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The Annual Resurrection of a Fake Dr. King and Re-entombment of Black Liberation Movement

The Annual Resurrection of a Fake Dr. King and Re-entombment of Black Liberation Movement

It is January, and in the U.S. this means it is time for the annual ritual of revisiting the white-washed, de-radicalized, pro- “American” M.L. King fairytale as part of the official celebration of King’s birthday.

In the official story, Dr. King was not the creation of the movement that was fighting for the democratic and human rights of Black people. No, it was Dr. King who created the movement, according to the colonial white elite and the neocolonial Black misleadership. In this story, the objectives of the movement were not for radical social transformation and Black self-determination but the redemption of the U.S. settler-colonial nation/state and the quiet integration of Black people into the state. In other words, to complete the establishment of a “more perfect nation,” as Obama would put it.

But King did not just show up to save Black people. Dr. King was a product of the post-war Black movement. And as such, the King that the movement produced reflected the changing, and sometimes contradictory development of that movement. As a product of the movement, Dr. King’s experiences as the leader of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) evolved. He began to raise criticisms of capitalism, eventually opposed imperialist war and embraced a program of class struggle represented by the Poor People's campaign.

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Afghanistan No 'Graveyard' for U.S./EU/NATO Axis of Domination

Afghanistan No 'Graveyard' for U.S./EU/NATO Axis of Domination

Some have asserted the U.S. empire has reached its historic endpoint because of its defeat in Afghanistan. However, that call is as premature as political scientist Francis Fukuyama’s proclamation that history had "ended" in 1989 when Western liberalism won because the former Soviet Union was coming apart.

Afghanistan might have been the so-called “graveyard of empires” and of certain states at other points in history. But the U.S. defeat in Afghanistan had occurred years earlier, a fact verified by revelations found in the “Afghanistan Papers.” That defeat had no appreciative impact on U.S. foreign-policy makers, who continued their destructive path in places like Yemen, Libya and Syria. Only a handful of the U.S. population was still interested in continuing a war in Afghanistan up until the last week or so. But the rulers did not inform the U.S. public, so the masses did not know the war had been lost.

Missing Links on Cuba, Haiti and Colombia

Missing Links on Cuba, Haiti and Colombia

Nothing quite demonstrates the arrogance and white supremacy of the U.S. empire like its relationship to Africans and other colonized people.

On Thursday, the Biden administration slapped new sanctions on Cuban government officials. We ask those who have raised racism in Cuba as a nuance worthy of interrogation: Why not question the white supremacy inherent in U.S. policies that disproportionately impact African/Black peoples throughout the region?

The Cuban people have spoken and they have said, yes, they have internal contradictions, like any country born within the context of colonial conquest and genocide. But they also have said what would make the most difference to Cubans in Cuba is an end to the cruel medieval-style blockade that has prevented vital food, medicine and other items needed to help the Cuban people.

We say when a people are at war with an oppressor, it is our obligation inside the United States to stand with them against the empire without engaging in the ego-inflating exercise of raising their internal contradictions at those critical moments. Either you support national liberation and self-determination or you don’t.

Candidate Accountability: Demand a Commitment to a Peace-and-Human-Rights Agenda

Candidate Accountability: Demand a Commitment to a Peace-and-Human-Rights Agenda

The novel coronavirus pandemic both revealed and accelerated the irreversible crisis of the global capitalist system and, consequently, the domestic conditions shaping the 2020 U.S. presidential election and every level of U.S. governance.

The Black Alliance for Peace (BAP) asserts the deepening structural crisis is causing unprecedented forms of capitalist structural violence that can be measured in unnecessary deaths, sickness, hospitalizations, mass hunger, homelessness and collective trauma. This crisis, along with climate change and the interlocking issues related to imperialist war, militarism and domestic repression, are the main challenges facing the public.

Yet, the diversionary psychodrama passing itself off as politics in the United States has consigned these issues outside of the pre-approved range of items for public discussion.

