All posts by Dr. James Thomas Jones III

The Education of Kyle Larson: Reflections on a Racially Inclusive NASCAR Community and the Fall of a Superstar

When Senator Joe Biden questioned Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas on October 11, 1991, regarding Anita Hill’s allegation of sexual harassment, the current Presidential hopeful asked Thomas “Do you have anything you’d like to say?” It was at this moment that Thomas tapped into an often overlooked aspect of the White male psyche that I am sure Nascar driver Kyle Larson wishes that he’d mastered. Thomas slyly responded to Biden’s question by likening the hearing to determine his fitness to serve as a U.S. Supreme Court Justice as a “high-tech lynching.”

Thomas’ strategy was brilliant for so many reasons. The most notable reason was because it allowed him to tap into a weakness in the psyche of many powerful White males; a weakness that appears when racial matters conflict with bottom-line financial realities. Clarence Thomas knew that those questioning him, many of whom were racial bigots, would go to extreme lengths to hide their true identities before a national audience.

Whereas Clarence Thomas navigated this minefield as a skilled jazz pianist such as McCoy Tyner, Kyle Larson fumbled and stumbled in such a manner that he has been made a pariah in the public arena. This young man has learned a lesson about Race, representation, cultural wars, and corporate sponsorship in one of the worst ways imaginable. All because of a single word that we all know is used in non-public spaces by those who have distanced themselves from Larson.

Just in case you missed the events that led to the destruction of Kyle Larson’s rendezvous with superstardom, I will quickly rehash it below.

During an iRacing event designed to placate racing fans going through withdrawals due to the absence of sports, Larson’s head phone appeared to lose communication with his designated spotter. It was while checking his microphone that Larson said, “You can’t hear me? N!@@a!” Fellow racers veered from this matter while informing Larson that his microphone was live and that the world could hear him.

The day after Larson’s misspeak, he offered an apology for his use of the racial slur and offered “no excuse” for its occurrence. Unfortunately for Larson, there were things in motion that his quick apology was incapable of stopping. Within hours of the incident, the embattled driver’s three major sponsors one of which was McDonald’s dropped him and his racing team Chip Ganassi Racing fired him forty-eight hours after the incident; the latter occurrence was particularly daunting as it left Larson, a person who is half-Japanese and ironically gained access to NASCAR via its “Drive for Diversity” program, without a racing team. This situation is financially devastating for a young driver who earned $9,000,000.00 last year, an amount that most agree was merely the tip of the iceberg regarding Larson’s earning potential. 

I am slightly surprised by NASCAR’s reaction to this situation. Afterall, it is NASCAR; a sport that has appeared to be a safe-haven for “the good ol boys.” As an outsider, it has always been apparent that the sport has always been lily-white. Most Blacks that I know pay no attention to NASCAR if for no other reason than the belief that the stands and pit crews, not to mention the cars, would be filled with rednecks who own Confederate flags.

Apparently, my father’s NASCAR is not the NASCAR that my son is inheriting. The organization has apparently made a conscious effort to lessen its well-earned reputation as a haven for White bigots. Indicative of such was superstar driver Bubba Wallace who offered the following response to the above incident. An offering that explains why NASCAR’s response to Larson is crucial to the sport’s present and future.

The word brings many terrible memories for people and families and brings them back to a time that WE as a community and human race have tried our hardest to get away from. The sport has made combatting this stereotype one of their top priorities. NASCAR has been doing what it can to get away from the ‘racist and redneck sport’ labels.

Diversity and inclusion is a main priority for the sport across every team, every car, every crew member and employee. With that said, It hurts to see the African American community immediately throw NASCAR under the bus with the ‘I’m not shocked, it’s NASCAR.’ NASCAR has been, and will be way better than how we’ve been represented in the last couple of weeks. As the person that arguably has the biggest voice on this topic in our sport, it’s tough for me to speak to because I didn’t imagine us being here. Can we all do a better job with inclusion? Absolutely, it’s a worldwide problem, not just in our sport. We as humans can always do better.

