Friday, 30. June 2006, 14:07:44
race, identity, authenticity, blackness
...
This is the legacy of Maafa. The legacy of Maafa is such that these five conditions apply to every single Black nation. Maafa is a Swahili word which defines the triad of tortures: continental enslavement, passage across the seas, and New World bondage. The primary accomplishment of slavery was to eliminate African institutions of culture, defense, and justice - the cornerstones of social order for all Black people. The post-emancipation task of abducted Africans is not to gain wholesale inclusion into the institutions of their former masters. It is to reclaim, rebuild, and transform their own institutions to provide nourishment and protection for Black people. The loss of sovereignty and African cultural grounding equates to the loss of self-determination. The loss of self-determination means that Blacks exists as adjuncts to other people with prior claims of authenticity and authority.
Authenticity and authority are the concepts by which a people define and maintain themselves. Authenticity refers to the generally recognized and accepted behavioral practices and beliefs of a people. Implicit in this notion of authenticity is that a people self-identify, and therefore share certain values and practices as indicative of membership. Authority refers to the institutions of those people which define traditional and acceptable behavioral practice for the group.
By way of example, the authentic American is white. Six in ten Americans self-identify as white. National institutions of commerce, travel, politics, and trade portray the typical American as white. Non-white Americans typically have other descriptors attached to their identities: Native American, Mexican-American, and Asian-American. In fact, many non-white historical figures are not remembered as Americans at all: Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse, Nat Turner, and Malcolm X. The context in which these warriors were great precludes their identification as Americans. Whites, conversely, are generally referred to without reference to a European cultural base. Thus, Norman Schwartzkopf is not considered a German-American. He is merely American. While American authenticity is uniformly expressed as “white,” the authority is spread across many institutions:
•The institutional authority in politics is made up of a complex system of international, federal, state, and local networks. Political networks include multinational corporations (Bechtel, Microsoft), Congressional representatives, judges, legislators, and the armed forces, and law enforcement.
•Financial authority is signaled from the institutions of New York City’s Wall Street. Financial networks include commercial banks, savings banks, savings and loan institutions, financial service corporations, multinational corporations (Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch), and the Federal Reserve Bank.
•“Hollywood,” the home of commercial television and filmmaking, is the definitive source of American cultural authority. Cultural networks include multinational corporations (Time Warner, Cap Cities), media magnates (Turner, Murdoch, et al.), television networks, cable networks, theatre companies, schools, universities, and colleges, museums, spiritual centers (temples, mosques, churches, synagogues, etc.)
The dynamism of the American polity, notwithstanding, traditional images of America endure domestically and internationally. The authentic Muslim continues to be represented as Arab. The authority is in Mecca. For Catholics, the representations are as white as DaVinci’s paintings, and the authority is at the Vatican. Authority is as important as the perception of authenticity. It is clear that religious traditions like Islam and Catholicism require clear lines of authority. Therefore, propriety as a Muslim or Catholic is not only associated with tradition, but with the current practice espoused in a living institution (Mecca or the Vatican).
Blacks continue to live in America as adjuncts with only secondary claims to authenticity and no claims to authority. In some scenarios, individual Blacks are given opportunities to serve as surrogates of a non-Black entity. Witness Colin Powell as surrogate soldier for authentic American interests. Colin Powell is an American, without hyphen - without question. The context of his soldiering is not related to America’s racial conflict. Thus, Powell is more successor to Crispus Attucks than to men like Nat Turner, Gabriel or Denmark Vesey.
A people who are adjuncts or surrogates are best identified with a hyphen. The hyphen represents a connection to some greater entity. The recent shift in identity from ‘Black’ to ‘African-American’ suggests an implicit acceptance of Black marginality. Moreover, from a grammatical standpoint, the order is suggestive of powerlessness. America represents a powerful authoritative entity, of which Blacks are not authentically a part. Culturally, African icons and traditions are ritually ridiculed. Economically, American Blacks earn less than seventy cents on the dollar earned by whites. Blacks remain an underrepresented political group. In 1997, only one Black Senator served in the American Congress. African Americans are a marginalized group.
“African-American” is an answer to the question, “What kind of an American are you?” Africans, once abducted (1619) and then emancipated (1863), were made “American” by an act of the Congress (1865). Citizenship was not gained by referendum, nor did the creation of Black citizens reflect the popular will of authentic (white) Americans. Citizenship was imposed by political and military leadership as an alternative to territorial sovereignty within the borders of the U.S., wholesale relocation in Africa or the Caribbean, or extermination. Therefore, “African-American” remains a contradictory term. The contradiction is only heightened by the visceral contempt of most whites and Blacks for Africa and Africans. American Blacks, and others, have been taught that to “look African” is to look ugly. Doll preference tests performed by psychologist Kenneth Clarke on little girls demonstrated the pervasiveness of anti-Black indoctrination for American youth. Just as young Black children did not wish to associate with Black dolls, their parents typically deny association to the font of blackness - Africa.
