Silver Bullets/Golden Arrows
By Wanda Sabir
The Black Commentator co-founders launched their publication covering
the mayoral race in Newark, New Jersey’s largest city, a city
run by, Sharpe James. James was challenged by newcomer, Cory Booker,
city councilman, Newark political neophyte. Now I found out about
Booker in the POV film, Street Fight: Directed by Marshall Curry,
distributed by Ironweeds Films. Ironweeds is a media club, distribution
site which promotes community discussion on provocative topics.
Booker is portrayed as the underdog, James arch-villain. Not once
in the film, is Booker’s connection to corporate money –
a right-wing think tank whose president, Michael Joyce praises Charles
Murray, author of the Bell-Curve, a book which uses pseudo-science
to prove the intellectual inferiority of African people. Instead,
the “street fight,” is said to revolve around Booker’s
skin color and his sterling academic record. Nothing, could be further
from the truth. Commentator author’s state in “Fruit
of the Forbidden Tree: Hard Right Plans to Capture Newark, NJ. Visit
www.blackcommentator.com/poisoned_tree.html.
In the meantime, the ballots are still being counted in Alameda
country to determine who won the mayoral race, Ron Dellums or Ignacio
De la Fuente. As we went to press “of the “76,496 votes
counted so far, Dellums has 49.65 percent and De La Fuente 33.37
percent. Now the vote total will now be updated periodically, rather
than daily,” Acting Registrar of Voters Dave McDonald was
quoted in Wednesday, June 14, Oakland Tribune.
Why did Curry leave these questionable campaign items unexplored?
Also left unexplored were Booker’s ties to a movement for
public school privatization, a.k.a., voucher programs. Now Sharpe
James was no saint over his 20 year tenure, but his resignation
letter certainly lists achievements in Black community development
unmatched by many municipalities. Just check out Mayor Willie Brown’s
track record here in San Francisco as a case in point.
Though Amiri Baraka when asked about his new mayor, Cory Booker,
called him a “Republi-coon.” Booker is in fact is in
fact a nominal Democrat – in name only, which points to the
innate trouble with this two-party. It seems strange that in five
reelections as mayor and his recent appointed in 1999, then elected
subsequently in 2001, to the New Jersey State Senate, that James
hadn’t groomed a predecessor. I also found it strange that
Cornell West was shown supporting Booker in the film; perhaps he
was unaware of the company Booker kept, just as I was.
I wonder why so many of the bright African Americans end up on the
wrong side of the street. What Booker’s win this year signifies
is the ease with which right wing conservatives court African Americans
whose interests lie in advancing their careers not serving the community.
I thought this was the reason why people run for office.
Note the past tense.
Booker completely staged and positioned himself for political office
–living in a public housing projects while tapping into resources
like the Bradley Foundation, the primary moneybags for private school
vouchers, BC stated in the article: “Hard Right Cash Defeated
in Black City – This Time.” Visit www.blackcommentator.com/puppet_loser.html.
African people need to wake up! This is still Babylon.
Since I’m coming clean, I guess I’ll also fess up to
not knowing about Alameda County Superintendent of Schools, Sheila
Jordan’s implicit invitation to Jack O'Connell, the California
State Superintendent of Public Instruction, to send in a Randy Ward
to save Oakland Public Schools when she blocked funds to stave off
the deficit, Greg Hodge, School Board member, told me. I remember
when Jordan was City Council person. The former school teacher seemed
to know where her alliances lay then. Now, the situation has shifted
to one where children in twelfth grade this week, who didn’t
pass an eighth grade math, writing, reading and perhaps history
exam – will receive a letter of completion instead of a high
school diploma. At one high school, Castlemont, the seniors were
all told they didn’t make the grade en masse, a move dismissing
their right to privacy. All of them probably felt shamed. It was
like informing someone of his HIV status on the school intercom.
Read www.eastbayexpress.com/Issues/2006-05-24/news/feature.html
.
The failure of Oakland children is a failure of the school administrators
– instead if penalizing the children who did what they were
supposed to do, show up ready to learn. This reminds me of the Brian
Brooks’ film “Half Nelson,” whose protagonist
is a philosophy teacher slash physical education teacher, who is
also addicted to crack cocaine. His sidekick, a cute 14-maybe year
old girl, yes, it screams inappropriate – yet the student
and teacher bond in a strange dysfunctional way which serves both
well. Girl-child’s mom’s a police officer who works
too many hours. The girl’s brother’s in prison and his
best friend is trying to turn his friend’s sister out. The
director, from Berkeley/claims Oakland, wanted to make the film
here, but since he was already in New York, he had to shoot it there.
Part of the teacher’s problem was his inability to handle
reality, a career where he was penalized for telling the truth to
the children he taught, a career where he was penalized for teaching
them to be independent thinkers who question authority. Look for
it this fall. The metaphor gives opponents a little wiggle-room
wherein lies the hope I suppose.
I don’t know what Oakland Public School children or their
parents can do at this point, but it would have been great if the
principals would have advocated for the children who didn’t
pass and let them participate in the ceremony which is about all
children have today as a rite of passage, marking change from childhood
to adulthood.
Who asked the rhetorical questions: why do we allow the enemy to
educate our children? Well, it’s no longer rhetorical; it’s
a call to action. If black and brown kids are not graduating with
high school diplomas, the road to hell – read crime, prison,
death, is a little more slippery. I hope the children with those
useless pieces of paper enroll in college, while also attending
Oakland Adult School to prepare for the GED or High School Equivalency
Test (a.k.a. Exit Exam). Students can’t get financial aide
(or graduate from college) without a diploma or GED – more
ice, engine oil, grease on the descent down.
At the College of Alameda, 555 Atlantic Avenue, Alameda, we have
a program we are launching this fall called Sspire specifically
for vulnerable youth in high risk situations. I teach the English
Composition courses. Other first semester classes are Math 201,
Introduction to Humanities, College Success, and Dance. Student
books are paid for; some of the assignments are shared between classes,
as well as texts. “The theme this fall is: For Love or Money.”
If you’re interested and you’re 17-24, please call Brenda
Bias (510) 748-2209 and ask for information about the Friday orientation
schedule this summer.
Sunday, at Sankofa Anamontou: African Cotillion, a really lovely
affair, Greg Hodge, spoke eloquently about what the communities’
obligation is to its children, and in return what these young people:
Monique Blodgett and Keenan Jones, who have completed their rites
of passage successfully, what their responsibility is to those just
behind.
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