The efforts of NASCAR leaders are to be applauded as this transformation has occurred without the usual major public relations campaign seeking favor from those that they have previously prevented from joining their ranks. When confronted with evidence of such efforts, any judicious person is forced to re-evaluate their sweeping indictment of NASCAR power-brokers as racial bigots enforcing the tenets of institutionalized racism. If Bubba Wallace’s words are an accurate representation of today’s NASCAR, I, along with the majority of Black America, have to significantly re-calibrate our viewpoints regarding the organization.

Although I am sure that the frustrations of NASCAR leaders will be heightened by the fact that when their present course is weighed against prior patterns it is still insufficient in the minds of Blacks. It should be understandable to all that Black America’s suspicions flow from a host of sources that begin with historical patterns of racial bigotry and institutionalized racism.

Regardless of its fairness, most Blacks will suspect that this alteration to unstated racial policies flows not from goodwill rather the realization that harboring racial bigots whose daunting perspectives are so significant that they can’t be muted even in public spaces is a nightmare for owners who rely on major corporations for their existence. One can only wonder how McDonald’s would be harmed due to its association with Kyle Larson.

Only time will tell if NASCAR’s efforts to be more inclusive and accommodating to non-redneck fans are genuine. One thing is certain, Kyle Larson has learned that wealthy White men, in this case NASCAR owners, will go to extreme lengths to prevent being labeled racial bigots in the public arena. Such a designation is bound to have a horrendous impact on future business. If only Kyle Larson were aware of Clarence Thomas’ slick maneuver during his Anita Hill debacle nearly thirty-years ago, he would still be positioned as the next NASCAR superstar.

If nothing else, I guess that it is a lesson learned; a costly one, yet a lesson nonetheless.

Dr. James Thomas Jones III

© Manhood, Race, and Culture 2020. � c

Now That’s What I’m Talking About: The Pro-active Decision of Abdul and Fabien Lovett to Escape Mississippi State University for the Sake of Decency and Respect

There are moments where I am flabbergasted by the absence of civility or common sense among White authority figures. I have always considered these moments unbridled testimony to how a person really about you. Unlike many of my kinsmen, I long ago decided that I would follow the directive of ancestor Maya Angelou. Angelou was credited with saying “When someone shows you who they are, believe them the first time.”

Apparently, Abdul Lovett raised his son Fabien to adhere to this axiom.

I am sure that you are wondering who Abdul and Fabien Lovett are and why I am writing about them. Well, I will tell who they are and their importance to Black America if provided the opportunity.

Fabien Lovett is a much-celebrated Division I football player whose moral compass led him to withdraw from Mississippi State University in the wake of Head Coach Mike Leach’s tweet of a woman knitting a noose for her beloved husband during this moment of quarantine. Fabien Lovett responded with a quick “WTF” response prior to entering the NCAA’s Transfer Portal; a prerequisite to transferring from Mississippi State and irrevocably severing all ties with Mike Leach. I recently learned that Fabien Lovett has decided to enroll at Florida State University.

When interviewed by the Clarion Ledger, Abdul Lovett shared the following.

I didn’t feel comfortable with my son being down there with a guy like that from a leadership standpoint – that you can just throw anything out there…I feel if he can do it, the kids are going to feel like they can do it.

As expected, Mike Leach offered the standard apology and University Administrators doled out a punishment of forcing him to participate in “listening sessions” and visiting a local Civil Rights museum after the global pandemic subsides. However, I am sure that you understand that this post has less to do with Mike Leach’s horrendous soul and everything to do with the Lovett’s decisiveness regarding this inexcusable offense.

When one considers the level of trust imbued in educators and coaches to pour into the lives of their children, it is frightening to consider that a figure possessing the thoughts, ideals, and worldview of Mike Leach would have access to the lives of any collegian, let along African-Americans. Yet, naïve entrusting parents routinely make the dubious decision to send their children to learn at the foot of someone whose dedication to their development as a person is in a word, non-existent.

Although difficult to admit publicly, moments such as this one serve as evidence of the lack of pride and solidarity among Blacks; a malady that guarantees their failure to activate dormant political power. Consider for a moment if Mike Leach had provided similar negative social commentary regarding the Jewish community and their Holocaust experience, if he had, there is little doubt that he would be rendered to the scrapheap of “hard core employables”. Put simply; Leach would be hopelessly unemployed forever. This well-deserved employment status would be less about the act and more about the inherent power found among those who were offended. Yet, in a world where Black solidarity is an oxymoron, Leach retains his employment and leads a team that is predominantly composed of African-American males. The absence of power mandates that pitiful appeals to Whites unreliable sense of decency Black America’s most frequent and reliable strategy.

