Was John Lewis Correct? Were Sixties Black Power Slogans “Empty Rhetoric?”

My initial exposure to John Lewis occurred while researching Black Panther Party for Self-Defense co-founder Huey P. Newton’s calamitous attempt to surrender control of his organization to the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). By the late-sixties, Huey P. Newton believed that his cadre had been infiltrated and driven into unprecedented chaos by internal and external factors. In the wake of the killing of Lil’ Bobby Hutton and the lack of uniformity from Panther chapters throughout the nation, it became obvious that the Black Panther Party’s teenagers and twenty-something lumpen proletariats did not possess the bourgeoisie skills needed to effectively guide the organization. Hence, Huey P. Newton’s decision to give control of the organization to SNCC’s collegians.

Newton’s decision, a decision that every Panther that I interviewed disagreed with, forced me to study the history of SNCC. It is this research that exposed me to Marion Berry, Diane Nash, John Lewis, Bernard Lafayette, H. Rap Brown, and Stokely Carmichael (Kwame Ture). If you need your faith in the future restored, engagement with the story of SNCC members following an Ella Baker-centric decentralized leadership model will accomplish that lofty goal. John Lewis is a central figure in this narrative.

SNCC, officially formed at Shaw College, Ella Baker’s alma mater, exceeded the expectations of old-guard Civil Rights leaders by becoming much-grander than an auxiliary group to adult Civil Rights groups like Dr. King’s Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC). Make no mistake about it, SNCC activists, unlike the adults of SCLC, were on the frontline of hand-to-hand combat with white bigots.

Whether it was the Sit-In Movement or the continuation of CORE’s Freedom Rides, John Lewis was central to this on-going battle of good vs. evil. As expected, SNCC activists grew increasingly frustrated by the slow pace of integration as governed by white bigots. The alluded to frustrations facilitated a segment of SNCC activists to begin publicly questioning “Who wants to integrate into a burning house.” Increasing doubt regarding the wisdom of integrating with a hostile white community were most publicly articulated via angry not fully defined Black Power slogans.

It was the ascension of Black Power slogans within SNCC that facilitated John Lewis’ exit from SNCC. According to the SNCC leader, Black Power slogans were little more than “empty rhetoric” that threatened to dismantle hard-fought gains in the struggle for racial equality.

Since John Lewis’ death was announced, I have been thinking about what I could say about this man that has not already been stated in the voluminous coverage that he has received. I finally settled on an examination of Lewis’ criticism of Black Power slogans as being nothing more than “empty rhetoric.”

Of all the riveting moments in the struggle for African-American liberation, there may be no more exhilarating one for Black America than the Black Power Era. At the center of the adoration for this historical period is the polarizing slogan of “Black Power” whose debut most attribute to the courage of SNCC worker Willie “Mukasa” Ricks in Greenwood, Mississippi.

As with most slogans, its power is found in its flexibility to address a host of situations; a pliability that flows from its lack of specificity. To the present moment, the meaning of undefined “Black Power” slogans are determined on a person-by-person basis. It is this lack of definition that led Congressman John Lewis to render it as little more than empty rhetoric. Lewis was not alone in his summation.

In response to SNCC leader Stokely Carmichael’s insistence that “Power is the only thing respected in this world, and we must get it any cost” The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., responded

We must use every constructive means to amass economic and political power. This is the kind of legitimated power we need. We must work to build racial pride and refute the notion black is evil and ugly. But this must come through a program, not merely through a slogan…The words ‘black’ and ‘power’ together give the impression that we are talking about black domination rather than black equality.

MLK’s rebuttal to Carmichael buttresses John Lewis’ assertion that the mid-sixties call for “Black Power” was empty rhetoric that threatened hard-fought gains. I am certain that the future Congressman feared that the undefined slogan threatened to destroy the tenuous relationship between black and non-black activists.

When one considers that the man who earned the moniker of “the conscience of Congress” stood against insurgent Black Powerites for their use of undefined language during the mid-sixties and never moved off of his square of doing what he considered correct in the pursuit of racial equality, there is little negativity that one can attach to Lewis’ legacy. The historical record has been kind to Lewis’ belief that Black Power slogans were little more than “empty rhetoric” that was an unwise choice of words that threatened to do more damage than most could imagine. In many ways, Lewis’ warnings regarding the use of empty rhetoric should be heeded in this present moment filled with the proliferation of phrase-mongering and undefined slogans that are wielded by individuals to advance personal interests. Unfortunately for us all, few paid attention to Lewis’ warnings during the sixties and even fewer will heed them as we travel into an uncertain future.

Dr. James Thomas Jones III

©Manhood, Race, and Culture, 2020.

