….this interview with Manning Marable about his upcoming biography of El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz (Malcolm X)?
….this interview with Manning Marable about his upcoming biography of El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz (Malcolm X)?

Incognegro: A Memoir of Exile & Apartheid.
Frank B. Wilderson, III.
South End Press.
498 pp. $18.
This chronicle of the adventures of Frank Wilderson, III reminds Black Americans that the classic novel and film “The Spook Who Sat By The Door”—where social worker Dan Freeman, the first Black CIA agent, uses his training to turn a street gang into a revolutionary army—wasn’t always metaphor. The author proudly portrays himself as a modern-day Br’er Rabbit-David Walker combo, a trickster character who loves truth so much he’s willing to literally fight for it, regardless of the costs. This beautifully written book documents those struggles for truth, both in South Africa (where he was a member of the armed wing of the African National Congress between the period of Nelson Mandela’s 1990 release from prison and his first years as president) and in America, as a teen in the heyday of late 1960s Berkeley and as a middle-aged Baby Boomer in early 00s-era California academe.
Wilderson is anything but a good Black liberal. A laughable notion, that, since he’d clearly eat one for lunch and spit out the bones. The wickedly great twist of this American Book Award-winning memoir—which went through two book publishers unsuccessfully before landing at South End Press—is that Wilderson was/is a hard-core Leftist revolutionary during an era in which that was/is insanely unpopular on both sides of the Atlantic.
In South Africa, Mandela once called the author, one of the few African-Americans to help lead the ANC, “a threat to national security”—in short, a terrorist. Wilderson was named such because he and his colleagues continued to clandestinely push for socialism by any means necessary while Mandela had embraced the military-corporate establishment and the idea of peace and reconciliation—the latter the author dismisses as “anger management for Blacks.” The hope of a socialist South Africa led by Leftist Chris Hani, Wilderson’s leader (seen with Mandela above), is eventually shot full of holes as Hani‘s blood leaks out. “It was a blind faith I never threatened with scrutiny,“ he said of his time as a South African revolutionary. “I simply incorporated my dream to no longer be the slave of my appearance (the slave of thick lips and guilty eyes; my dream to free my mirror of all contemporary gestures—you’re Black but you’re intelligent, Black but fairly handsome, Black but you come from good….good Black stock?), incorporated it into the dream of a proletarian dictatorship. For five years I kept the faith. But now the world was rushing in again.”
He doesn’t fare much better later, in the land of the free, hope of the slave. The stifling nature of white elite “liberal” universities—and his romantic relationship with a white woman, a fellow professor—brings out his inner Huey Freeman in ways that would make the character’s creator Aaron McGruder chuckle and Michael Eric Dyson and Cornel West quietly step away before their speaking tours get canceled. In one of many serious-but-hilarious episodes, Wilderson laughs at the tension he created in his department after he told his white students he went to South Africa because he wanted to kill a white person, but wanted it to matter politically. At one point, the author asks himself “if Black hatred isn’t a deep well. I drop a stone into it and listen, waiting for the sound when it hits the water. It’s a sound I never hear.”
Simultaneously an honorary Black South African and an honorary American, Wilderson is under the illusion that he is free wherever he goes, which brings all kinds of trouble down on his hard head, and he wouldn’t have it any other way. (As he admits, terms such as delicate and balance “are words I can hardly spell.”) The repeated collision between freedom and voluntary slavery makes a spectacular creative tension that is sustained throughout, deftly sailing the near-500-page tome onto intellectual, personal and socio-political shores occupied by 20th-century writing legends James Baldwin and Eldridge Cleaver and Black Panther living legend Assata Shakur. “I find myself wanting to go home,” he muses at one point, “with no idea where that might be.” His home is with those writers.
Wilderson combines poetry, political travelogue/adventure, diary, radical theory, autobiography, essay, domestic comedy and folklore into organized, relentless time-shifting fragments that explode, shooting up to cut through pre-conceived notions and perceptions carried by those who dare to follow radical autobiography and memoir. “Incognegro” is a clinic for aspiring writers and thinkers. Wilderson’s need to find the larger meanings contained in the glory of (his own) narrative serves him well; he is doing what his former ultra-Leftist ANC comrades, in a lost struggle against Mandela and the ANC’s compromised hegemony, had to eventually do when the music died: “[to] speak his name and mark his moment in history before history came to an end.”
By willing to leap, bloody sword in hand, into contradictions most Black people happily choose to ignore, the author shows a dangerous level of self-awareness and honesty that has led many of his scribe-tribe to madness or deep cynicism. He is saved by his righteous and romantic rage, sarcastic humor and incredible command of the mysterious alchemy of turning word to lyric, past to present and back again, thoughts into actions, and actions into written memories. It’s that latter magic, superbly done here, that is truly revolutionary.
Plunder: Investigating Our Economic Calamity And The Subprime Scandal.
By Danny Schechter.
New York: Cosimo.
240 pp. $14.95.
Danny Schechter is one of my heroes, and I wasn’t afraid to tell him so when I met him. Ever since “South Africa Now” (showing my age here 🙂 ), he’s been a straight-up truth-teller. I used one of his books, “The More You Watch, The Less You Know,” when I was writing my doctoral dissertation.
He continues the tradition here, putting himself in the company of a few journalists who tried to inform America that a serious recession was coming. But, as usual, Schechter is ahead of the mainstream, warning of “a vast CREDIT AND LOAN COMPLEX every bit as insidious as the Military-Industrial Complex. Most Americans have no idea that this even exists.” And you can bet which government it funds.
Schechter blends charts, articles, books, interviews, journalistic observations and even poetry together, walking the reader month by month (almost day by day) through 2007 and 2008 to show it how capitalism unraveled in front of America’s eyes. He explains boldly how it’s actually American democracy that’s threatened by the economic disaster. The journalist-filmmaker-activist-blogger stays in the street and On The Street, and does a very good job of balancing both. Schechter once again earns the reputation he has gained, joining those who proudly stand in the shadow of muckraker legend I.F. Stone.
“A Long Time Coming”: The Inspiring, Combative 2008 Election and the Historic Election of Barack Obama.
By Evan Thomas and the staff of Newsweek magazine.
New York: Public Affairs.
256 pp. $22.95.
Rem Rieder, editor and senior vice president of American Journalism Review magazine, was clearly tired of hearing and/or reading for the zillionth time the now-accepted narrative about political journalists and Decision ’08: that Barack Obama’s presidential campaign got a free ride from The Boys (and Girls) On The Bus. “The truth is, the Obama campaign was well-organized, disciplined, virtually error-free. Obama was an inspiring candidate to many, a dazzling public speaker with an inspiring storyline,” Rieder wrote in AJR’s December 2008/January 2009 issue. “The McCain campaign, in contrast, was a train wreck, lurching from message to message. And McCain, who can be an immensely appealing figure, seemed angry and unfocused.”
That’s as good a summary of this book as any. Evan Thomas has crushed Newsweek’s coverage of the two-year rollercoaster into this clear, concise book that allows the reader inside the campaigns’ inner sanctums, due to the magazine’s agreement to not publish the fly-on-the-wall happenings until after Election Day. “Coming,” then, is a very slight outgrowth of the meat of Newsweek’s special post-election issue (which, coincidentally enough, was online until this book’s release).
The newsmagazine has had this arrangement with presidential campaigns since 1984, and the trust shows. The publicly displayed hubris and cluelessness of the Hillary Clinton’s would-be nomination crew pales compared with the tone and tenor of its inside fights, and it turns out the McCain-Palin campaign really didn’t know what it was doing from one day to the next. Meanwhile, as the entire world remembers, Barack Obama’s train ran smoothly down America’s track into the White House, The Big Engine That Would. “Coming” answers the how, step by step, day by day.
If you watched the evening news every night last year, this book is just detail. But it’s rich, absorbing and well-written detail, a finely crafted rough draft of history. It rightly belongs on the Obama bookshelf next to Obama’s own “Dreams From My Father” and “The Audacity of Hope” and David Mendell’s very good biography, “Obama: From Promise To Power,” all four now awaiting the scores of tomes to come.
It’s clear this truth can’t be told enough. 🙂
Got this Wednesday morning, after I heard the news on “Democracy Now!”
X-Replyto: contact@whoisleonardpeltier.info
Date: Tue, 20 Jan 2009 17:20:11 -0800 (PST)Dear LP SupportersI am so OUTRAGED! My brother Leonard was severely beaten upon his arrival at the Canaan Federal Penitentiary. When he went into population after his transfer, some inmates assaulted him. The severity of his injuries is that he suffered numerous blows to his head and body, receiving a large bump on his head, possibly a concussion, and numerous bruises. Also, one of his fingers is swollen and discolored and he has pain in his chest and ribcage. There was blood everywhere from his injuries.
We feel that prison authorities at the prompting of the FBI orchestrated this attack and thus, we are greatly concerned about his safety. It may be that the attackers, whom Leonard did not even know, were offered reduced sentences for carrying out this heinous assault. Since Leonard is up for parole soon, this could be a conspiracy to discredit a model prisoner.He was placed in solitary confinement and only given one meal, this is generally done when you won’t name your attackers; incidentally being only given one meal seriously jeopardizes his health because of his diabetes. Prison officials refuse to release any info to the family, but they need to hear from his supporters to protect his safety, as does President Obama. His attorneys are trying to get calls into him now.
This attack on LP comes on the heels of the FBI’s recent letter, prompting this attack by FBI supporters as an attempt to discredit LP as a model prisoner. Anyone who has been in the prison system knows well that if you refuse to name your attackers or file charges against them, then you lose your status as a victim and/or given points against your possible parole and labeled as a perpetrator.
It is not uncommon, in fact is quite common for the government to use Indian against Indian and they still operate under the old adage “it takes an Indian to catch an Indian.” In 1978, they made an attempt to assassinate him through another Indian man who was also at Marion prison with LP. But Standing Deer chose to reveal the plot to him instead of taking his life in exchange FOR A CHANCE AT FREEDOM. When Standing Deer was released in 2001, he joined the former Leonard Peltier Defense Committee as a board member. He also began to speak on Leonard’s behalf until his murder six years ago today. Prior to his murder, Standing Deer confided with close friends and associates that the same man who visited him in Marion to assassinate Peltier, had came to Houston, TX and told him that he had better stay away from Peltier and anything to do with
him.We are aware that currently, the FBI is actively seeking support for his continued imprisonment of Leonard Peltier and also also seeking support from Native People. So please be aware, and keep Leonard in your prayers. The FBI is apparently afraid of the impact we are having. If they will set him up to blemish his record just before a parole hearing, what will they do when it looks like his freedom will become a reality? We need to make sure that nothing happens to him again!
Please write the President, send it priority or registered mail. Email to Change.gov or email President Obama. Call your congressional representatives and write letters, not email, to them. Do what you can to get the word out to insure that LP is receiving adequate medical attention for his injuries.
I am asking you, supporters of Leonard and advocates of justice at this time to help. I don’t know what else to do. Please Help!
Thank you
Betty Peltier-Solano
Executive Coordinator
Leonard Peltier Defense Offense CommitteeAlso call and request Leonard be treated with dignity and respect.
Canaan Federal Prison
570-488-8000
Later, I got a forwarded email that showed a Facebook response:
Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2009 10:02:44 -0800
From: Facebook
Subject: Marpessa Kupendua made a comment about your note…Marpessa made a comment about your note “!*URGENT ALERT: Leonard Peltier Beaten!”:
“Here’s some contact info Jason just sent out:
Let the Bureau of Prisons know that the public will hold them
accountable for the safety and well being of Leonard Peltier.Warden Ronnie R. Holt
USP-Canaan
3057 Easton Turnpike
Waymart, PA 18472
Phone: 570-488-8000
Fax: 570-488-8130
E-mail address: CAA/EXECASSISTANT@BOP.GOVD. Scott Dodrill, Director
Northeast Regional Office
Federal Bureau of Prisons
2nd & Chesnut Streets., 7th Floor
Philadelphia, PA 19106
Phone: 215-521-7301
E-mail: NERO/EXECASSISTANT@BOP.GOVHarley G. Lappin, Director
Bureau of Prisons
U.S. Department of Justice
320 First Street, NW, Room 654
Washington, DC 20534
Phone: 202-307-3250
Fax: 202-514-6878Ask President Obama to investigate this incident:
The Honorable Barack H. Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
Comments: 202-456-1111
Switchboard: 202-456-1414
Fax: 202-456-2461
E-mail: http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http://www.whitehouse.gov%2Fcontact%2F”To see the comment thread, follow the link below:
http://www.facebook.com/n/?note.php¬e_id=49819416860Thanks,
The Facebook Team
The Last First
not the first heavyweight champion of the world,
airline pilot, quarterback in the NFL, college graduate,
doctor, teacher, big league baseball player, preacher-pastor,
ceo, mountain climber, university president, entrepreneur,
heart surgeon, inventor, governor or poet.not the first mathematician, physicist, engineer, supreme court justice,
fastest man alive, publisher, reporter, ambassador, entertainer,
four-star general, best-selling author, executive chef, sergeant major,
scientist, basketball hall-of-famer, economist, secretary of state,
nobel prize winner, astronaut, law enforcer, chair of the joint chiefs,
senator, first responder or state legislator.not the best trumpet player alive, bank president, husband, father,
organic farmer, rapper’s rapper or coach’s coach.not an ? question looking for an answer or
hidden agenda claiming the authority of one.not an exploiter of the commons.
Is the green hands nurturing fields, crops and rain forests.
is the water, food, education, clean energy, preventive health and intellect required.
is the humanitarian connecting music and economy, writing political notes legible to professionals, novices, students and elders the world over.
is the community organizer maneuvering citizens’ campaigns
expecting to implant knowledge, consent and saneness on impracticabilityas renegade* and renaissance* expand the can in we and yes
at the early-light of this promising century
not the last, is the first
barack obama, president.December 19, 2008
*Secret Service code names for President-Elect Obama and Mrs. Obama