Andrew
Young is an ‘international business consultant,’ a
polite term for flack, fixer and corporate
whore.”
BAR asked
several Atlanta activists their opinion of Young's
road from movement streets to the corporate
suites.
“It's always
sad, when you see somebody people look to as a
leader crossing the line like that,” observed Rev.
Alton Pollard of Emory University's Candler
School of Theology. “This is a man who walked and
worked with Dr. King. We should be able to expect
better.”
“Shameful,”
spat the Rev. Austin Ford, a retired Atlanta
minister who had been active in SNCC more than 45
years ago.
“When you
look at it, it's really not all that surprising,”
offered Dr. Keith Jennings. “This is the same
Andrew Young that went straight from the King
memorial celebration in Washington, DC to a
Republican fundraiser across town where corporate
fat cats showered Bush with campaign cash to do
what he does for them. Those are the circles he
moves in now, and that's who the brother
is.”
“Andy
Young's been on that road a long time now,” agreed
Akinyele Umoja, a professor of African American
studies at Georgia State University. “His deal
with Wal-Mart was a shock to folks who hadn't been
paying attention to what the man was
doing.”
“This is
the same Andrew Young that went straight from the
King memorial celebration in Washington, DC to a
Republican fundraiser across
town.”
One Atlanta
native who has been paying close attention is
Cynthia McKinney, the soon to be former
congresswoman from
Georgia:
“This is not the first
time that Andy Young has associated with people of
dubious repute.… During the time when I came under
severe attack for my September 11 comments, I was
investigating allegations that Barrick Gold and
its mining operations in Africa had
buried
alive 60 African petty gold
miners. I
had been given a photograph, and I had eyewitness
testimony that this had taken place.
Unfortunately, Barrick Gold had some of the most
notorious people associated with it, and Andy
Young was part of that cabal. So, the financial
arrangement that one enters into…one has to be
careful where you get your paycheck from. And
certainly, if you’re going to sit on the
boards of companies like that, you ought to
serve as a conscience, not just as an employee
receiving a paycheck.”
McKinney
had these observations on “peacemaker” Paul
Wolfowitz
“Paul
Wolfowitz was one of the architects of the
disastrous military and foreign policy – and, of
course, domestic policy – that the Bush
administration has pursued. I include domestic
policy because, if you’re spending all of your
money on guns then there’s very little to spend on
butter – and the American people need
butter. So, that diversion from satisfying
the needs of the American people is a consequence
of the policies pursued by Paul Wolfowitz when he
was at the Pentagon. Paul Wolfowitz, in my
opinion, has no business being at the World Bank.
It tells me something about the World Bank and its
mission, because this is not a man of peace, this
is not a man of development, this is a man who has
destroyed the cradle of
civilization.”
“More than anything else,
World Bank and IMF policies of
structural
adjustment, forced upon developing countries
around the world are directly responsible for
starvation and the inability of those countries to
provide for the basic needs of their people,”
according to Keith Jennings. “You can draw a
straight line between the Paul Wolfowitz who
instigated the invasion of Iraq, the Paul
Wolfowitz who sits atop the World Bank... It's
been a long time since the days Young walked with
Dr. King. Young's choice of friends these days
shows just how far he has
traveled.”
“This
speech praising Wolfowitz ought to finally exhaust
any good credit Andy built up from the days of the
Movement.”
“Being able
to hold leaders accountable is the most important
thing,” concluded Sudanese scholar Ahmed An-Na'im,
a Candler Professor of Law at Emory University,
“whether it's political leaders, spiritual leaders
or movement leaders.”
“Andy Young
never lets anybody forget that he walked with Dr.
King,” said Keith Jennings. “But this [speech
praising Wolfowitz] ought to finally exhaust any
good credit Andy built up from the days of the
Movement. Andy hasn't been accountable to our
communities or our needs for a long time
now.”
Bruce Dixon is Managing Editor at
BAR, and lives near
Atlanta GA. He can be reached at
Bruce.Dixon at
blackagendareport.com.