However, BAP took on the task to raise the issues that others have avoided during this election season to suggest the people must demand from public officials a minimum program that opposes war, repression and imperialism.

We launched the Candidate Accountability Pledge as part of our broader campaign, No Compromise, No Retreat: Defeat the War Against African/Black People in the U.S. and Abroad, to say public officials coming to our people for support must embrace an agenda that in the words of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., addresses the ongoing issues of “racism, materialism and militarism” that characterize the politics of the United States as the “greatest purveyor of violence on the planet.”

In these last few weeks of this effort, we highlight our demands. They go beyond the election because we know the state is increasingly relying on the use of violence domestically and abroad, and that both Democrats and Republicans are committed to this strategy to maintain the power of the capitalist dictatorship. So, we suggest the people demand their elected officials and candidates:

  • Oppose the militarization of U.S. police through the Department of Defense’s 1033 program

  • Oppose Israeli training of U.S. police forces

  • Call for and work for the closure of the U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM)

  • Advocate for the closure of 800+ U.S. foreign military bases

  • Oppose Trump’s “Operation Relentless Pursuit”

  • Commit to opposing all military, economic (including sanctions and blockades) and political interventions

  • Advocate for an end to U.S. participation in NATO

  • Support efforts to cut the U.S. military budget by 50%

  • Demand the U.S. Department of Justice document and investigate the use of lethal force by domestic police officers

  • Commit to passing resolutions that commit the U.S. to uphold international law and the U.N. Charter

  • Sponsor legislation and/or resolutions to support the U.N. resolution on the complete global abolition of nuclear weapons

Over the last few weeks, we have attempted to raise the visibility of these demands. 

For example, our September 24 webinar, “Full Spectrum Dominance: From AFRICOM to Indo-Pacific Command”, focused on our ongoing work to shut down AFRICOM, but we also drew attention to another U.S. command structure, the Indo-Pacific Command, which is being used to strengthen U.S. offensive capabilities against China.

Then on October 1, over 300 organizations from global civil society joined us by endorsing and taking action in support of the International Day of Action on AFRICOM. For that day, we asked organizations and individuals to call on the U.S. Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) to investigate the impact of AFRICOM on the African continent. The effort to sign onto that letter continues.

We are disseminating an especially important conversation BAP members hosted and presented on October 7 on Black Women and Anti-Imperialism

On October 14, BAP co-sponsored and National Organizer Ajamu Baraka participated in a discussion on policing in Nicaragua and the Caribbean that is receiving international attention.

BAP member organization Friends of the Congo yesterday launched “Congo Week in Harlem”, an annual 7-day event that draws attention to the ongoing struggles in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and to its rich history and culture. Many believe the DRC would be one of the richest countries if it was allowed to exercise real national sovereignty, free from predatory U.S. and Western companies.

BAP is a member of the Black is Back Coalition (BIB), which is organizing the “Black People’s March on the White House” on November 7-8. For BIB, the election’s outcome will not change that Black and Brown colonized workers in the United States and abroad have no choice but to resist the U.S. state’s criminal activity as it desperately attempts to shore up the capitalist order.

And we are still moving toward our fundraising goal of $30,000, so we can continue to work for peace and People(s)-Centered Human Rights. Help us.

 

PRESS AND MEDIA


On the October 6 episode of WPFW’s “Voices With Vision”Netfa Freeman, who represents Pan-African Community Action (PACA) on BAP’s Coordinating Committee, and co-host Craig Hall, interviewed Qiana Johnson, a core organizer with Black Lives Matter-DC and executive director of Life After Release, about a model for challenging mass incarceration called “Participatory Defense.” That model was highlighted with the song "New Tribes" by Dahk Matter (PACA's Ahmed Malik Braxton). PACA organizer Max Rameau discussed the presidential debate and the mention of Community Control of Police (CCOP). Netfa and Craig spoke to Rwandan genocide survivor and African Great Lakes Action Network (AGLAN) Executive Director Claude Gatebuke about Congo Week (October 18-24) and the case of Paul Russesabagina—hero of the film, "Hotel Rwanda"—recently kidnapped by the Rwandan government and being held as a political prisoner for criticizing the Rwandan occupation of the DRC and its culpability in atrocities there. As is customary on "Voices With Vision", political prisoner Mumia Abu Jamal provides commentary. This time, on Trump’s COVID-19 diagnosis.