Miseducation and alienation notwithstanding, I refer to U.S. born Blacks as American Blacks or American Africans. Continental, Caribbean, Asian, and European Blacks are also identified as such, based on region. Grammatically, the region (America, Caribbean, etc.) modifies the core cultural connection (Black or African) - hence, American African or Caribbean African. Thus culture, not nationality, as is the case with “African-American,” is primary. In the latter instance, it stands to reason that “African-Americans” would find common cause with Irish, German, and Italian Americans versus any connection with Brazilian Africans, Jamaican Africans or Panamanian Africans.
Common cause is not the same as common access to popular culture. It is common access to popular American culture which is shared by African and various ethnic white Americans. The uncommon cause is the distribution of power and resources between African and white Americans. American Africans or American Blacks are more likely to find common cause and common solution with Africans from the continent and throughout the Diaspora.
Wednesday, 21. June 2006, 04:48:05
Miami Heat, 2006 NBA Championship, Dwyane Wade
I sent this e-mail to family and friends on August 3, 2005. Tonite, the Miami Heat sip the champagne of champions. Congrats to all the competitors and big-up to Dwyane Wade for playing power ball and getting to the free throw line, 'cuz that's where it's at.
Did you about the huge trade the Lakers made?? I mean, former Lakers
(West, Riley, Scott). If this trade stands up, Miami has a red-carpet
invitation (black-tie only) invitation to the championship and the after
party. The TV ratings and the gate receipts of the Heat are going to go
through the roof...they have a white point guard who Riley compared to
Steve Nash, immediately - even though Jason Williams' game is clearly
And-1 Mix Tape Tour or Urban Legend style...Nash's game is wide open, but
he is more under control than Williams.
I would dare say that Jerry Buss pissed off the wrong folks. It is almost
unfathomable that the prior relationships of West, as the GM who hired
Riley and drafted Byron Scott and Eddie Jones and traded for Shaq, did not
play the definitive role in this trade. I would argue that West and Riley
are probably not big fans of Jerry Buss, Phil Jackson or Kobe. and we
know how Shaq feels about Kobe...this was a true power move of epic
proportions...it's the biggest trade in league history - with lop-sided
implications for the Heat...they've added a point guard, a do-everything
small forward in Walker and a defensive stopper who can score in James
Posey...and Posey can play...he was good in Denver and in Memphis...he'll
get minutes and make huge plays when needed, especially against Indiana
and Detroit.
Miami gave up very little...Eddie Jones (former Laker going to Memphis,
sweet), Rasul Butler, a couple of 2nd round draft picks and some cash.
Even Danny Ainge wanted to get down on the Laker beat down...He gave up
Antoine Walker - whom he brought back into the fold after trading - and
publicly admitting the error of his ways...what's going on here.
I told you I cut the Lakers off when they brought Phil in...I know Shaq
loves him, but there is something rotten in LA now and even though they
won a few rings, I'm not feeling them anymore...Your coach is a buddhist,
but he's blasting players in a book, why? The Lakers, a franchise built
by MIKAN, CHAMBERLAIN, JABBAR, JOHNSON AND O'NEAL, trade a big man...why?
I did some research...the only teams to not repeat in the Finals (in
consecutive or non-consecutive years) in the last 30 years were the '04
Pistons (jury is still out-different team than the Bad Boys), '83 Sixers
(Moses Malone), the '77 Blazers (Bill Walton), the '75-'76 Bullets (the
Big E)-Sonics (Jack Sikma, not great, but good) teams that played two
years in a row...The Sixers and Blazers didn't repeat because the teams
were disassembled...but every team since then has repeated - Lakers ('80,
'82, '85, '87, '88), Boston ('81, '84, '86), Chicago ('91-'93, '95-'97),
Houston ('94-'95), Detroit ('89-'90), San Antonio ('99, '03, '05), LA
('00, '01, '02)...all of these teams, with the exception of the Bulls and
Pistons had great big men (Jabbar, Parrish, Olajuwon, Duncan/Robinson,
Shaq)...and the Bulls had Jordan (best player) and the Pistons had Isiah
(arguably, the best little man of all time). So where are the Lakers
headed with Kobe and Kwame Brown? It's all about Kwame Brown because you
know what you'll get from Kobe. And I don't like the notion of pinning
the hopes of a franchise with links to George Mikan on Kwame Brown.
