How Henry Louis Gates Got Ordained as the Nation's "Leading Black Intellectual"
by Ishmael Reed
Who is Henry Louis Gates and how did he get to be one of the nation's most prominent black academics? How has he managed to make a career talking down to African Americans before white audiences? Ishmael Reed dishes out a little history, explaining what one has to do to be anointed by corporate media as the leading intellectual light of our people in this new millenium.
How Henry Louis Gates Got Ordained as the Nation's "Leading Black Intellectual"
Post-Race Scholar Yells Racism
by Ishmael Reed
Previously published in Counterpunch
Now that Henry Louis Gates’ Jr. has gotten a tiny taste of what “the underclass” undergo each day, do you think that he will go easier on them? Lighten up on the tough love lectures? Even during his encounter with the police, he was given some slack. If a black man in an inner city neighborhood had hesitated to identify himself, or given the police some lip, the police would have called SWAT. When Oscar Grant, an apprentice butcher, talked back to a BART policeman in Oakland, he was shot!
Given the position that Gates has pronounced since the late eighties, if I had been the arresting officer and post-race spokesperson Gates accused me of racism, I would have given him a sample of his own medicine. I would have replied that “race is a social construct”--the line that he and his friends have been pushing over the last couple of decades.
After this experience, will Gates stop attributing the problems of those inner city dwellers to the behavior of “thirty five-year-old grandmothers living in the projects?” (Gates says that when he became a tough lover he was following the example of his mentor Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka as though his and Soyinka’s situations were the same. As a result of Soyinka’s criticisms of a Nigerian dictator, he was jailed and his life constantly threatened.)
Prior to the late eighties, Gates’ tough love exhortations were aimed at racism in the halls of academe, but then he signed on to downtown feminist reasoning that racism was a black male problem. Karen Durbin, who hired him to write for The Village Voice, takes credit for inventing him as a “public intellectual.” He was then assigned by Rebecca Penny Sinkler, former editor of The New York Times Book Review, to do a snuff job on black male writers. In an extraordinary review, he seemed to conclude that black women writers were good, not because of their merit, but because black male writers were bad. This was a response to an article by Mel Watkins, a former book review editor, who on his way out warned of a growing trend that was exciting the publisher’s cash registers. Books that I would describe as high Harlequin romances, melodramas in which saintly women were besieged by cruel black male oppressors, the kind of image of the brothers promoted by confederate novelists Thomas Nelson Page and Thomas Dixon.
Gates dismissed a number of black writers as misogynists, including me, whom he smeared throughout the United States and Europe, but when Bill Clinton was caught exploiting a young woman, sexually, he told the Times that he would “go to the wall for this president.” Feminists like Gloria Steinem defended the president as well, even though for years they’d been writing about women as victims of male chauvinists with power, the kind of guys who used to bankroll Ms. Magazine.
“There are big bucks to be made in promoting this culture. Two studios are currently fighting over the rights to a movie called “Push” about a black father who impregnates his illiterate Harlem daughter.”
Not to say that portraits of black men should be uniformly positive--I’ve certainly introduced some creeps in my own work--but most of the white screenwriters, directors and producers who film this material--and the professors and critics who promote it-- are silent about the abuses against women belonging to their own ethnic groups. Moreover, Alice Walker, Tina Turner and bell hooks have complained that in the hands of white script writers, directors and producers, the black males become more sinister straw men than they appear in the original texts.
There are big bucks to be made in promoting this culture. Two studios are currently fighting over the rights to a movie called “Push” about a black father who impregnates his illiterate Harlem daughter. A representative of one, according to the Times, said that the movie would provide both with “a gold mine of opportunity.”
As an example of the double standard by which blacks and whites are treated in American society, at about the same time that the Gate’s article on black misogyny was printed, there appeared a piece about Jewish American writers. Very few women were mentioned.
