…………..don’t you know a smear campaign when you see one?
Here, read your own political cartoon section.
…………..don’t you know a smear campaign when you see one?
Here, read your own political cartoon section.
Two book reviews. The first is fiction, the second nonfiction.
The Horror Of Lynching (And The Power Of ‘Passing’), Through The Eyes Of The Black Press
Incognegro.
By Mat Johnson (Writer) and Warren Pleece (Illustrator).
New York: Vertigo/DC Comics.
136 pages. $19.99.
ISBN-10: 140121097X
ISBN-13: 978-1401210977
It’s become a cliché to say that both lynching and “passing” are parts of the African-American experience most Americans, including and perhaps especially African-Americans, would like to forget. However, the recent Black media rallying over the Jena 6 case—in which nooses were found under a tree under which Black teenagers were allowed to sit near a Louisiana high school—have brought up the ugly history of the former again. The latter—in which light-skinned African-Americans would, in effect, secretly cross enemy lines, disguising their true identities—has, interestingly enough, found new, “overground” currency in post-modern America, with famous light-skinned Blacks now being able to publicly claim their inter-racial “diversity,” in effect refusing to take a side in the classic divide.
Taking a side is what this graphic novel—a fictional tribute to NAACP leader Walter White’s real-life, death-defying lynching investigations almost a century ago—is all about. Harlemite Zane Pinchback’s secret identity is “Incognegro,” the muckraking investigative columnist for the best Black newspaper in town, The New Holland Herald (an obvious play on The New York Amsterdam News). He’s light-skinned enough to “pass,” so he can investigate lynchings close-up, literally risking his neck in the process. Although he wants to place his real byline into the Harlem Renaissance vortex swirling around him, he’s summoned back to wear the mask one more time to free his brother, who’s been framed for the murder of a white woman.
Johnson—winner of the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award, an increasingly major Black writer peer honor—beautifully alternates humor and horror, turning even a profanity-filled phrase as easily as blood flowed from the lynching trees. The colors, notably and powerfully, are absent; all is, appropriately, in black and white. Pleece’s simplicity in draftsmanship keeps the attention on the story and characters, not the pretty pictures. And since lynching is the subject, the pictures should be only so pretty. A powerful, passionate, funny adult work to be read and discussed by old and not-so-old, especially the teenagers who want to know what all that Jena fuss was about.
*****
To One Japanese Journalist, Gun Violence Is ‘In America’s DNA’
Democracy With A Gun: America And The Policy of Force.
By Fumio Matsuo. Translated by David Reese.
Berkeley, California: Stone Bridge Press.
296 pages. $26.
ISBN: 978-1-93330-46-4
Mary Matalin, the Republican strategist who has made her name and fortune by trimming both Bushes, asserted last Sunday (11/25) on NBC’s “Meet The Press” that gun culture was “mainstream culture” in the United States. “I’m from the (Dick) Cheney Way,” she said, referring to the vice president who will be forever known for his 2006 accidental shooting of a friend during a hunting trip. “If you come hunting for me, I’m going to shoot you.”
Matalin may or may not agree with veteran journalist Fumio Matsuo that America’s use of force is in its DNA, from the Revolutionary War through Columbine and into the United States’ occupation of Iraq. But it’s clear that Matsuo, a longtime American correspondent and former Washington Bureau Chief for the Kyodo News Service, creates a masterful outline of American political and legal history from the point of view of the gun. He traces the story of the Second Amendment, explaining how it could lead to the scorched-earth philosophy behind the World War II bombing he miraculously survived as a boy in Japan. He learns the latter by digging up the history of the bombing and profiling its generals. The work is completely thorough.
Any writing elegance, for the most part, might have gotten lost during translation, but Matsuo deftly walks through three centuries of America. He dispassionately teaches the American way of violence to other Japanese first (the book was originally published in Japan), then calling for better U.S.-Japan relations by asking for a real, public reconciliation based on the acknowledgement of both sides of the atomic fires of World War II. Fundamentally an optimist, he sees America’s racial diversity as its strength, but he also analyzes why he thinks that the neo-conservatives who got America mired in Iraq are the next coming of “The Best and the Brightest” White House intellectuals who got the nation sucked into Vietnam. Matsuo depends on the reader to draw his or her own conclusions—an increasingly rare attitude in political books these days. It’s an important view of America from someone who knows parts of it better than most natives.

……the interview The Guardian did with Angela Davis? That long-ago quote from Aretha Franklin……wow! With apologies to “All In The Family,” “THOSE were the days!” LOL! 🙂


See the above? Well, it isn’t torture—at least, not according to America’s elite mainstream media. Well, at least not yet. See, they haven’t made up their minds.
Whenever I think “Democracy Now!” sounds too strident, all I have to do is hear the MSM’s hand-wringing over the obvious to again be reminded why we need national, professional advocacy journalism based in the United States.