The October 13 episode of “Voices With Vision” featured an interview with Erica Takeo, who coordinates the solidarity network for the Asociación de Trabajadores del Campo, or the Rural Workers Association, in Nicaragua. Takeo spoke about Friends of Latin America’s October 14 webinar that delved into the Nicaraguan experience with CCOP.

For The Real News Network, BAP member Jacqueline Luqman interviewed Dr. Akinyele Umoja, professor in the African-American Studies Department at Georgia State University and author of the book “We Will Shoot Back: Armed Resistance in the Mississippi Freedom Movement,” about armed self-defense for Black people. 

Netfa was featured 9 minutes into KPFA’s Evening News to break down the Trump/Biden debate mentioning CCOP. Plus, Dedan Waciuri, who represents Black Workers for Justice on the BAP Coordinating Committee, spoke about the need for CCOP on Black Agenda Radio. Mapinduzi, an organization Dedan belongs to in Greenville, North Carolina, held an online panel discussion October 17 on the role of police.

KPFA's “Flashpoints” interviewed Netfa about militia groups caught plotting to kidnap Michigan’s governor and the white-supremacist roots of militias and U.S. police.

BAP member Erica Caines wrote in Hood Communist about the possibility of a Trump coup, the material purpose of the Supreme Court and the focus of Black collective organizing.

BAP Coordinating Committee member Margaret Kimberley appeared 60 minutes into Radio Sputnik’s “The Critical Hour” to analyze the Trump administration’s response to wildfires ravaging California and other western states, the Barrett nomination, and a Sentencing Project report showing nearly 5.2 million people will be disenfranchised in the 2020 U.S. elections because of felony convictions. 

CodePink video showed Netfa breaking down how U.S. elections are used to misdirect the people’s struggle.

Erica hosted a forum, “Black Women and Anti-Imperialism”, featuring speakers Nnennaya Amuchie of #8ToAbolition⁣; Asantewaa Nkrumah-Ture of BAP and the Poor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign in Philadelphia; and Onyesonwu Chatoyer of BAP member organization All African People’s Revolutionary Party-New Mexico, Anti-War Coalition of Albuquerque and the Hood Communist blog. The conversation aimed to show Black women in the United States why they should care about the symbiotic relationship that exists between the military industrial complex and militarized policing. The history of Black women radicals in anti-imperialist movements in the United States, domestic imperialism, internationalism and AFRICOM were also discussed.

BAP’s U.S. Out of Africa Network Coordinator Tunde Osazua spoke to Anticonquista’s L@s Hij@s de Fidel podcast—hosted by BAP member Kayla Pop and professor Danny Shaw—about the imperialist roots of the U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) and its implications for Africans around the world. WORT’s “8 O’Clock Buzz” interviewed Tunde about how AFRICOM uses U.S. military power to impose U.S. control on African land, resources, and labor to service the needs of U.S. multinational corporations and the wealthy in the United States.

Popular Resistance interviewed Ajamu, who spoke about the history of AFRICOM and its impact on the continent. He also discussed why anti-imperialist and internationalist perspectives are necessary, the changing power dynamics in the world, the upcoming elections in the United States, and where activists should focus their time and energies.

Meanwhile, Netfa was interviewed for Press TV's “Africa Today” on the cost of terrorism on 18 African countries. 

 

EVENTS


October 18-24: Friends of the Congo is commemorating Congo Week XIII by hosting a series of virtual events this year with special presentations from the Andree Blouin Center in Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

October 22: Stand with thousands across the country for National Day of Protest to express our collective outrage, creativity and resistance in response to the crimes of this system. Uphold the tens of thousands of lives stolen by U.S. law enforcement over the past quarter century. Join a National Day of Protest event in your area. Create one if you are in an area where no one is organizing. On October 22, “WEAR BLACK, FIGHT BACK!” To endorse this call, complete this form. For more information, visit october22.org. Provide details of an action by emailing oct22national@gmail.com.   