That franchise is done. I believe if West and Riley stay in the game, the
Lakers could be in trouble for a long time...and the trade of Shaq may go
down in history as a move semi-analogous to the trade of Ruth - not in
that it will turn the Heat into the Yankees, but in that it will keep the
Lakers out of the Finals for at least 15 years.
Wednesday, 21. June 2006, 01:50:22
Discernment The word is seldom used and is even less frequently demonstrated.
Saturday, 17. June 2006, 22:01:28
NFL, Ben Watson, tight ends, New England Patriots
You gotta like what the New England Patriots are looking like coming into the 2006-07 season. My Steelers are not the only team with a player who has earned the moniker
"Big Ben" The Patriots are stocked up on high quality tight ends. The have Ben Watson, Daniel Graham, Christian Fauria and even picked up another TE in the draft (Dave Thomas - Texas). Tight ends are often underutilized by NFL teams, but many of the most dynamic offenses in league history have featured the tight end.
Take the Air Coryell version of the San Diego Chargers in the 1980's. Kellen Winslow (father of
former moto aficionado Kellen II of the Cleveland Browns) was the most outstanding pass receiving tight end of his generation. He was, of course, the most outstanding player in one of the greatest games ever played. He caught passes and even blocked a kick.
The 49ers, under Bill Walsh, always used tight ends like Brent Jones to attack the deep middle of the field. Shannon Sharpe, Mark Bavaro, Mark Chmura, and Jay Novacek were also dominant tight ends for Super Bowl champion teams. It seems the Patriots are resurrecting the love affair among Super Bowl teams with this position.
The Steelers surprised the Colts by hitting Health Miller early and often in last year's playoff game. The Patriots should surprise anyone next year with Watson, Graham and company. Still most defenses won't be able to match up against the big guys on offense. Tight ends are usually around 6'4 and about 255 to 270 pounds. They can block like tackles - and Watson can run like a wide receiver (4.4/40 - if you must know...they're physical enough to get off the line against linebackers and tall enough to play over the top of most corners and safeties.
The NFL is a copycat league and teams moved away from tight ends with the success of the Rams and other spread offense teams. Clearly, the Rams TE Ernie Conwell didn't get enough press. You could blame Marshall Faulk and Torry Holt and the enigmatic Mike Martz...but the tide is turning. From Miller to Watson and Graham to Jeremy Shockey in New York, Antonio Gates in San Diego and many others, offensive coordinators are remembering that tight ends can be more than safety nets for QBs under pressure. They can be more than run blockers. Tight ends are jack-of-all trades players that defensive coordinators don't like to plan for because they know they don't have the personnel to match up. When you don't have personnel - you have to scheme. When you have to scheme for a tight end, everyone else on the offense has more room and more time to do their thing.
Tony Gonzalez, Ben Troupe, Jason Witten, Anthony Fasano, Jermaine Wiggins, Vernon Davis, Jeb Putzier, LJ Smith, Randy McDaniel, Algernon Darius Crumpler (Alge to most), and others represent a high-water mark for the position. No one has as many tight ends as the Patriots and New England's return to the top may hinge on how well those four players represent this new era.
Tuesday, 13. June 2006, 15:34:27
Ben Roethlisberger, motorcycles, stoopid shit, accidents
...
Can a Steeler fan remain silent as his QB takes a 9-inch gash to the dome, smashed fronts (or teefus, as they were affectionately known by Richard Pryor), banged up knees, and other cuts and bruises to body and ego?
Hell yeah, I could. But, what's the point. For those who don't know, Big Ben became the youngest QB to win a Super Bowl a few months ago. He leads the Steelers and the economy of Pittsburgh along a path of recovery that hadn't been anticipated since Julius Erving, Stockard Channing and a Fish. With all that promise, Ben continued to ride his motorcycle in and around town without a helmet. The details of the accident have not emerged, but we do know this, people wearing cars and trucks are safer than people wearing shirts and hair.
If you get banged up and you're wearing shirts and hair (and you're not a pedestrian), it's too damn bad. It's not a tragedy...it's not even an accident...it's like a fully foreseeable event that includes pain, suffering, recriminations and the like. Do I hope he gets better? Of course. Do I hope he's healthy enough to win another Super Bowl? Of course. But if the Steelers had another QB who was as talented or moreso (hypothetical - think Drew Bledsoe having an accident and opening the door to Tom Brady), I probably wouldn't care as much. If scrub-ass former Steeler QBs Mark Malone or Bubby Brister or Cliff Stoudt went belly up on I-76, it wouldn't be national news. So...context is everything.