The Miseducation of the American Worker: Why American Workers Continue to “Cut off their nose to spite their face”

In a recent video taken at a Minnesota Walmart, two white shoppers horrified shoppers by donning masks bearing the swastika symbol. For most forward-thinking people, the swastika is the symbolic equivalent of the “N-word” that carries a heavy legacy of pain that is only rivaled by the African Holocaust. As if they could not make matters worse, the female portion of this duo stoked the growing emotional embers into a full-blown inferno with obscene hand gestures that communicated her feelings regarding those taping her antics.

Although it is natural to jump to a snap judgement that this is yet another occurrence of racial bigotry, intolerance, and xenophobia. Experience has taught me to not rush to quick judgment. So, I listened to the alluded to duos explanation for why they wore the offensive symbol so prominently on their face. The explanation was in in a word, illuminating.

When confronted by other Walmart shoppers, the masked female stated that

I’m not a Nazi. If you vote for [Joe] Biden, you’re going to be in Nazi Germany. That’s what it’s going to be like. Socialism is going to happen here in America.

I resist every urge to make connections without sufficient evidence, hence, I have no comment regarding if this couple are members or mere sympathizers of the National Socialist Party (Nazi’s); it is in many ways none of my business. However, I think that the most interesting portion of this matter is found in the usual phrase-mongering against Socialism. Whenever I hear non-elites railing against Socialism, I recognize that they have undergone not only a serious misreading of history, but also are devoid of a serious understanding of American Capitalism.

I will tell you the truth that most educators fail to articulate, however, the most exhilarating aspect of being an educator is the opportunity to see students learn what are their best interests and how to balance several variables while seeking to make important decisions that are in their best interests. As a labor historian who spends much time researching and addressing racial matters, I will tell you that my students are similar to most Americans in the following way, they have no understanding of the exploitive nature of Capitalism as it is executed in this nation. This absence of understanding beautifully explains why American workers have yet to understand that they are steeped in a war for economic resources with elites. The fact that they do not understand such substantive issues is particularly shocking as the war between workers and owners is this nation’s longest running war.

The spoils of this Class struggle are life-sustaining economic resources. Yet, this matter is rarely, if ever, explained to American schoolchildren in a digestible manner. Hence, much-needed discussions over Capitalism, Socialism, and Communism denigrate to a celebration of socially irresponsible Capitalism and the dismissal of all other systems. Unfortunately, American schoolchildren are taught that Socialism is to be avoided at all costs; it is not even up for discussion.

A crucial portion of myself is saddened to report that not only have my students been instructed to avoid Socialism but that they cannot tell you from whence such emanate. To put it simply; my students have been indoctrinated about this and many other substantive matters.

The dimwitted, uneducated, and certainly poverty-stricken Walmart couple’s support of Capitalism is a classic case of “cutting off your nose to spite your face.” Only in America does one witness economically marginalized citizens of every race/ethnicity taking a stand for their exploiters right to continue their exploitation. If non-elites who have been convinced that the best way to display their patriotism is to support an ownership class that exploits their labor for the amassing of unconscionable profit do not increase their understanding and change their ways, their economic position will continue to spiral downward.

In their rush to defend American economic philosophies that rest on thoughts of individualism and small government, non-elites are betraying their present and their children’s future. It is surprising that non-elites fail to recognize that during economic downturns the elites who claim that unfettered Capitalism is the most patriotic of all activities are quick to adopt Socialist principles of communalism and government assistance when necessary. If I knew no better, I would believe that American elites believe in cooperative Socialism for them and exploitive Capitalism for everyone else.

As the son of a now retired unionized U.S. Steelworker, I can attest to the essentialness of unionization and a non-biased worker solidarity. It is the only way that non-elites will not lose this centuries-long war with greedy avaricious owners devoid of loyalty to the workers who have enriched them beyond measure.

Unfortunately for workers, as long as they receive their “education” at the foot of American Capitalists they will continue to be “hoodwinked, led astray, run amuck, and bamboozled” by economic elites. We are witnessing a slick economic game where the victim of a brazen robbery has been convinced that if he plays his cards correctly that he could also reach a point where he could rob and exploit others. Until the brainwashing of American laborers and their children is eradicated, they will continue to not only lose in this epic battle between workers vs. owners, but also have nary a clue for whey they are losing battle after battle.

Ultimately it appears that America has devolved into a place where not only is it permissible to have Socialism for elites and exploitive Capitalism for non-elites, but also those being exploited by this rigged economic system have thrown their support behind its perpetuation. What a wicked trick that the elites have played on American workers.

Dr. James Thomas Jones III

© Manhood, Race, and Culture, 2020.

According to the idiotic Tom Cotton, Slavery was “a necessary evil”: I warned you that his idiocy was just beginning

One of the most comforting parts about writing about the many facets of racial strife in America is the reality that I’m rarely at a loss for material. Unfortunately, it appears that the same cast of characters reappear with different degrees of foolishness. Earlier today, I penned a warning regarding the idiotic thinking of Senator Tom Cotton (R-Arkansas); I never imagined that I would be addressing this imbecile at the latter portion of the same day. Yet, here we are.

I have chosen to revisit this matter because I consider it as dangerous, if not more than the murder of black people in American streets.

Just in case you missed it, Senator Cotton has doubled down on his efforts to “Make American School Curriculums Great Again” by offering the following quote to the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

We have to study the history of slavery and its role and impact on the development of our country because otherwise, we can’t understand our country. As the Founding Fathers said, it was the necessary evil upon which the union was built.

I have always subscribed to the belief that if you listen long enough, a fool will always reveal their foolish ways. Senator Tom Cotton perfectly fits this description.

As I mentioned in the earlier post, there is an element of truth found in Senator Cotton’s reasoning regarding the importance of history. He offers a similar truism in the above quote. I have no problem with his contention that

We have to study the history of slavery and its role and impact on the development of our country because otherwise we can’t understand our country.

My issue with Cotton and those who agree with his infantile understanding of history and even worse application of logic is that they are not interested in studying the central role of slavery in the development of America. His kind are seeking to explain away black economic exploitation, physical misery, and elongated racial inequality by crafting an opportunistic narrative that borders on lunacy. Such people are seeking to equivocate and use half-witted logic to simultaneously deny or severely downplay the African Holocaust, an event that exceeds all other human atrocities on the planet, while celebrating the perpetrators as “Founding Fathers.”

Let me be clear on this matter, the British colonies would not have flourished without the labor of stolen Africans, Thomas Jefferson is a hypocrite and a rapist for penning the words that “All men are created equal” in the daylight and continuing his status as not only a slaveowner by night but also a rapist who victimized Sally Hemings for decades. Trust that I could go on and on regarding the atrocities that the “Founding Fathers” perpetrated against people of color on behalf of their God. Yet, I am going to step aside and allow Frederick Douglass, a figure who experienced what Senator Tom Cotton considers a necessary evil address this matter.

If provided the opportunity I am certain that Frederick Douglass would inform Senator Cotton that his equivocating and desire to silence black voices is not only nothing new, but also aimed at creating

a thin veil to cover up crimes which would disgrace a nation of savages. There is not a nation on the earth guilty of practices, more shocking and bloody, than are the people of these United States, at this very hour. Go where you may, search where you will, roam through

all the monarchies and despotisms of the old world, travel through South America, search out every

abuse, and when you have found the last, lay your facts by the side of the everyday practices of this

nation, and you will say with me, that, for revolting barbarity and shameless hypocrisy, America reigns

without a rival . . .

There is really nothing more than needs to be said about Senator Tom Cotton’s dastardly attempt to relegate the greatest genocide known to mankind the level of a “necessary evil.”

Dr. James Thomas Jones III

© Manhood, Race, and Culture, 2020.

Brother, Come on This Porch, Grab a Seat, Take a Load Off, and Let Me Know What’s On Your Mind: An Open Invitation for Black Men to Join Us For A Robust Discussion of What It Means To Be A Black Man In America

Although I have never revealed these feelings to anyone. Do you know what I have always wanted to be? I have always wanted to be like my Uncle’s who sat on my grandmother’s front porches and engaged in hours upon hours of talk that covered black relationships, black family matters, black economics, the proliferation of drugs within our community.

From a very young age, I thought that the wisdom of my Uncles (Leon, A.C., Mulazim Abdul Rashid, Rikki, Jerry, Steve, James, Fats, Danny, Kenneth, Jeff, Gary, Clarence, David, and Arthur) was only superseded by my grandfathers (A.G. Young and James Thomas Jones Sr.) who knew everything because they had lived longer. At least that is how my childhood mind understood the world. Nevertheless, I yearned for the day that I would have lived enough life to have something substantial to contribute to what amounted to as A Gathering of Old Men, a designation that is also the title of one of my favorite Ernest J. Gaines books.

Although I am hundreds of miles away from my family, that does not lessen the fact that my time to sit on some unknown porch and talk about everything and nothing at all with a group of black men who assemble in the spirit of brotherhood. It is a privileged position to be in and one that I am excited to share with others who would like to experience a virtual community of brothers who are seeking to make sense out of this world that we live in. Let’s be honest about the fact that black men far too frequently seek to traverse the rugged terrain of America by themselves, it is a Herculean effort. An unnecessary Herculean effort that could be lightened with the support of willing brothers.

So, it is in the spirit of brotherhood that I heartily invite my brothers to join us in the Zoom broadcast of the show Who Did It To You.

Every Tuesday at 6:00 EST & 5:00 CST

I would really like to encourage the brothers to join us and interact with us as we try to decipher and survive what it means to be black man in America.

Please use the link below to join us.

Dr. James Thomas Jones III

EVERY TUESDAY

6:00 Eastern — 5:00 Central

Click to take a seat on the porch

Why Ol’ Tom Cotton’s Legislative Proposal (Saving American History Act of 2020) Should Have Everyone Who Loves Black Education Concerned

It is a rare day that some type of racial conflict does not land at my doorstep. Predictably, many of the alluded to racial discussions are with total strangers. Yet, they still leave an indelible imprint on my soul regarding the both the present and the future of this nation that James Baldwin loved more than any other country. The catalyst behind these contentious debates is invariably some strangers flawed understanding of U.S. history. Those who attack me are cloaked in a tattered patchwork quilt of biased historical “facts” that paint “whites” as anointed by God to rule this and all other lands. Such thinkers are “a dime a dozen.” Senator Tom Cotton (R-Ark) represents this populace.   

Just in case you missed it, ol’ Tom Cotton has introduced a bill titled “Saving American History Act of 2020.” Few of my countrymen seem to understand that the path to flawed public policy is a fallacious historical narrative that uses the silencing of contradictory voices and perspectives as a reliable foundation. For many of my white countrymen it appears that the propagation of a “standard historical narrative” is akin to a holy crusade. This fanaticism is the driving force behind Senator Cotton’s attack on the New York Times Magazine 1619 Project, that has the audacity to view American history through the lens of slavery.

According to Tom Cotton, the 1619 Project amounts to little more than

…a racially divisive, revisionist account of history that denies the noble principles of freedom and equality on which our nation was founded.

Senator Cotton’s perspective is a fairly standard one for whites seeking to extend their control over ill-gotten politico-economic monopolies; a privilege that trickles down more reliably than Reaganomics.

I hope that you are not shocked that I do agree with Tom Cotton’s belief that how we as a nation reconstruct our past, matters mightily. Put simply; the history lessons American schoolchildren digest shape their understanding of this nation’s past, present, and future possibilities. Consider for a moment the potential destructive power that a whitewashed history curriculum has on the psyche of black and brown children. If black parents are not careful, their children will carry the shame of chattel slavery and integrate beliefs that black poverty is not caused by institutional racism, rather their ancestors’ laziness. According to psychologist Derrick Wilson, “far too frequently, the educational process is a traumatic one for black children.” Undoubtedly, if the referenced trauma, is left unchecked, the intellectual curiosity of black children will be dimmed.

The absence of riotous opposition to Senator Tom Cotton’s bill disturbs my soul for many reasons.

The alluded to silence means that far too many Americans agree with Senator Cotton’s perspective that the inclusion of contrary viewpoints amount to little more than “left-wing garbage” or progressive Americans do not understand its inherent dangers.

In many ways, Senator Cotton’s bill amounts to an outlandish counter-attack against “an activist movement (that) is now gaining momentum to deny or obfuscate this history by claiming that America was not founded on the ideals of the Declaration but rather on slavery and oppression.” Those who agree with such conjecture will find it difficult to accept the following historical facts. Thomas Jefferson’s reverberating words that “All men are created equal” is one of many signs of his undeniable hypocrisy and inconsistent relationship with the truth. Even Abraham Lincoln, the great emancipator, is recorded as responding with a stern response of “nothing” when asked what he planned to do about chattel slavery.

Unfortunately for Senator Tom Cotton, the silencing of contradictory voices will never erase America’s sordid racial past from the historical record. Those opposing the Tom Cotton’s of the world realize that time is on their side. In many ways, it is ironic that those seeking to turn back the hands of time to “Make America Great Again” are motivated by the realization that time is not on their side. In time, those who agree with Senator Tom Cotton will realize that time, just like truth, marches forward and there is no way of stopping its procession.

In this case, the passing of time and expiration of those who agree with Tom Cotton will be a good thing, a very good thing, for American schoolchildren of all races.

Dr. James Thomas Jones III

© Manhood, Race, and Culture, 2020.

Committed to investigating, examining, and representing the African-American male, men, and manhood by offering commentary regarding the status of Black Men and Black Manhood as it relates to African-American Manhood, Race, Class, Politics, and Culture from an educated and authentic African-American perspective aimed at improving the plight of African-American men and African-American Manhood in regards to Politics, Culture, Education, and Social Matters.