WE MUST NEVER COMPROMISE OUR IDENTITY AS FAR OUR AFRIKAN - TopicsExpress



          

WE MUST NEVER COMPROMISE OUR IDENTITY AS FAR OUR AFRIKAN HISTORICAL EXPERIENCE HAS SHAPE US AND MAKE US THE AFRIKAN WE ARE TODAY . NEGROPEAN ARE WORTHLESS INTELLECTUALS UNDERMINING ENTIRE FAMILES WIPE OUT ..KILLED ...RAVAGED BY VIOLENCE AND UNSPEAKABLE ACTROCITIES...NEGROPEANS ARE GOOD FOR NOTHING ....NO EMAPTHY ..DRUNK ON ARROGANT DECEITFUL EGO OF EMULATING WHITE SUPREMACY IN NON WHITE COVER UP NEGROPEAN ARE GOING TO BECOME MORE NEGROPEAN THAN EVER. WHEREAS WE MUST BECOME MORE AFRIKAN BLOOD THAN EVER. “Had King survived, his break with Obama would have come early.” Back in 1964, under prodding from a BBC interviewer, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. predicted that a Black person might be elected president “in 25 years or less.” Four years later, shortly before his assassination, King confided to actor/activist Harry Belafonte that he had “come to believe were integrating into a burning house. We now see that the two notions are not at all contradictory. At least some African Americans have achieved deep penetration of the very pinnacles of white power structures – integrating the White House, itself – while conditions of life for masses of Black folks deteriorate and the society as a whole falls into deep decay. The fires lit by the “giant triplets of racism, extreme materialism, and militarism” that Dr. King identified in his 1967 “Beyond Vietnam: Breaking the Silence” speech are consuming the world, now stoked by a Black arsonist-in-chief. Domestic poverty hovers only a fraction of a percentage below the levels of 1965, with “extreme poverty” the highest on record. Black household wealth has collapsed to one-twentieth that of whites. Today, more Black men are under the control of the criminal justice system than were slaves in the decade before the Civil War, according to Michelle Alexander, author of The New Jim Crow. The intervening years have shown that Dr. King’s 1960s visions were not in conflict: the rooms at the top floors of the national house may have been integrated, but the building still burns. The deepening crisis of capitalism, the triumph of Wall Street finance over industrial capital, the increasing imperial reversion to international lawlessness in a desperate bid to maintain global supremacy – all this was predictable under the laws of political economy. Had the assassin’s bullet not found him, Dr. King would have continued his implacable resistance to these unfolding evils, rejecting Barack Obama’s invasions, drones and Kill Lists with the same moral fervor and political courage that he broke with Lyndon Johnson over the Vietnam War. Absolutely nothing in King’s life and work indicates otherwise. “The very notion of a grand austerity bargain with the Right would have been anathema to MLK.” One school of thought holds that corporate servants like Obama could not have taken root in Black America if Dr. King, Malcolm X and a whole cadre of slain and imprisoned leaders of the Sixties had not been replaced by opportunistic representatives of a grasping Black acquisitive class. In any event, had King survived, his break with Obama would have come early. Surely, the Dr. King who, in his 1967 “Where Do We Go from Here” speech called for a guaranteed annual income would never have abided Obama’s targeting of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid in the weeks before his 2009 inauguration. Forty-five years ago, King’s position was clear: “Our emphasis must be twofold: We must create full employment, or we must create incomes.” The very notion of a grand austerity bargain with the Right would have been anathema to MLK. blackagendareport/content/don’t-you-dare-conflate-mlk-and-obama — with Bro Lv Epsilonaasrfm and 4 others. POLITICAL & CURRENT AFFAIRS PoliticsZA
Posted on: Thu, 16 Jan 2014 10:56:17 +0000

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