October 24: A march and caravan co-initiated by BAP member organization Ujima People’s Progress Party will demand housing justice in Baltimore, Maryland.

October 27: The Claudia Jones School for Political Education, along with the New Dawn Podcast, are hosting Dr. Charisse Burden-Stelly and Boots Riley to discuss anti-capitalism. Register here.

November 7-8: The Black Is Back Coalition calls on all to march, rally and convene in Washington, D.C., during the “Black People's March On White House.” Registration is requested. Read their article in Black Agenda Report.

 

TAKE ACTION

  • The Black Latina Girls and Women Fund was created by AfroResistance, a Black Latina women-led organization in the service of Black Latinx women in the Americas. This fund offers financial support by giving money directly to Black Latin womxn, girls and femmes who are experiencing severe financial need across the region, especially due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Whether in Brazil, Colombia, United States or Panama, Black Latina girls, women, and femmes are organizing in their local communities in the fight against several forms of state violence. You can donate here and people are encouraged to use the hashtag #BlackLatinaGWFund.

  • Ask your local, state and federal candidates to sign BAP’s 2020 Candidate Accountability Pledge. If you are a candidate, distinguish yourself from the other corporate warmongering candidates by signing the pledge.

  • Sign up to join BAP’s U.S. Out of Africa Network to receive the bi-weekly AFRICOM Watch Bulletin in your inbox.

  • Make sure you keep up with us throughout the week by subscribing to our YouTube channel, liking us on Facebook, and following us on Instagram and Twitter.

No Compromise, No Retreat!
 
Struggle to win,
Ajamu, Dedan, Jaribu, Margaret, Netfa, Nnamdi, Paul, Vanessa, YahNé

P.S. Freedom isn’t free. Consider giving today.

Photo credit: Robert W. Kelley/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images

¡Kevin Zeese, PRESENTÉ!

¡Kevin Zeese, PRESENTÉ!

The anti-imperialist and anti-war movement suffered a great loss early Sunday morning with the sudden passing of activist Kevin Zeese.

Margaret Flowers, his life partner, captured the sentiments of many of us who knew Kevin and were shocked by his passing, when she said to know Kevin is to know how ”... amazing, kind and selfless a person Kevin was. He never asked for anything, but was always there for others. He had such great knowledge and wisdom. He was a gentle giant and his death is a huge loss for me personally and I know for many people who are a friend or who worked with him over the years.”

It was that kind of solidarity and commitment to people that compelled Kevin, along with Margaret and all of the activists who became known worldwide as the Embassy Protection Collective, to hold the Venezuelan embassy in Washington, D.C., for 37 days to prevent it from being taken over by the unelected, right-wing forces who aligned with Juan Guaido. It was an amazing and heroic act of internationalist solidarity that will go down in the annals of the people’s history.

Another country Kevin was especially concerned about that now finds itself in the crosshairs of U.S. criminal aggression is Nicaragua. The Black Alliance for Peace (BAP) shares those concerns and pledges to the memory of Kevin to raise the visibility inside the United States of the heroic struggle of the Nicaraguan people to preserve the integrity of their project.

Central to Kevin’s concerns was respecting the will and sovereignty of peoples around the world. That is why he adamantly opposed U.S. and European sanctions. Kevin recognized sanctions were acts of war, and that they usually target the civilian population with inevitable death, suffering and destruction. We at BAP will go even further and say sanction regimes are acts of state terrorism when they are applied unilaterally by rogue states, such as the United States.

So, while our hearts are heavy, we know Kevin would tell us not to mourn too long and get back to fulfilling our duty to organize and fight at the center of the U.S. empire. That is how Kevin will be present—as our inspiration, both as we struggle and once the people win! 

