We need voices like Dr Wright's
I don't think that it's a mistake that Buchanan's comments went relatively overlooked by the mainstream media while Wright's comments were repeatedly over sensationalized. 
|
Is that going to make me take down my Obama signs out of my window and my custom made "Obama Mama" clinger on my car, not a chance. I'm disappointed, not crazy. Because of the criticism that Dr. King faced from his own people his activism, he created the Southern Christian Leadership Conference along with Los Angeles ministers Reverend James Lawson and the late Dr. Thomas Kilgore, pushing forward with his fight for equality, a fight that today has greatly benefited those that opposed him in the beginning. To that end, I am happy that Dr. Wright hasn't censored himself and caved in to calls for him to disappear somewhere. We need voices like Dr. Wright's.
Let's be real, while there are a plethora of black activists, there are very few that dare to really rock the boat. Even fewer that would risk losing their corporate sponsorships by saying "God damn America." To me, Dr. Wright represents the type of voice that we need, and quite frankly have been lacking, speaking up for blacks. You know, the kind of voice that hasn't been bought off with lavish corporate sponsorships of annual conferences and birthday parties. The voice of reason that has nothing to lose by speaking freely and openly about America's denial of their issues with race as it relates to blacks.
Dr. Wright embodies the late Shirley Chisholm's slogan, unbought and unbossed. No amount of negative publicity is going to make him distance himself from his people or deny what he knows to be true. My man, Dr. Wright! And while all of America's attention via the media has been on Dr. Wright's comments, what about right-wing conservative Pat Buchanan's A Brief for Whitey?
And I quote:
"First, America has been the best country on earth for black folks. It was here that 600,000 black people, brought from Africa in slave ships, grew into a community of 40 million, were introduced to Christian salvation, and reached the greatest levels of freedom and prosperity blacks have ever known. Wright ought to go down on his knees and thank God he is an American.
I don't think that it's a mistake that Buchanan's comments went relatively overlooked by the mainstream media while Wright's comments were repeatedly over sensationalized. Pat Buchanan's comments are exactly the reason why black people need to address the atrocities committed against us and not leave it to others to rewrite our history. If we don't, we get ludicrous statements like the one above which we all know is about as far from reality as Senator Hillary Clinton dodging sniper fire in Bosnia.
But because he felt comfortable enough in his "whiteness" to say it is what really bothers me and just further illustrates how our struggle for liberation and equality continues to be minimized to the benefit of the very people who are responsible for our current state. We are at a point in a time where our actions are going to dictate whether it's business as usual as it relates to race or class or whether we address it head on, the good, the bad, and the ugly. The way I see it, Obama being the good, Pat Buchanan the bad, and Dr. Wright the ugly---each of them has had a roll to play. Obama gave us hope for the future, Pat Buchanan gave us reality, while Dr. Wright gave us the truth.
We've got to stop letting the mainstream media and reports of Senator Clinton surging ahead in polls, that we don't know even know to be true, pull our strings making us turn on each other. That's how they keep us distracted, how we keep ourselves down and the last time I checked, no suckers lived here. Instead of trying to silence the truth, we should be embracing it while using it to change reality into the hope for the future that we see in Obama.
Come tomorrow, no matter who wins or loses in Indiana and North Carolina, it won't be because of Dr. Wright. It'll be because of ourselves and what we choose to buy into - or not.
Speak on Dr. Wright, speak on!
Based in Los Angeles, Jasmyne A. Cannick is a nationally syndicated race, culture, and social issues journalist and critic.
|