As the documentary film premieres in Europe, The Guardian did an interview with the man in question.
“I spend my days preparing for life, not preparing for death,” he says. “They haven’t stopped me from doing what I want every day. I believe in life, I believe in freedom, so my mind is not consumed with death. It’s with love, life and those things. In many ways, on many days, only my body is here, because I am thinking about what’s happening around the world.”
As always, Mumia Abu-Jamal uses nommo (the power of words) to penetrate the soul and generate thought. Not bad for somebody who doesn’t have his own blog. 😉

And never forget what happened.
Why I Am Running For The Green Party Presidential Nomination
WASHINGTON—My name is Jared Ball. I’m a Navy veteran of Desert Shield and Desert Storm. I’m also a Black man living in Washington, D.C. Do I really want to be your President? No. But I am currently running for the Green Party’s presidential nomination.
Then why run for President? Well, I’m not running for simple symbolism. I don’t believe in that. But I do believe in a new style of politics, so I’ve decided to help create one.
I’m running because the true majority of women, the poor, Black, Latino and Indigenous people need organization, a place to cohere. I’ve chosen the Green Party because its structure is loose enough for those groups to find that kind of liberated space.
It’s time to find that space and claim it. Next year we’ll be commemorating 40 years of the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.—and the wholesale abandonment of his radical politics in favor of corporate-sponsored dreaming.
A little personal history is appropriate here. I joined the D.C. Statehood/Green Party several years ago specifically because it fought for the District of Columbia to become a state. The party’s freedom from corporate dominance, its commitment to social justice, the redistribution of society’s wealth, and its call for diversity within its ranks made it different. And so I stayed, and fought.
Do I believe in the vote? Yes—depending on how you use it. It’s an organizing vehicle, not an action designed to fulfill fantasies.
We’re not targeting Democrats, Republicans or others to “steal” votes. We’re not engaged in an effort to upset one or another major party candidacy, since we don’t see either as being able to legitimately represent the needs of the true majority.
I have always believed that it’s time to build a genuine populist party—one built on the proper politics of those who, like Kwame Ture (nee Stokely Carmichael) once made clear, are no longer willing to accept the lesser of evil because “we will not vote for evil, period.”
So my campaign is not expecting to “win” the Presidency next year. Instead, we’re expecting to help build a party to build a new community, society and world.
To do that, we’re trying to make it funky. We’re focusing on the culture of the most oppressed—Blacks, Latinos and Indigenous—to make the case to them that it’s time to use the voting booth to build a real movement. My man Head-Roc, one of the most critically acclaimed hiphop artists in the Mid-Atlantic, is onboard. We are perpetually on tour with a brash, powerful and unorthodox campaign. We want the Green Party to gain tens of millions of eligible but dormant voters. Our radical approach matches the radical tone of the Green Party.
Your party and politics are here. Let’s add some Red and Black to the Green! For more information on my campaign, visit voxunion.com. You’ll see video of my initial statement of candidacy, along with campaign updates and contacts.
As Fred Hampton said long ago: “To you I say peace, if you are willing to fight for it.” So let’s fight and win together.
Copyright 2007 by Jared A. Ball, Ph.D.
Dr. Jared Ball, a candidate for the Green Party’s Presidential nomination, is an assistant professor of Communication Studies at Morgan State University. He is also an independent journalist. He is a host on WPFW 89.3 FM, the Pacifica Network radio station in Washington, D.C., and the founder and creator of “FreeMix Radio: The Original Mixtape Radio Show,” a rap music mixtape committed to the practice of underground emancipatory journalism. He and his work can be found online at voxunion.com.
*******
An Open Letter To Michael Baisden, Steve Harvey And Black Radio
WASHINGTON—Dear Michael, Steve, And The Other National Black Radio Hosts:
I was exceedingly glad to hear that so many of you were so incensed about the attempted lynching of those Black boys in Jena, La., that you decided to go down there to broadcast, bringing folks with you to raise hell.
It was great that you/us/we scared them so bad the court rushed to overturn Mychal Bell’s trumped-up conviction before the Sept. 20 Black rhetorical beatdown. The shame of charging six Black teens with murder just because they kicked a white boy’s butt! And over a tree, yet! Strange fruit trying to drop in 2007.
But as I was filling with pride, I kept wondering how come I don’t hear from you when other issues pop up. What do I mean? Well, issues like:
* The cases of political prisoners such as Leonard Peltier and Mumia Abu-Jamal.
* The continuing expansion of the prison-industrial complex.
* How the so called “Wars Against Terrorism” in Iraq and Afghanistan are illegal as well as immoral.
* How President Bush, Vice President Cheney and the whole administration have repeatedly committed violations of the Constitution of the United States.
Nothing but love. But just sayin’.
Why put this on you, after you just made Black broadcast history?
Because Black radio had such a strong activist history in the last half of the last century. Its deejays were independent of the radio stations because they made their money elsewhere—as sock-hop emcees, etc. This financial freedom, coupled with the creative independence that came from directly representing the Black community, helped give many of them the courage to tell it like it was.
But nowadays, Black radio is, in reality, white conglomerate radio serving Black—uh, excuse me, I meant “urban”—customers. (For more on this, Google “Black Radio” and BlackCommentator.com, then “Black Radio” and BlackAgendaReport.com.) All of you are paid very handsomely by your white syndicators. So there’s plenty of yucking it up and Baby Boomer oldies, with small doses of social observations interspersed in-between. But I notice it’s not the type of commentary that gets national advertisers like Wal-Mart and Dodge upset.
Even Black news-talk radio isn’t sacred anymore. Mark Thompson recently got his walking papers from “The Power,” Radio One’s XM Satellite Radio channel, and Bob Law was just ousted from WURD, Philadelphia’s only remaining Black radio news-talk. When Bob Law—the legitimately legendary host of American Urban Radio Network’s “Night Talk” for more than three decades—can’t keep a job in Black radio, there is something wrong with the system and the role too many of us are playing in it in 2007.
With Jena gone, we can’t just go back to business as usual now, can we? There’s an election coming up. More importantly, there’s the commemoration of the anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King.
King asked a year before he died: “How do we turn the ghettos into a vast school? How shall we make every street corner a forum, not a lounging place for trivial gossip and petty gambling, where life is wasted and human experience withers to trivial sensations?”
I think you could play a major role in answering King’s questions on the 40th anniversary of his death next April. You have the tech; do you have the will? I mean, I think we’ve all had enough of Michael Vick (and now O.J. II), right?
Let’s make Jena the beginning, not the end. Thank you for doing the right thing there. But we need more from you. A lot more.
Your Brother and Colleague,
Jared A. Ball, Producer/Host, “Jazz & Justice,” WPFW-FM, Washington, D.C. and Candidate, Green Party Presidential Nomination
Copyright 2007 by Jared A. Ball, Ph.D.
Dr. Jared Ball, a candidate for the Green Party’s Presidential nomination, is an assistant professor of Communication Studies at Morgan State University. He is also an independent journalist. He is a host on WPFW 89.3 FM, the Pacifica Network radio station in Washington, D.C., and the founder and creator of “FreeMix Radio: The Original Mixtape Radio Show,” a rap music mixtape committed to the practice of underground emancipatory journalism. He and his work can be found online at voxunion.com.
Full Disclosure: I’m a campaign volunteer.
P.O. Box 7423
Silver Spring, MD 20907FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
For Further Information, Contact:
Todd Steven Burroughs
301-405-6653
toddpanther@hotmail.com
GREEN PARTY PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE LAUNCHES BLACK PRESS COLUMNOp-Ed Essays Will Target Issues Of Concern To Black And Brown People
WASHINGTON—Jared Ball, a candidate for the Presidential nomination of the Green Party, announced this week he was launching a column in the nation’s Black newspapers.
The column is called “I Write What I Like.” The title is a tribute to slain South African Black activist Stephen Biko, who had his essay collection published in book form under that title. Biko was killed by white South African authorities 30 years ago this September.
“The column is not only my continuing tribute to Stephen Biko, but to all Black and Brown progressive and revolutionary journalistic writings,” explained Ball, a Washington, D.C.-based independent journalist and radio host. “I’m glad to join the historic tradition of Black press columnists that extend from Samuel E. Cornish and John Brown Russwurm, the publishers of Freedom’s Journal, the first Black newspaper, all the way to Drs. Manning Marable, Ron Walters and Ron Daniels today.”
“I Write What I Like” will be distributed periodically from the “Jared Ball For President” campaign. The campaign’s website is http://www.voxunion.com/jaredball/ .
About Dr. Jared Ball
Dr. Jared Ball is a candidate for the Green Party’s Presidential nomination. He is an assistant professor of Communication Studies at Morgan State University. He is also an independent journalist. He is the producer and host of “Jazz & Justice” on WPFW 89.3 FM, the Pacifica Network radio station in Washington, D.C., and the founder and creator of “FreeMix Radio: The Original Mixtape Radio Show,” a rap music mixtape committed to the practice of underground emancipatory journalism. He and his work can be found online at voxunion.com.
About The Green Party
The Green Party of the United States is a federation of state Green Parties. Committed to environmentalism, non-violence, social justice and grassroots organizing, Greens are renewing democracy without the support of corporate donors. Greens provide real solutions for real problems. Whether the issue is universal health care, corporate globalization, alternative energy, election reform or decent, living wages for workers, Greens have the courage and independence necessary to take on the powerful corporate interests.