Rest assured that in time, Leach will learn from his superiors who have learned how to handle Blacks that it is ungentlemanly to express such sentiments in the public arena; keep in mind that this lesson is a far-cry from the condemnation of the harboring of racial bigotry. The wicked dance of harboring bigotry, yet never displaying it in public or among Whites that one does not know is a clunky two-step that White bigots can attribute their mastery of to decades of repetition.

Unfortunately for Black America, the failure to mobilize political power or economic solidarity has left them without a reliable counter to the alluded to wicked dance beyond appealing to the White conscious. Instead of scientifically mobilizing politico-economic resources, Blacks have learned to “make the best out of a bad situation” and pray for a better day. It is time that Black America follows the lead of Abdul and Fabien Lovett and realize that “times will never get better until you make them better.”

Dr. James Thomas Jones III

© Manhood, Race, and Culture 2020.

I thank you and appreciate you visiting Manhood, Race, and Culture.

If you enjoy the content that you find here at Manhood, Race, and Culture.

It would be greatly appreciated if you would consider purchasing one of the following books.

The Dove Counter-balance IQ Test (Updated Version)

In 1968, African-American student Adrian Dove was excoriated by his professor and colleagues regarding a subpar performance on an IQ Test; legend has it that Dove’s performance landed him in the region of mental retardation. Angered by this experience, the industrious Dove set out to prove a seismic point to all around him regarding culturally biased IQ Tests. From this young man’s perspective, these tests did not measure intelligence, rather reflected how similar the test-taker was in cultural perspective as the creator of the test. He created the following IQ Test and distributed it to his classmates who all performed worse than he had on the initial test.

Keep in mind that the issue of IQ and Standardized tests will become a hot-button issue in the wake of the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education (Topeka, Kansas) decision. A few of the major questions that were being bantered around the nation by White power-brokers were the following?

  • Are Blacks intellectually inferior to their White counterparts?
  • Is the Black mind capable of learning as rapidly and retaining information as the White mind?
  • Is poor testing on Standardized Tests (ACT /SAT) a sign of Black intellectual inferiority?
  • Is it possible for Blacks to gain entry and complete coursework at Predominantly White Institutions?

This matter became a frontpage issue with the arrival of Allan Bakke and the State of California’s attempt to implement “Affirmative Action” strategies to diversify their medical school classes. Bakke’s argument was a simple statement of “In the Federal Government’s rush to include Blacks, they failed to understand that it meant excluding more deserving (meaning higher performing)  students.”

What follows is a modernized Dove Counter-Balance Intelligence Test. A major portion of our discussion regarding Affirmative Action.

NAME:

TIME:

THE COUNTER BALANCE INTELLIGENCE TEST

  1. A “handkerchief head” is:
    (a) a cool cat                                                  

(b) a porter

(c) a Uncle Tom                                             

(d) a hoddi

  1. Which word is most out of place here?

(a) black                                                         

(b) blood

(c) gray                                                          

(d) spook

  1. A “gas head” is a person who has a:
    (a) fast-moving car                                        

(b) “process,”

(c) habit of stealing cars                                

(d) long jail record for arson

  1. “Bo Diddley” is a:
    (a) game for children                                     

(b) down-home cheap wine

(c) down-home singer                                    

(d) new dance

  1. “Hully Gully” came from:
    (a) East Oakland                                            

(b) Fillmore

(c) Watts                                                        

(d) Harlem

  1. Cheap chitlings (not the kind you purchase at a frozen food counter) will taste rubbery unless they are cooked long enough. How soon can you quit cooking them to eat and enjoy them?
    (a) 45 minutes                                                

(b) 2 hours

(c) 24 hours                                                   

(d) 1 week (on a low flame)

  1. What are the “Dixie Hummingbirds?”
    (a) part of the KKK                                       

(b) a swamp disease

(c) a modern gospel group                             

(d) Deacons.