Gates was also under pressure for making himself the head black feminist in the words of feminist Michele Wallace as a result of his profiting from black feminist studies sales because, as she put it in the Voice, he had unresolved issues with his late mother, who was, according to Gates, a black nationalist. The black feminists wanted in. As a result, Gates invited them to join his Norton anthology project. The result was the Norton Anthology of African American Literature. One of the editors was the late feminist scholar Dr. Barbara Christian. She complained to me almost to the day that she died that she and the late Nellie Y. McKay, another editor, did all of the work while Gates took the credit. This seems to be Gates’ pattern. Getting others to do his work. Mother Jones magazine accused him of exploiting those writers who helped to assemble his Encarta Africana, of running an academic sweat shop and even avoiding affirmative action goals by not hiring blacks. Julian Brookes of Mother Jones wrote:
“Henry Louis Gates Jr. has never been shy about speaking up for affirmative action. Indeed, the prominent Harvard professor insists that he wouldn't be where he is today without it. Odd, then, that when it came to assembling a staff to compile an encyclopedia of black history, Gates hired a group that was almost exclusively white. Of the up to 40 full-time writers and editors who worked to produce Encarta Africana only three were black. What's more, Gates and co-editor K. Anthony Appiah rejected several requests from white staffers to hire more black writers. Mother Jones turned to Gates for an explanation of this apparent inconsistency.
“Did the staff members who expressed concern that the Africana team was too white have a point?”
Gates responded:
“It's a disgusting notion that white people can't write on black history--some of the best scholars of Africa are white. People should feel free to criticize the quality of the encyclopedia, but I will not yield one millimeter[to people who criticize the makeup of the staff]. It's wrongheaded. Would I have liked there to be more African Americans in the pool? Sure. But we did the best we could given the time limits and budget.”
“Gates is among those leaders who were “given to us,” not only by the white mainstream but also by white progressives.”
While his alliance with feminists gave Gates’ career a powerful boost, it was his Op ed for the Times blaming continued anti-Semitism on African Americans that brought the public intellectual uptown. It was then that Gates was ordained as the pre-eminent African American scholar when, if one polled African-American scholars throughout the nation, Gates would not have ranked among the top twenty five. It would have to be done by secret ballot given the power that Gates’ sponsors have given him to make or break academic careers. As Quincy Troupe, editor of Black Renaissance Noire would say, Gates is among those leaders who were “given to us,” not only by the white mainstream but also by white progressives. Amy Goodman carries on about Gates and Cornel West like the old Bobby Soxers used to swoon over Sinatra. Last week Rachel Maddow called Gates “the nation’s leading black intellectual.” Who pray tell is the nation’s leading white intellectual, Rachel? How come we can only have one? Some would argue that Gates hasn’t written a first rate scholarly work since 1989.
CNN gave Gates’ accusation against blacks as anti-Semites a worldwide audience and so when I traveled to Israel for the first time in the year, 2000, Israeli intellectuals asked me why American blacks hated Jews so. In print, I challenged Gate’s libeling of blacks as a group in my book, Another Day at the Front, because at the time of his Op-ed, the Anti-Defamation League issued a report that showed the decline of anti-Semitism among black Americans. I cited this report to Gates. He said that the Times promised that there would be a follow up Op-ed about racism among American Jews. It never appeared. Barry Glassner was correct when he wrote in his “The Culture of Fear” that the whole Gates-generated black Jewish feud was hyped.
Under Tina Brown’s editorship at The New Yorker, Gates was hired to do hatchet jobs on Minister Louis Farrakhan and the late playwright August Wilson.
“Even the Bush administration admitted to the existence of racial profiling...”
The piece on Wilson appeared after a debate between Robert Brustein and Wilson about Wilson’s proposal for a black nationalist theater. Gates took Brustein’s side of the argument. Shortly afterward, Brustein and Gates were awarded a million dollar grant from the Ford Foundation for the purpose of holding theatrical Talented Tenth dinner parties at Harvard at a time when regional black theater was heading toward extinction. Tina Brown, a one-time Gates sponsor, is a post-racer like Gates. Like Andrew Sullivan, a Charles Murray supporter, she gets away with the most fatuous comments as a result of Americans being enthralled by a London accent. On the Bill Maher show, she said that issues of race were passé because the country has elected a black president. This woman lives in a city from which blacks and Latinos have been ethnically cleansed as a result the policies of Mayor Giuliani, a man who gets his talking points from The Manhattan Institute. Thousands of black and Hispanic New Yorkers have been stopped and frisked without a peep from Gates and his Harvard circle of post-racers such as Orlando Patterson.
