Latest Articles

vertical horizontal
  • Politics Is Like Hiring A Hitman
    by Scott Woods inPolitical on2020-08-13

    For me, politics is like hiring a hitman. I have values and things I care about. I care enough about them to at least bother voting for 5 minutes every year for one issue or another. And because I care at least that much, I vote for people who align with the ability to realize the things I care about.

    Read More ...

  • Punching Above Our Weight
    by Roger Madison Jr. inPolitical on2020-07-24

    I believe our vote is the punctuation of our voice. Without that resounding exclamation mark, I believe our voices are just incoherent noise.

    Read More ...

  • BLACK PROGRESS AMIDST SOCIAL CHAOS
    by Roger Madison Jr. inPolitical on2020-06-16

    Recent events have raised the profile of historical injustice and inequities here in the USA. The entire world has taken note of the fact that BLACK LIVES MATTER.   We invite all of our friends to engage in actions that result in the greatest movement for change in our history. It is imperative that we take advantage of this opportunity to affect a positive change by ACTING IN OUR SELF-INTERESTS.

    Read More ...

  • Living in a Black No-Man's Land
    by Roger Madison Jr. inOur Community on2019-10-28

    There are many narratives that define the Black experience in America in this 2nd decade of the 21st century. Our striving over the centuries of our sojourn in this nation is a tapestry of every human experience -- oppression, enslavement, forced assimilation, dehumanization, exclusion, segregation, isolation, struggle, perseverance, achievement, excellence, celebration, mourning, despair, progress, setbacks, lynching, assassination, genocide, terror, self-hatred, low esteem, pride,...

    Read More ...

  • Fighting Racism
    by Scott Woods inOur Community on2018-10-25

    I had a boss who was racist. Not an outright bigot, of course; her toolbox was more subtle than most. We bumped heads a lot over inconsequential things. She frequently couldn’t keep my name out her mouth. Lot of gaslighting. You know…2018 style. I tried a lot of ways to combat or navigate her issues. None of them worked, and that’s saying a lot because I’m really good at fighting racism. But at the end of the day – every day – she was my boss, I had to deal with her, and that was that. Finally I...

    Read More ...

Bury that Sucka!

In his 1963 Civil Rights manifesto “The Fire Next Time,” James Baldwin insists that he is a man, not a n**ger. The book opens with a letter written to his nephew, also named James, on the 100th anniversary of Emancipation. Baldwin offers the youngster encouragement and advice on how to survive in the stubbornly racist American society.

Baldwin
writes to his nephew:

“It will be hard, James, but you come from sturdy peasant stock, men who picked cotton and dammed rivers and built railroads, and, in the teeth of the most terrifying odds, achieved an unassailable and monumental dignity. You come from a long line of great poets, some of the greatest since Homer. One of them said, ‘The very time I thought I was lost, my dungeon shook and my chains fell off.”

By the end of the correspondence,
Baldwin urges his nephew not to define himself by white racial definitions steeped in ignorance and degradation. His most potent words are: “You can only be destroyed by believing that you really are what the white world calls a n**ger.”

More than a half century before Baldwin’s publication, civil rights activist W.E.B. DuBois also exhorted Black people to define themselves with dignity and outside of racist definitions. He too worried about the prospects of Black self-hatred. In his 1897 “Conservation of the Races,” DuBois wrote:

“No people that laughs at itself, and ridicules itself, and wishes to God it were anything but itself ever wrote its name in history.”

If Baldwin and DuBois were alive today I wonder what they would say to all those Black people who argue that we should reclaim “the n-word” by respelling it, applying it to ourselves, and proclaiming that we can somehow derive power from using it as a greeting or term of endearment. Would they say that those Blacks are defining themselves by white racial definitions steeped in ignorance and degradation? Would they say that those Blacks are ridiculing and laughing at themselves? Would Baldwin and DuBois argue that those who embrace the n-word really believe that they are n**gers and are on that path to self-destruction?

I think so.  BURY THAT SUCKA! http://www.burythatsucka.com