The one body part that could use the greatest improvement is internal. Am I risk averse? Not so much. Do I do stupid shit? Yep. Fer sure. Ben has the right to ride without a helmet - just as I have the right to do stoopid shit, but neither of us have the right to call it a tragedy or an accident when stoopid shit goes wrong. Shit happens and when stoopid shit happens, the results are often worse than we can imagine or care to handle.
Live free or die...helmets are for pussies. And pussies are for macs (and dykes). And macs don't wear helmets. The circle of life is complete.
Tuesday, 13. June 2006, 15:20:40
free trade, tariffs, WTO, sanctions
...
The question of free trade is everywhere in the news today. Washington presses for free trade agreements around the world. Some countries sign on in hopes of increasing exports and adding foreign exchange (dollars). Some countries do not sign on - and instead institute protective tariffs designed to protect emerging industries in their country from the advanced products of mature industries in other countries.
I'll dig deeper on this topic in the coming weeks. I want to explore Washington's position on free trade. I am curious to see if this is a new position or an old position. In other words, has the US always advocated for free trade? What are the dollar implications of free trade for the US and other countries? Who wins and who loses?
More importantly, I'd like to see whether or not independent(?) research leads in a particular direction. What do we know and how do we know it? If you have any thoughts on this drop dime right now!
Thursday, 8. June 2006, 01:24:35
Stanley Cup, Carolina Hurricanes, Edmonton Oilers, tv ratings
So far, so good. The Hurricanes lead the game 1-0. It's a good game, but
I'm sure the ratings are in the toilet. Hopefully the transition to NBC can pick up the ratings. If NBC knows anything, they'll use the OLN announcers or they'll hunt down Gary Thorne. GT is my favorite hockey play-by-play guy.
Make that 2-0. Kaberle in the slot. Carolina is looking good. Power play goal with 9:32 remaining in the 2nd. Bergeron - hip check and a beauty. Good stuff.
Tuesday, 6. June 2006, 02:36:20
When I started my last post, the Edmonton Oilers had a nice lead on the Carolina Panthers. It grew to 3-0 in an instant. Over the last 30 minutes, Carolina scored 4 in a row. And, just as I started this post, the Oilers tied it up at 4. Great game. No sleep for me.
11:00PM//
It's over. Carolina wins 5-4. And, the Oilers goalie is injured - and that cost them the game. Some sloppy stick handling by the new goalie, a little Rod Brind'Amour, and voila...a 1-0 lead for the Hurricanes.
Tuesday, 6. June 2006, 02:09:44
1. The Stanley Cup Finals. Hockey is an amazing game. It has the speed of the NBA and the power of the NFL without the punk-ass whining and fake injuries of the World Cup or the strained-muscle-straight-to-the-15-day-DL of MLB. It's not an American game. It won't ever be an American game. Americans are too proud and parochial for that. Still, there is room for the game to grow here. Many more Americans are playing and watching the game than were doing so 20 or 30 years ago.
For anyone who has watched a game, you know that games can change in a matter of seconds. Pitched defensive battles with tremendous hits and daring saves can quickly become wide open offensive games with multiple rushes at the net, slap shots off the boards, and open ice moves that would make Steve Nash blush. The Stanley Cup is not broadcast on a major network or Fox or ESPN or MSG. It's on OLN - Channel 122 in New York. If you don't know where it is - it's gonna be hard to find - but if you do - tune in...it's the fastest game on ice.
2. Dirk Nasty. Dirk Nowitzki, Power Forward, Dallas Mavericks. Skillz. Dirk has skillz and can score the rock from all over the court. Now that his coach Avery Johnson has reintroduced him to his balls, Dirk drives to the basket and scores inside. He's lethal and he's carrying his team. Good stuff.
3. Mark Messier. Mess is doing the studio show on OLN for the Stanley Cup Finals. Gotta give Mess props for three things. 1) Playing with Gretzky and handlin' his bizniz. Messier was the hammer for the Oilers back in the day and he brought the pain to the best player for the opposition. 2) He won a cup for the Rangers. That's damn near impossible, but he did it. He's the original Big Papi. 3) He's a white dude that looks cool with a bald dome. Gotta give up the props for that. Hard to come by. I'm thinking about making Mess an honorary brotha. I'll have to see how that works out.
4. Dislike...the time between the NFL Draft and the start of pre-season. It's a damn good thing the weather is nice or else I would be a real pain in the ass.