  1. If you throw the dice and 7 is showing on the top, what is facing down?

(a) 7                                                                

(b) snake eyes

(c) boxcars                                                     

(d) 11.

  1. “Jet” is:
    (a) an East Oakland motorcycle club            

(b) a gang in “West Side Story”

(c) a news and gossip magazine                    

(d) a way of life for the very rich

  1. T-Bone Walker got famous for playing what?
    (a) trombone                                                  

(b) piano

(c) “T-flute”                                                   

(d) guitar

  1. “Bird” or “Yardbird” was the “jacket” that jazz lovers from coast to coast hung on:
    (a) Lester Young                                            

(b) Peggy Lee

(c) Benny Goodman                                      

(d) Charlie Parker

  1. Hattie Mae Johnson is on the County. She has four children and her husband is now in jail for non-support, as he was unemployed and was not able to give her any money. Her welfare check is now $286 per month. Last night she went out with the highest player in town. If she got pregnant, then nine months from now how much more will her welfare check be?
    (a) $80                                                            

(b) $35

(c) $150                                                         

(d) $100

  1. “Money don’t get everything it’s true.”
    (a) but I don’t have none and I’m so blue      

(b) but what it don’t get I can’t use

(c) so make do with what you’ve got             

(d) but I don’t know that and neither do you.

  1. How much does a short dog cost?
    (a) $0.15                                                         

(b) $2.00

(c) $0.35                                                         

(d) $0.05

  1. Many people say that “Juneteenth” (June 19) should be made a legal holiday because this was the day when:
    (a) the slaves were freed in the USA             

(b) the slaves were freed in Texas

 (c) the slaves were freed in Jamaica             

(d) the  slaves were freed in Ca.

  1. The saying that “He’s Clean” means?

      A.        Fresh out of the shower                     

B.        Not carrying drugs

      C.        Well Dressed                                     

D.        Extremely smart

17. Who wrote The Road to Riches?

      A.        Kool Moe Dee                                   

B.        Big Daddy Kane        

      C.        Ice-T                                                  

D.        Kool G. Rap

18. Who performed a soulful rendition of the Star Spangled Banner at the NBA All             Star Game?

      A.        Prince                                                 

B.        Marvin Gaye

      C.        TLC                                                    

D.        Al Green

19. Who was the first woman to run for the U.S. Presidency?

      A.        Shirley Chisholm                               

B.        Hillary Clinton

      C.        Jane Goodall                                      

D.        Susan B. Anthony

20. What religious leader was known as “The Charmer” during an earlier music       career?

      A.        Malcolm X                                         

B.        Louis Farrakhan

      C.        The Honorable Elijah Muhammad    

D.        Father Divine

21. The lead rapper for Public Enemy was?        

      A.        Chuck D                                             

B.        Flavor Flav

      C.        KRS-ONE                                          

D.        Paris

22. The first person to say “Black Power” during the 1960s was?

      A.        James Brown                                     

B.        Al Green

      C.        Stokely Carmichael                           

D.        Willie Ricks

23. Which artist is closely associated with the P-Funk

      A.        Shock-G                                             

B.        George Clinton

      C.        Big Baby                                            

D.        All of the Above

24. Tupac Amaru Shakur was born in

      A.        Baltimore                                           

B.        Harlem

      C.        Marin City                                         

D.        Oakland

25. My dogs are barking means

      A.        My feet are sore                                 

B.        My feet hurt

      C.        My shoes are too tight                       

D.        All of the above

26. Which group made “Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos”

      A.        Public Enemy                                    

B.        Busta Rhymes

      C.        The Last Poets                                   

D.        Sister Souljah

27. “Are you waiting for my arm to fall off?” Is a classic line from what movie?

