David Simon, the Baltimore Sun
crime reporter who created the HBO series, “The Wire,” (2002-2008), in a
recent interview said of African-Americans: “They’re the last (on) the
economic ladder. And if you look at Baltimore, Md., half of the adult
male African American-residents have no work. That’s not an economic
system that is having a bad go of it, that’s something that doesn’t
actually work.”
How true. The system is broke. Statistics that have been repeated to
us a hundred times like some mantra, back up Simon’s words, and, of
course, he could be speaking not just of Baltimore but of any city in
America. This is a nation whose people are sliding into decline with 46
million already sunk below the poverty line.
Here are just a few of the stats: African-Americans(AA) poverty rates
27%, nearly triple those of whites (10%); AA’s—making up 14% of the
population yet comprising 28% of those on food stamps; AA’s comprising
40% of those in prison, about 1 million out of a total of 2.3 million;
wirh about 33% of all Hispanics and AA’s living in substandard housing
compared with 14% of poor whites.)
“It is implausible to imagine that, were (Rev.) King to be raised
from the dead, he would look at America’s jails, unemployment lines,
soup kitchens or inner-city schools and think his life’s work had been
accomplished,” wrote Gary Younge, the British author, in last September
2nd’s issue of “The Nation.”
“The fact remains,” Younge asserted, “that African-Americans are no
better off materially as a result (of Obama’s election)”and that the
economic gap between backs and whites has grown under his presidency.The
ascent of America’s first black president has coincided with the
descent of black Americans’ standard of living. Reasonable people may
disagree on the extent to which Obama is responsible for that. But the
fact is undeniable.”
The question today is not “What is the problem?” We all know the
stats. We have walked the mean streets. We have seen the unemployed
panhandling on the street corners. Some hardy souls among us have even
visited the prisons. The question is, “What is the solution?”
The answer is nothing is left to us but non-violent direct action. It
is a course that has much to commend it. That’s because it involves
masses of people. It goes beyond having a few spokespersons or leaders
speak for the afflicted. It involves setting in motion the afflicted
themselves, by the scores, by the hundreds, by the thousands. The
individual who marches for social justice has got a right to hold his or
her head up. People are filling the streets from Cairo to Kiev. Why not
in Chicago and Los Angeles?
“You deplore the demonstrations taking place in Birmingham,” the Rev.
Martin Luther King Jr. wrote to his fellow ministers in the June 12,
1963, issue of “Christian Century” in his classic essay “Letter From a
Birmingham Jail”.
“But your statement, I am sorry to say, fails to express a similar
concern for the conditions that brought about the demonstrations. I am
sure that none of you would want to rest content with the superficial
kind of social analysis that deals merely with effects and does not
grapple with underlying causes,” King wrote.
“It is unfortunate that demonstrations are taking place in
Birmingham, but it is even more unfortunate that the city’s white power
structure left the Negro community with no alternative.”
There was no alternative in 1963; and there is no alternative in
2014. I submit there is no point in waiting for a charismatic leader
akin to Rev. King to swing into action. The place to find the next
charismatic civil rights leader is to look in your own mirror.
SOYMB would beg to disagree with this statement. There is an alternative. We do not advocate leaders at all, charismatic or otherwise! We do advocate a mass movement of the working class worldwide, aware of their position within the capitalist system, working together peacefully to achieve their legitimate status as equal citizens of the world. Black, white; male, female; manual worker, academic; it makes no difference - we are all subject to wage slavery. Cause and effect. Cause - the capitalist system. Effect - the misery, poverty, inequality described above. Solution - get rid of the cause, change the effects. Socialism is the alternative.
JS
From here
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