5. Stoopid Muhfuckas gettin' arrested for stoopid shit. SMF #1 - step in the arena...Robbing a college teammate is not a smart move. It's a stoopid move when you do it months before signing an NFL contract. And, you're a stoopid muhfucka when you get caught because your blood is in the apartment (you cut yourself on the electronics - and your accomplice left his glove with his uniform number in the apartment). And, you're a stoopid muhfucka because you chose to roll with a stoopiderererer muhfucka than your stoopid self. When you're a muhfucka that stoopid, you must be AJ Nicholson...LB, Florida State. Step in the arena. That arena? Paul Brown Stadium/Cinergy Field/The Jungle - Cincinnati, Ohio.
Sunday, 21. May 2006, 15:05:38
1. Reggie Bush - stopping and starting in the middle of a run before the defense can catch up. It's all about hesitation and fear for the defense.
2. Big guys who refuse to score in the post...this means you Rasheed and C-Webb and Kevin Garnett. It's great that you guys can shoot threes and handle the rock and pass the ball. It's great that you block shots and serve as inspiration for your teams. It's not so great that you don't demoralize and demolish the opposing defense by taking out the core of their defense. Most games are very similar. "Up the middle" defense is essential in baseball: catcher, second base, shortstop and center field. In football, it's the nose tackle (or DT's), the middle linebacker and the safeties. If you're not strong up the middle, you're not going to win. In the NBA, big guys who don't score in the middle make their teams weaker. Rasheed is the only guy with a ring in this group - and he was lucky to get the one that he has. The only way the other guys get a ring is to get traded to a team with some big guy willing to play offense in the post - otherwise, it's a wrap.
3. Media white out on Tony LaRussa's links to Steroids in Baseball. I know players take full responsibility for their actions. MLB has already admitted looking the other way when Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa saved the game from disaster. Still, St. Louis manager Tony LaRussa has managed some of the most momentous home run hitters in the history of the league - and each of these players was a bit of a phenom. LaRussa was there as manager of the Oakland A's when Jose Canseco and Mark McGwire emerged as the Bash Brothers. The A's were the largest, strongest team in the majors. The hit homers and intimidated teams around the league - except in the World Series where they lost 2 of 3 times (Oakland beat the SF Giants and lost to the LA Dodgers and Cincinnati Reds). LaRussa managed McGwire during 1998 and now he manages Albert Pujols who is "on fire" and has established MLB records for his home run pace. Is Pujols using the juice? Maybe. There is no way to tell, but if history is any indicator, he's as juiced as McGwire and Canseco. After all, is there any other rational explanation for his displays of power? Maybe he's legit. But this seems more than a coincidence - and it's something journalists with access should be looking into - if for no other reason than that Pujols has established an offensive pattern that could mark him as one of the best hitters of all time.
4. Steve Nash as MVP. I just don't think so. Anyone who is that poor of a defensive player simply should not hold the trophy - let alone twice. Even Larry Bird, an atrocious man-on-man defender was an excellent "team defensive player" who played passing lanes, rebounded and threw great outlet passes to fuel the Celtics unique fast-break. Nash is a dominant point guard in the league, but the Suns play a game of related rates. They can score more, faster than other teams...as such, each of their players have statistics that are inflated beyond league averages. Shawn Marion is not an elite rebounding forward, but his career averages (if this keeps up will be on par with the likes of Elvin Hayes and Wes Unseld). So, the question of definition emerges. Is the MVP the best player, the most valuable player, the most influential player or some combination of all three? I don't think Nash is the MVP on any of these counts. Nonetheless, he may have the highest "composite score" of candidates like LeBron James, Kobe Bryant and Dwyane (love that spelling) Wade. Still, I can't help imagining LeBron playing point-forward for the Phoenix Suns.
5. Game 7's on Monday Night. What is the NBA doing? Are you kidding me. This has been the best playoff season in years - and I think I've seen two or three games - max. Tomorrow night (Monday-ouch), the Clippers and Suns go after it in Game 7. The game may not end until midnight in New York. Granted that NYC should not be the center of the world for a game between LA and Phoenix, but a little scheduling love could really help the league's profile. The League MVP is playing in Game 7 - and it will be on Monday night? If this was the NFL, it would be fine. It's not. It's not fine. Folks have little ones to tuck in, jobs to get to - and they need to be coherent when they get there. The NBA has got to get it together in a hurry. This has been a problem for years that was masked by Michael Jordan's dominance. The league bent over backwards to get the Lakers on the tube in prime time. They need to do it again.
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