      A.        School Daze                                       

B.        Lady Sings the Blues

      C.        Mo Better Blues                                

D.        Sparkle

28. The father on Good Times was named?

      A.        Jerry                                                   

B.        JJ

      C.        James                                                 

D.        Bookman

29. Jim Brown was a famous?

      A.        Athlete                                               

B.        Movie Star

      C.        Political Activist                                

D.        All of the above

30. Drez is the lead rapper in what group?

      A.        The Lords of the Underground          

B.        Black Sheep

      C.        X-Clan                                               

D.        Digital Underground

31. Nassir Jones’ first album was titled?

      A.        Stillmatic                                           

B.        Illmatic

      C.        Automatic                                          

D.        Too Tragic

32. Who song “I Will Survive”?

      A.        Whitney Houston                               

B.        Yolanda Adams

      C.        Gloria Gaynor                                    

D.        Hezekiah Walker

33. What was Muhammad Ali’s former name?  

      A.        Sonny Liston                                     

B.        Cassius Clay

      C.        Joe Louis                                           

D.        Carl Johnson

34. Malcolm X was a member of which organization?

      A.        Nation of Islam                                  

B.        OAAU

      C.        Muslim Mosque Inc.                          

D.        All of the Above

35. Michael Ray Richardson was a?

      A.        Boxer                                                 

B.        Pugilist

      C.        Politician                                           

D.        Basketball Player

36. The lead singer of LTD was?

      A.        Jeffrey Osborne                                 

B.        Luther Vandross

      C.        Teddy Pendergrass                            

D.        Prince

37. “Freeway Ricky Ross” garnered fame as a?

      A.        Drug Dealer                                       

B.        Corrections Officer

      C.        Rapper                                               

D.        Race Car Driver

38. Bruce Leroy was

      A.        The Last Dragon                                

B.        A Political Leader

      C.        Bruce Lee’s son                                 

D.        Sho’ Nuff

39. Marvin Gaye recorded many songs with whom?

      A.        Diana Ross                                         

B.        Gladys Knight

      C.        Tammi Terrell                       

      D.        Michael Jackson

40. Billy Dee Williams was the spokesperson for what?

      A.        Malt Liquor                           

      B.        Candy

      C.        Love                                       

      D.        Wine

 

Where’s Huey P. Newton When You Need Him?: How Would The Black Panther Party Have Reacted to the Coronavirus

Over fifty years after its genesis, the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense reigns as Black America’s most memorable revolutionary group. For most, the Panther’s longevity flows from iconic imagery that never-fails to escape the limits of time. For an oppressed people starving for strong images, photos and footage of Black men resisting White oppression were intoxicating. There was no doubt that Panther co-founders Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale had issued a direct challenge to marauding Whites seeking to extend Black America’s misery and suffering.

Although the referenced iconic imagery ensures the Panthers omnipresent importance, it is proving to be a double-edged sword in the following manner. The admiration that Panther guns engender among supporters who continually reconstruct the organization in their minds has led to a cavernous hole in their understanding of Panther history. Such populations are quick to miss the crucial fact that the vaunted “Panther Patrols” — a program of Panther members patrolling police officers as they patrolled black communities — was only one of a series of community service activities. Panther Party community service activities ranged from free breakfast for children and grocery programs to the creation of sickle cell anemia testing/treatment centers.

There is no need to rehash the plentiful data regarding the disproportionate impact that the Coronavirus global pandemic is having on Black America. Ironically, the potential “hotspots” for future outbreaks are the same locations where many of the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense’s local chapters were located. An understanding of Panther history leads my belief that it is time for Black America to follow the revolutionary example provided by Newton, Seale, Hutton, Pratt, Rush, and Hampton by ‘Seizing the Time’ and showing the power of the people by taking definitive steps to address this pandemic.

Just as Newton and Seale addressed Black America’s most pressing problems in an organized manner during the volatile 60’s protest era, contemporary Black Nationalists must take similar steps by educating and enforcing guidelines to prevent the Coronavirus spread among our community. Although such community service efforts are neither sensational nor lauded as the “Panther Patrols”, they are as integral to Black survival in this time of crisis as the Free Breakfast for Children, Ambulance service, Sickle-Cell Anemia Centers, and assisting the elderly within our community. According to Huey P. Newton, the Revolutionary’s sole objective is to serve the people.   

If provided the opportunity, I would advise those seeking to walk in the footsteps of the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense to abandon their fascination with the gun and paramilitary displays of machismo in favor of developing community service activities specifically designed to aid the community through this trying time. We can no longer afford to waste another moment mesmerized by romantic notions of a by-gone era. It is time that we recalibrate our strategies, tactics, and goals to fit this moment.

