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Overview
Conditions have changed so
we are not repackaging the old; racial oppression is more subtle
and cloaked in platitudes like "colorblind society" and
"level playing field"--today's versions of
yesterday's "Separate but Equal" nonsense. Unlike
yesterday, nowadays there are no racial apartheid and caste laws
on the books.
However, the values, intent
and patterns are still alive and well and the Neocons want to
return AmeriKKKa to the 19th Century (with monopoly businesses,
pliant government, and racial subordination). Where once the
white media depicted us as coons and pickaninnies and our
parents were forced to endure characters like Mantan Moreland
and Step 'n Fetchit who were caricatures out of a thoroughly
racist mindset, today our own children demean and devalue
themselves and our race by writing, producing. and performing
socio-pathic material. "It's all about the Benjamins,"
they say. So this is an aspect we haven't had to fight before,
our own people degrading us on such a large scale.
Sharif
Interviews Junious
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The racialization
of slavery was the product of the trans-Atlantic slave trade, in
connection with the world-market and the rise capitalism.
Marx deals with this in outline in Capital, which
Eric Williams takes up and analyses in deals his
Capitalism
and Slavery. The
existence of a “race of slaves” in America, and in
particular in the United States where following Aristotle's
class definition of slaves as less than human the American
Constitution declared slaves as less than human – it followed
that the race which constituted the slave population was less
than human.
Based on
technological-economic history in the United States, a history
of class struggles, the triangular trade displaced White and
Native American indentured servants and slaves by an influx of
slaves human beings from Africa who were sold into chattel
slavery. The first
African 'bondsmen' arrived in 1619.
By the 19th century there were no more White bondsmen or
Native American slaves. While
it was true that not all Blacks were slaves, and were free
Blacks, it is also true that by this time all slaves were Black.
Sharif
Interviews Lil Joe
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There are certain things that the
more committed elements of the Black Arts movement or
the Black Power movement never did develop. They fought
among themselves as to what should be the priorities.
But they never developed, for example, a real foothold
into film and into the recording industry, with the
force of the community behind them. They left that to
other people.
So, for example, the people who are
very often running the discos and this—are
the people who ain't got no consciousness to begin with.
They're just them kind of folks. That's what Archie was
talking about. When Archie Shepp
stated . . . Archie said—hey
man, like everybody got into the thing and the music
went weird.
Over here
you got Albert Ayler, over here Coltrane and over here
B.B. King. Over here some of them started saying we need
one music. Why is the music so divided up? Why is it
that so-called blues people, the folk people are not
into Coltrane? Those are complex musics. But Archie said
I want to do some music that's swinging but has
consciousness in it.
You see
what I mean? But Archie Shepp don't have a record
company. Now what I'm saying is that, if I may be a
little bit controversial for a moment, maybe they should
have been fighting the Mafia. See where I'm coming from?
I'll put it out like that. So like I don't know if it's
true, I hope it's not true but they say the Mafia took
Motown from Barry Gordy.
Larry Neal in Omowe
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