 

PRESS AND MEDIA


Last week's episode of WPFW’s “Voices With Vision,” hosted by Netfa Freeman, who represents Pan-African Community Action (PACA) on the BAP Coordinating Committee, featured familiar voices. BAP member Jacqueline Luqman exposed how the new March on Washington obscured the problems that have continued to be ignored since the first march held in 1963. The show featured music by Dahk Matter (aka PACA's Ahmed Malik Braxton) and BAP Coordinating Committee member Margaret Kimberley explaining why "Democrats are officially Republicans.”

BAP member Mark Fancher questions the value of marches and protests after police murder Black people in his latest piece for Black Agenda Report.

The U.S. crisis of legitimacy has been on display as millions have lost their jobs and homes amid an economic crisis exacerbated by the lockdowns. BAP member Asantewaa Nkrumah-Ture was featured in a Philadelphia Inquirer article on Pennsylvania’s statewide eviction moratorium coming to an end.

Press TV’s “The Debate” interviewed Netfa about ongoing racial tensions in the United States. Meanwhile, Press TV interviewed Margaret on Trump’s latest move to ban anti-racism training. Plus, Margaret spoke to Radio Sputnik's “Political Misfits” and “The Critical Hour”, as well as Al Mayadeen (only available in Arabic), about the uprising in Kenosha, Wisconsin, and the 2020 election. BAP National Organizer Ajamu Baraka also discussed Kenosha on Al Mayadeen (only available in Arabic).

Ajamu wrote in Black Agenda Report that the U.S. human rights record—domestically and internationally—is filled with hypocrisy, deceit and denigration.

BAP’s August 23 webinar, “How the International War Against Black People Is Being Waged Locally and Unifying Our Fight Against It,” is now available on YouTube and Facebook

A video that explains BAP’s mission can be viewed on YouTubeFacebookTwitter and Instagram. This video wouldn’t have been possible without BAP member Jelani Fraser, who scripted and produced the video, and BAP Coordinating Committee member Jaribu Hill, who lent her voice as narrator.

 

EVENTS


September 9: PACA's Assata Shakur Study Group will be held at 7 p.m., EST, online. Non-Africans who wish to attend are asked to bring an African.

September 19-20: Labor and Community for an Independent Party is organizing a two-day online conference, “Break the Grip of the Two-Party System Program Agenda.” Registration is required.

September 24: Mark your calendars for 4 p.m., EST, for BAP’s next webinar, “Full Spectrum Dominance: From AFRICOM to the Indo-Pacific Command.” Registration information will be available in an upcoming newsletter.

November 7-8: The Black Is Back Coalition calls on all to march, rally and convene in Washington, D.C., during the “Black People's March On White House.” Registration is required.

 

TAKE ACTION

  • The Black Latina Girls and Women Fund was created by BAP member organization AfroResistance, a Black Latina women-led organization in the service of Black Latinx women in the Americas. This fund offers financial support by giving money directly to Black Latin womxn, girls and femmes who are experiencing severe financial need across the region, especially due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Whether in Brazil, Colombia, United States or Panama, Black Latina girls, women, and femmes are organizing in their local communities in the fight against several forms of state violence. You can donate here and people are encouraged to use the hashtag #BlackLatinaGWFund.

  • Ask your local, state and federal candidates to sign BAP’s 2020 Candidate Accountability Pledge. If you are a candidate, distinguish yourself from the other corporate warmongering candidates by signing the pledge.

  • Sign up to join BAP’s U.S. Out of Africa Network to receive the bi-weekly AFRICOM Watch Bulletin in your inbox.

  • Make sure you keep up with us throughout the week by subscribing to our YouTube channel, liking us on Facebook, and following us on Instagram and Twitter.

  • We are raising $30,000 to help expand our membership support capacity and revamp our website. Donate and share our GoFundMe campaign with your networks today.


No Compromise, No Retreat!
 
Struggle to win,
Ajamu, Dedan, Jaribu, Margaret, Netfa, Nnamdi, Paul, Vanessa, YahNé

P.S. Freedom isn’t free. Consider giving today.