All Power to the People!!!!!!!!!

Dr. James Thomas Jones III

© Manhood, Race, and Culture 2020.

I thank you and appreciate you visiting Manhood, Race, and Culture.

If you enjoy the content that you find here at Manhood, Race, and Culture.

It would be greatly appreciated if you would consider purchasing one of the following books.

  • Foolish” Floyd: The Life & Times of an African-American Contrarian.
  • Creating Revolution as They Advance: A Narrative History of the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense

Why The Confrontation at the Wood River (Il) Walmart is Yet Another Example of the Grind of Being a Black Male in America

It would be both disingenuous and dishonest to state that young African-American males enter this world on the same footing as their counterparts of any other racial or ethnic group. According to many medical studies, African-American children are born with natural abilities such as being able to hold up their heads, sitting up, and focusing on objects that others are incapable of achieving. So, Black males enter this world further developed than all of their male counterparts.

I do not need to tell you that other studies monitoring the development of Black males throughout their lifetimes reveal that they are by-passed by their male counterparts in every way imaginable. In many ways it is startling that a populace that entered this world at the forefront of development ends last in the race of life. The most reasonable question that one could ask about this matter is a singular-word of “Why?”

Although the above question is brief, an accurate answer require volumes. No one should doubt that so much happens to Black males during their lifetimes.

This understanding of the maddening twists-and-turns that occur in the lives of African-American males informs my bemused look regarding an incident at a Walmart in Wood River (Il.). Apparently a White police officer was filmed harassing two Black males, Jermon Best and Diangelo Jackson, for entering the shopping establishment while wearing protective masks.

Much of the haranguing has occurred regarding two points: (a) if the wearing of protective masks were against Walmart’s policy as the officer cited, it actually isn’t, and (b) if this were an occurrence of racial profiling. I refuse to equivocate on such silly matters and will dedicate this space to an ancillary issue that I term the grind of being a Black male in America.

Although rarely commented on, Black male lives vacillate between a frustrating cycle of “micro-aggressions” and major incidents of racial bigotry and institutionalized racism. Racial matters hover over Black males like unpredictable clouds who seem to block the Sun’s radiant light according to their own whimsical nature. Every Black male understands that neither a formidable socioeconomic status or professional accomplishments protect them from the unpredictable winds of racial bigotry and the torrential storms of institutionalized racism. The incident at the Wood River Walmart testifies to such.

Let’s be clear regarding what occurred. The unnamed officer made the decision to harass Best and Jackson based solely on their physical appearance. History proves that the most assured activating agent to White prejudice and bigotry is the presence of Black males. We cannot forget that the seeds of racial bigotry occurs via an American socialization process distributed via school curriculum, television, movies, life experiences, and kitchen tables.

Not even my most fervent desire to escape this damning truth has paved a path for me to consider the police officer at the center of this storm as an outlier. Unfortunately, he is a fairly typical representative of this nation’s most plentiful creation. At their best, Americans leave the impression that there is little hope that the ill-fitting concept of racism will ever reduce beyond gentlemanly political correctness. Despite what most would like to think, the absence of blatant uncouth racial bigotry is not the same as the presence of racial equality and/or justice for the darker brother/sister.

The revelation that the absence of blatant uncouth racial bigotry spewed into the public sphere by our countrymen does not signal the presence of racial equality and/or justice would be a great starting point for a riveting discussion regarding what is wrong with young Black males. Yet, this is a difficult discussion for the entire nation as it would invariably place much of the responsibility for the plight of Black males at the feet of each of us. One thing is for certain, the collective ignoring of this matter will not lessen its impact on Black males and the nation. It will simply grow worse as time goes along like an unchecked virus. And as we all know, an unchecked virus is a very dangerous thing.

Dr. James Thomas Jones III

© Manhood, Race, and Culture 2020.

I thank you and appreciate you visiting Manhood, Race, and Culture.

If you enjoy the content that you find here at Manhood, Race, and Culture.

It would be greatly appreciated if you would consider purchasing one of the following books.

  • Foolish” Floyd: The Life & Times of an African-American Contrarian.
  • Creating Revolution as They Advance: A Narrative History of the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense