Is This The Way To Win?

Is it time to stop singing yet and start……? Two different views from The Root as to what Obama should do.

The Gandhian in me wants to go here (my huge crush on Melissa Harris-Lacewell pushed to the side 🙂 ), but I don’t want Obama to metaphorically end up like Fannie Lou Hamer getting her ass beaten in jail or James Zwerg—*and* lose! Doesn’t make that much sense. I mean, is the purpose of this “movement” to win (the second Root view I saw) or to make a point?

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No wonder Samantha Power was so upset. She knew she was in a street fight, so she did more than block the blows. Maybe when Obama figures out how to negotiate the reality he’s in, next time he won’t be so quick to throw a valued intellect overboard.

And here’s a not-too-unrelated thought: If Obama’s not strong enough to have Power’s back, how will he summon the courage to defend or promote any of our interests, especially after the support (Black)progressives have (blindly?) given him?

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Okay, look: I fully admit that I have a little bit of a crush (intellectually, although I’ve always had a little thing for redheads 🙂 ) on Samantha Power.

She’s everything I want to be: an author, a journalist, a talking head.

I’m really sorry that she spoke her mind this time, ’cause I hate to see someone this incredible (and dedicated) get smeared around the world—particularly when what she said was more true than mean. 🙂

Benjamin Todd Jealous, the NNPA and the NAACP

 

So I see my old boss is a candidate for the NAACP’s top slot. George Curry has weighed in, so as someone who’s worked for both George and Benjamin Todd Jealous at NNPA, I think it’s my turn.

Prologue: I’m not the best employee in the world  🙂 , so of course I had my share of run-ins with both of them within NNPA. But today I consider both friends and, as a Black media historian, I honor deeply their demonstrated commitment to the Black press and independent Black journalism.

 

So, saying that, I’ll now say this:

If the NAACP is in trouble (and it clearly is), it needs a leader who would devote his or her entire energy to the task. I don’t know anything about the other candidates aside from what Curry has written.

Here’s what I do know, from my own eyes:

Between 1999 and 2001, Ben and his assistant, Adina Berrios Brooks, worked 100 hours a week rescuing and reconstructing the NNPA. When Ben came aboard, the NNPA News Service was delivered to the nation’s top Black newspapers by first-class mail. Ben and the multi-talented Raoul Dennis together transformed the nation’s Black press while I largely watched (and worked on my doctoral dissertation). Ben hired one of the most amazing women I’ve ever had the honor of knowing, Hazel Trice Edney—a crusading Black press reporter in the tradition of Ethel Payne—to be NNPA’s first fulltime Washington Correspondent in decades. (She is now the News Service’s Editor-in-Chief.)  Meanwhile, Adina did so much work keeping dozens of different tasks straight, Ben had to replace her with three people when she left. When Ben himself left, the News Service had a state-of-the-art Washington bureau at Howard University and covered breaking stories in print and online.

So take all that for what you will.

Independent Audio/Video You Should Check Out (Twelfth In A Long-Running Series)

VoxUnion Media
February 25, 2008

This Jazz & Justice “redux” tribute is paid to Malcolm X in sad honor of this (February 21, 1965) the 43rd anniversary of his assassination. Hear words and music all dedicated to the honor of both the revolutionary and the idea of revolution.

CLICK HERE to download and/or visit voxunion.com for the download/stream option and much more including the latest edition of Roots Revolution from DJ Soul Rebel with the latest on Kenyan political struggle.

—“Once Black youth began to approach the ideas of Malcolm X it became necessary to destroy what he stood for. Once Black youth began to approach the ideas of Malcolm X it became necessary to destroy the man’s image that produced those ideas… if Malcolm were alive today he’d be a political prisoner and we wouldn’t be here having a discussion about {sic} his life… because the political prisoners we have today get no support…”

Dhoruba bin Wahad

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“The Many Sides of Malcolm Part I” by Melki

“The Many Sides of Malcolm” represents the original “Documixtory” done for “Black World Report,” an online radio newsmagazine of The Black World Today and the NNPA, the Black Press of America. It includes speeches from Malcolm (El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz), and commentaries from now-ancestors Dr. Betty Shabazz, Dr. John Henrik Clarke and Alex Haley.

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Produced in 2001, it pulls audio from the first Malcolm X International Conference in New York City in 1990.

If you are a fan of Malcolm or one who studies history, you will enjoy this fully. Click here to hear the program.

State Of The Obama Union :)

It was one of the better ones—when it was about the candidate who didn’t come.

I greatly enjoyed the dustup about the invitation (scroll down to the bottom of this link to hear Tavis Smiley’s commentary). As I like to say, Tavis keeps trying to be Larry King and Martin Luther King at the same time. It’s a mix that works for him, but he’s not the whole NAACP. He’s a communicator (and book hustler 🙂 ), not a leader. And I’m glad somebody put him in his place.

Hillary Clinton showed up at the end after trying to rip Barack Obama a new one. Before talking with Tavis (and apologizing for her campaign’s racist excesses), she outlined her career to the Black audience, but I was more interested in her view of the present: “We stand at such a historic moment.” Yep. “Unchartered terrority,” indeed.