“Gotham!”
“The Flash!”
“Marvel’s Agents of SHIELD” Season 2 and “Agent Carter” (the hard-as-nails love interest from “Captain America”)!
“Arrow” Season 3!
WOW! Good thing I’m co-writing a book, because I would not ever leave my house! LOL! đ
“Gotham!”
“The Flash!”
“Marvel’s Agents of SHIELD” Season 2 and “Agent Carter” (the hard-as-nails love interest from “Captain America”)!
“Arrow” Season 3!
WOW! Good thing I’m co-writing a book, because I would not ever leave my house! LOL! đ
WOW! It’s been a loooong journey from 1995! LOL! đ
Journalism: Activism or Profession? (AUDIOÂ LINK)
[Speech writ. 7/29/14] © â14 Mumia Abu-Jamal
When we consider the historic role of journalist among Black people, we are left with the deep conviction that, for Black people, the necessities of the time demand that activism must play a role in the performance of the profession.
It must be so, I argue, then – in our not-too-distant past – and now, in our troubled present, for to fail to do so leaves our people at the not-too-tender mercies of a system that has demonstrated a kind of vehemence and animosity that few populations in America have suffered from.
For ultimately, a profession is just that – a claim to act a certain way in the world, according to certain stated norms and codes that a certain area of employment must abide by.
Except in the long history of Black America, we know better.
We must know, as did the esteemed Black journalist, Frederick Douglass, that a constitution written on parchment would differ greatly from government and legal practice, when it came to Black people. They were promises: promises broken and unfulfilled for over a century, after the Supreme Court decided in the Plessy decision that âseparate but equalâ was good enough. Black journalist Ida B. Wells-Barnett worked long and hard to bring light to the lies used to justify lynchingâs against Black people. So much so that, according to recent scholarship, she was shunned and avoided by leading lights of the early civil rights movement, who regarded her as too militantâ too outspoken.
Meanwhile, under the Hayes-Tilden gentlemenâs agreement, white terrorism, expressed by lynching was the peculiar American custom that wasnât spoken of in polite society. So, quietly (except for Wells) Black bodies hung and burned by the thousands — across America, the courts and law deeming it mere local custom, beyond their control.
When we enter the modern era, we see a panorama of Black pain that is as unprecedented as it is silent. I speak of mass incarceration, the targeting, imprisonment and criminalization of dark people in ways (and in numbers) the world has never seen. For decades.
And, until recent days, the silence -even among Black journalists – has been deafening. Recently the New York Times has editorialized against it. How many Black newspapers have done so?
Why not? Professionalism? A false objectivity?
The late historian, Howard Zinn, for years decried the notion of professionalism. In a speech in Colorado in 2006, Zinn said:
âWe all go into professions where youâre supposed to be professional. And to be professional means that you donât step outside of your profession. If youâre an artist, you donât take a stand on political issues. If youâre a professor, you donât give your opinions in the classroom. If youâre a newspaperman, you pretend to be objective in presenting the news. But, of course, itâs all false. You cannot be neutral.â
In Zinnâs words, âYou canât be neutral on a moving train.â
As journalists, the choices before you are actually quite clear. Follow the dictates of your bosses; or serve the interests of your people.
Black America, in the main, lives a life of hell – daily. For them, freedom is a word, but prison is inevitability. For them, civil rights are a mirage, and daily humiliations are a certainty.
For all the powers of the State are arrayed against them.
They know this – as do we, but such lived realities rarely flow from our pens, our mouths or our fingers.
So, we write dross on the life-styles of the rich and famous. Or some blathering from a politician.
While our people suffer.
The choice, for any journalist, should be clear.
Thank you, NABJ.
–© â14maj
WOW! “Batman,” “Superman” and “Wonder Woman,” all on the same night! GREAT!
The “redface” in the last 10 seconds….*SIGH*
……to talk about next year’s “Avengers” movie?
No? Okay. đ
JULY 28th UPDATE: And here’s the 2014 Comic-Con Panel:
That aborted Time Warner-News Corp. merger would not only have created a ridiculously large world media conglomerate, it would have ALMOST merged Marvel and DC movies! *Gulp* NOT IN FAVOR OF THAT! đĄ
JULY 28th UPDATE: No, maybe not. And this is not good news, either.
OCTOBER 24th UPDATE: Or this, either.
NOVEMBER 24th UPDATE: Or this, either.
Yep, SASWAT, it’s that time! THANKS!
Boy, I’m old. This is from 1973, when I was five! I LOVED this song, and attempted to memorize ALL of it back then!
Although almost passing out in the heat wasn’t fun, I thoroughly enjoyed asking Mayor Baraka a question yesterday at his first post-inauguration press conference.
I asked him about the Youth Mayor and the Youth City Council he just appointed. Was it just symbolic? “All symbolism stops today,” he said.
The Youth Mayor will have duties, an office and a stipend.
Okay. Moving forward. Thanks to “Google News Alerts,” I’ll be keeping abreast.