to enhance society and morality. Many
libertarians lack an appreciation of true morality. Even economist and
libertarian icon Friederich Hayek believed in a basic guaranteed income and a
social safety net (including health care) to ensure a fair democratic
society. Rand Paul would disagree with an
extreme libertarian like Hayek on that issue. He made the same point in a less
popularly known work, Law, Legislation, and Liberty, where he writes that “a sort of floor below which nobody need fall even when he
is unable to provide for himself, appears not only to be wholly legitimate
protection against a risk common to all, but a necessary part of the Great
Society in which the individual no longer has specific claims on the members of
the particular small group into which he was born.” In a modern society,
Hayek’s saying, we’re obligated to collectively take care of the people who
aren’t being provided for by the people immediately around them. Some of the
public good can be positive for society. Human rights are not slavery. Human
rights are human rights and human rights are superior to states’ rights. Folks
in Rand Paul's ilk want to harm Social Security, which has helped tens of
millions of the elderly and disabled, avoid falling into poverty. Ron
Paul thinks that the poor should go it alone, without any government help.
According to Paul's every-man-for-himself philosophy, any regulation mandating
a minimum wage or safer working conditions are a part of "big government,"
and should be eliminated. Many of the Rand Paul ilk claims to want to end
militarization of local communities and oppose militarism overseas, but some of
them want to militarize the border in America. So, we are still fighting for
justice. We are still fighting for true freedom and equality. I reject
xenophobia and other evils in the world. So, our role models are Fannie Lou
Hamer, Kwame Ture, Malcolm X, Gloria Richardson, Ella Baker, and Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr., not the Koch Brothers. We should continue to fight for economic justice,
social justice, and true equality for all of humanity.
The genocide against our Black
Brothers and Black Sisters in Brazil continues to this very day. It did not
stop during the time of slavery. There is the recent police brutality against
mass demonstrations in Brazil. There is also the massive state violence by the
Brazil police forces against the poor Blacks of Brazil. Many Black communities
in Brazil are under siege or under attack. This is genocide. Any legitimate
community has the right to live and exist without state violence. Now, black
human beings in black communities in Salvador, Bahia, etc. created the
"React or be Dead" campaign. These activists are fighting against
police brutality, the prison industrial complex, and the genocide in black
communities. Communities have the right to survive in the world. We should
always reject the evil actions of paid death squads, murderous militias, evil
police, and extermination groups that want the status quo. Many blacks have
died by these murderers as a means to maintain the power structure.
Afro-Brazilians are literally fighting for their dignity and survival. This new
campaign of genocide since 2005 has not stopped. The homicides in Brazil are
more than those in Iraq (which experienced a violent imperialist occupation).
The Black movement has delivered reports to the UN and the Organization of
America States. Homicides are the principal cause of death for Black males
between the ages of 15 and 29. Furthermore, even the Ministry of Health
documented in 2010 that over 53.3% of the roughly fifty thousand homicide
deaths in Brazil are youths and from these 76.6% are Black Brazilians and 91.3%
are young men. This is coupled with poverty and lack of access to services such
as health care and education -- all wide spread manifestations of the white
supremacy that is pervasive in the lives Black Brazil and which mark Afro
Brazilians as “enemies to be combated” by the Police and injustice systems. We
know this to be genocide. Many Black Women in Brazil suffer death, mutilation,
and murder. These are our mothers, grandmothers, sisters, and aunties in
Brazil. These are our people. The Black Communities in Brazil nationally have
organized the “March against the Genocide of Black People.” It is indeed
“React or be Dead” since the color of homicides is indeed telling of the situation
of many Black communities in Brazil. All Afrikan peoples of the world must be
protected. We will never forget Oscar Grant, Trayvon Martin, and Zoltan
Hyacinth either. We should have solidarity with our Afrikan peoples of the
world.
Rick Perry has those neo-Confederate
tendencies. He wants to cite the Tenth Amendment as an excuse to claim that the
federal government has no authority to protect minority voting rights. He is
wrong in both constitutional analysis and he is wrong on the Fifteenth Amendment.
We witness a new era of voter suppression aimed at minorities, the poor, the
elderly, the youth, etc. The reactionaries exaggerate the significance of the
Tenth Amendment as a means to bash any expression of a social safety net. That
is why the Justice Department announced plans to contest a new Texas law that
would require voter IDs supposedly in response to the virtually nonexistent
problem of in person voter fraud. Many Republicans want to block blacks,
Hispanics, and the poor from voting (since many human beings lack the mandated
photo IDs). Texas Governor Rick Perry was well known for his infamous 2012 GOP
Presidential campaign. Rick wants to mention the 10th Amendment as a
justification to justify his evil anti-voting law. He feels that the Justice
Department's move was unconstitutional. “We continue to defend the integrity of
our elections against this administration’s blatant disregard for the Tenth
Amendment,” Perry declared. Unfortunately, The NY Times and the Washington Post
including other mainstream news outlets failed to stand up against the
reactionaries' deception on made up constitutional history. The Tenth Amendment
amounted to a sop to the states. It was heavily irrelevant since the
Constitution already granted an array of broad of powers to the federal
government like the elastic language for acting to “promote the general
Welfare” and to pass “necessary and proper” laws to implement those powers.
However, at the time of the Constitution’s ratification in 1788, supporters of
the old structure, the Articles of Confederation, recognized how the new
governing document made the federal government supreme and made the states
subordinate. The Articles had deemed the states “sovereign” and “independent”
with the central government only a “league of friendship.” The Articles of
Confederation failed to stabilize the government, so George Washington,
James Madison, Alexander Hamilton and Gouverneur Morris (who drafted the famous
Preamble) – came to hold a convention in secret in Philadelphia to throw
out the Articles and to craft the Constitution. Replacing the language
about state “sovereignty” and “independence” was the phrasing “We the People of
the United States.” Anti-Federalists opposed these changes. They wanted the
states to maintain slavery in states. Also, the Fifteenth Amendment explicitly
grants the federal government the authority to protect the voting rights of
minorities. The Fifteenth Amendment states, “The right of citizens of the
United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or
by any State on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. The
Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.”
So, Rick Perry's argument makes no sense unless he uses a Confederate view. The
Confederate view is that all other Amendments after the end of the Civil War
and during Reconstruction are illegitimate since they were imposed on the
South. So, whites should still be allowed to own black human beings (prohibited
by the Thirteenth Amendment) and that legal protections of minorities
(contained in the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments) should be ignored. That
sick view is evil indeed. Yet, some of the Confederate views (that makes states’
rights supreme over human rights) is embraced by many in the Republican Party.
The mainstream media in many cases refuses to call these retrograde views as
vestiges of slavery, segregation, and racism.
By Timothy
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