Even the Bush administration admitted to the existence of racial profiling, yet Gates says that only after his arrest did he understand the extent of racial profiling, a problem for over two hundred years. Why wasn’t “the nation’s leading black intellectual” aware of the problem? His exact words following his arrest were “What it made me realize was how vulnerable all black men are, how vulnerable are all poor people to capricious forces like a rogue policemen.” Amazing! Shouldn’t “the nation’s leading black intellectual” be aware of writer Charles Chesnutt who wrote about racial profiling in 1905!
The Village Voice recently exposed the brutality meted out to black and Hispanic prisoners at New York’s Riker’s Island and medical experiments that have damaged black children living in the city. Yet Maureen Dowd agrees with Tina Brown, her fellow New Yorker, that because the president and his attorney general are black--in terms of racism--it’s mission accomplished. Makes you understand how the German citizens of Munich could go about their business while people were being gassed a few miles away. You can almost forgive Marie Antoinette. She was a young woman in her thirties with not a single face lift operation.
What is it with this post-race Harvard elite? I got to see Dick Gregory and Mort Sahl perform in San Francisco the other night, the last of the great sixties comedians. During his routine, Gregory said that he’s sending his grand kids to black historical colleges because even though he lives near Harvard and can afford to send them there, he wouldn’t “send his dog to Harvard.” Maybe he is on to something.
When Queer Power became the vogue, Gates latched on to that movement, too. In an introduction to an anthology of Gay writings, Gates argued that Gays face more discrimination than blacks, which is disputed even by Charles Blow, Times statistician, who like Harvard’s Patterson and Gates, makes tough love to blacks exclusively. Recently, he reported that the typical target of a hate crime is black, but failed to identify the typical perpetrator of a hate crime as a young white male.
Moreover, what’s the percentage of Gays on death row? The percentage of blacks? Which group is more likely to be redlined by banks, a practice that has cost blacks billions of dollars in equity? Would Cambridge police have given two white Gays the problems that they gave Gates? Why no discussion of charges of Gay racism made by Marlon Riggs, Barbara Smith and Audre Lorde? How many unarmed white Gays have been murdered by the police? How many blacks? Undoubtedly, there are pockets of homophobia among blacks but not as much as that among other ethnic communities that I could cite. The best thing for blacks would be for Gays to get married and blacks should help in this effort, otherwise all of the oxygen on the left will continue to be soaked up by this issue.
For white Gays and Lesbians to compare their struggle to that of the Civil Rights movement is like Gates comparing his situation with that of Wole Soyinka’s. Moreover, Barbara Smith says that when she tried to join the Gay Millennial March on Washington, the leaders told her to get lost. They said they were intent upon convincing white Heterosexual America that “We’re just like you.”
“The police unions always back up their fellow officers even when they shoot unarmed black suspects in the back...”
Will the pre-late-80s Gates be resurrected as a result of what MSNBC and CNN commentator Touré calls Gates’ wake up call? (This is the same Toure, a brilliant fiction writer, who just about wrote a post-race manifesto for The New York Times Book Review, during which he dismissed an older generation of black activists as a bunch of “Jesses”.)
Will Gates let up on what Kofi Natambu the young editor of the Panopticon Review calls his “opportunism.” Will he re-think remarks like the one he made after the election of his friend, the tough love president Barack Obama? Gates said that he doubted that the election would end black substance abuse and unmarried motherhood?
Is it possible that things are more complicated than tough love sound bites which are designed to solicit more patronage? Will he reconsider the post-race neocon line of his blog, TheRoot.com, bankrolled by The Washington Post? Will he invite writers Carl Dix and Askia Toure, who represent other African American constituencies, as much as he prints the views of far right Manhattan Institute spokesperson and racial profiling denier, John McWhorter.
Will he continue to advertise shoddy blame-the-victim and black pathology sideshows like CNN’s “Black In America,” and “The Wire?” (Predictably CNN’s Anderson Cooper turned Gates’ controversy into a carnival act. The story was followed by one about Michael Jackson’s doctors. CNN is making so much money and raising its ratings so rapidly from black pathology stories that it’s beginning to give Black Entertainment Network a run for its money, so to speak.)
Predictably, the segregated media--the spare all white jury dominating the conversation about race as usual--gave the Cambridge cop the benefit of the doubt and the police unions backed him up. The police unions always back up their fellow officers even when they shoot unarmed black suspects in the back or, in the case of Papa Charlie James, an elderly San Francisco black man, while he was laying in bed. They back each other up and “testilie” all of the time.
Will Gates listen to his critics from whom he has been protected by powerful moneyed forces, which have given him the ability to make or break academic careers, preside over the decision-making of patronage and grant-awarding institutions. Houston A. Baker Jr.’s Betrayal: How Black Intellectuals Have Abandoned The Ideals Of The Civil Rights Era offers mild criticisms of Gates, West and other black public intellectuals, who, according to him, are “embraced by virtue of their race transcendent ideology.” His book went from the warehouse to the remainder shelves. The Village Voice promised two installments of courageous muckraking pieces about Gates written by novelist, playwright and poet Thulani Davis; part two never appeared. Letters challenging Gates by one of Gates’ main critics at Harvard, Dr. Martin Kilson, have been censored. Kilson refers to Gates as “the master of the intellectual dodge.” And even when Professor Melissa Harris-Lacewell at The Nation’s blog defied the 24-hour news cycle that has depicted Gates, a black nationalist critic, as an overnight black nationalist-- she calls him “apolitical”--she had to pull her punches. As an intellectual, she has more depth than all of the white mainstream and white progressive media’s selected “leaders of black intellection,” among whom are post-modernist preachers who can spew rhetoric faster than the speed of light.
It remains to be seen whether Gates, who calls himself an intellectual entrepreneur, will now use his “wake up call” to lead a movement that will challenge racial disparities in the criminal justice system. A system that is rotten to the core, where whites commit the overwhelming majority of the crimes, while blacks and Hispanics do the time. A prison system where torture and rape are regular occurrences and where in some states the conditions are worse than at Gitmo. California prisons hospitals are so bad that they have been declared unconstitutional and a form of torture, over the objections of Attorney General Jerry Brown and Arnold Schwarzenegger, who leased his face to the rich and was on television the other day talking about how rough they have it. A man who is channeling his hero the late Kurt Waldheim’s attitudes toward the poor and disabled.
Gates can help lead the fight so that there will be mutual respect between law enforcement and minorities instead of their calling us niggers all the time and being Marvin Gaye’s “trigger happy” policemen. Not all of them but quite a few. Or Gates can coast along. Continue to maintain that black personal behavior, like not turning off the TV at night, is at the root of the barriers facing millions of black Americans. Will return to the intellectual rigor espoused by his hero W.E.B Dubois or will he continue to act as a sort of black intellectual Charles Van Doren? An entertainer. (An insider at PBS told me that the network is demanding that Gates back up his claims about the ancestry of celebrities with more solid proofs.)
Gates has discussed doing a documentary about racial profiling. I invite him to cover a meeting residents of my Oakland ghetto neighborhood have with the police each month. (Most of our problems incidentally are caused by the off-springs of two family households. Suburban gun dealers who arm gang leaders. The gang leader on our block isn’t black! An absentee landlord who owns a house where crack operations take place.) He can bring Bill Cosby with him. He’ll find that the problems of inner citizens are more complex than “thirty five year-old grandmothers living in the projects” and rappers not pulling up their pants and that racism remains in the words of the great novelist John A. Williams, “an inexorable force.”
Finally, in his 2002 Jefferson lecture, delivered at the Library of Congress, Henry Louis Gates, Jr., during remarks about the 18th-Century poet Phillis Wheatley in which he excoriated the attitudes of her critics in the Black Arts movement, one more time, ended his lecture with: “We can finally say: Welcome home, Phillis; welcome home.”
If Gate’s ceases his role as just another tough lover and an “intellectual entrepreneur,” and takes a role in ending racial traffic and retail profiling, and police home invasions, issues that have lingered since even more Chesnutt’s time, we can say, “Welcome home, Skip; welcome home.”
Ishmael Reed is the publisher of Konch. His new book, "Mixing It Up, Taking On The Media Bullies" was published by De Capo.






















Comments
Respect
Henry Louis Gates a great man. There would be plenty. He is very strong spiritually, it can be written into the ranks of great men. This is not <a href ="http://www.vistatweaks.net">vista tweaks</a>, but quite a courageous man. That there is only his quote "It's a disgusting notion that white people can't write on black history - some of the best scholars of Africa are white. People should feel free to criticize the quality of the encyclopedia, but I will not yield one millimeter [to people who criticize the makeup of the staff]. It's wrongheaded. Would I have liked there to be more African Americans in the pool? Sure. But we did the best we could given the time limits and budget. "I respect him.
facts
In general, found a lot of facts and evidence related to Henry. But they are in the archives. The authorities know all the details of the case, but the reasons lie deep in the root apex of power. Because disclose it politically advantageous. Even if we take the example of journalist Gongadze in Ukraine. Found guilty, all the evidence against him, but he himself lives quietly. And has your business b&b . Because of his arrest because he can not part of the chain of power.
Also, what Reed did not
Also, what Reed did not mention however; but what I find most intrigueing to say the least, is the spectacle that Obama was, no doubt, pressured into making of his questionable, redoubtable leadership by in effect apologizing to the Cambridge Police department for not "calibrating" his language to the proper tolerances that ought to be allowed racist and bigoted Institutions, unlike most around the nation, when that very department refused to apologize to mr. Gates himself.
skin acne treatments
Definitions...
Thank you brother Reed. I'm greately relieved, having literally agonized over the blame-the-victim game played by "our" black intellectual elite--some of them. It's interesting, incidentally, that the far right, white left (e.g., Communists) view "brothers" like Bill Cosby, and, I'm sorry to say, a...ahem...very highly placed brother (about as highly as one can be placed in the political world) as something close to despicable.
One fundamental problem with these "leaders" (and, unfortunately, with many of our people, period) is that they have accepted the idea that the highest aspiration for black people in the U.S. should be equality. That is how our struggle has been defined: as being rooted in the quest for equality.
I've never understood that. How can it be that the ultimate desire of black people is to "be equal"? How can this be?
The ultimate desire of black folks should be to be free. Being equal is a given. It is not a discussion. I do not work to convince anyone that I am equal to them. You do not fight to "be equal." You fight to be free.
Where went the passion to be free? If you are allowed equal access to college; and then you graduate; and then you pursue your doctorate; and you obtain it. And you are well-versed in the rigors of academia. And you pull down $100,000.
Have you reached your goal? Is the highest passion in your life to be equal? You mean, you do not know that you are born equal?
My hat goes off to Sister Queen Assata Shakur, now exiled in Cuba. She's a woman whose highest aspiration in life is not to "be equal," but to be free.
When the day comes when virtually the only discussion you hear in all parts of the black community, whether it be the beauty shop or the hallowed halls of Harvard, surrounds the desire to be free, that's when the BEGINNING of real change will take place.
Yes, we need to begin again. We began in the 1960s and 1970s. Then we stopped, in part due to government murder, drug infiltration, FBI infiltration, and Jesus Christ (who many of our people are STILL waiting to come back to "save" them).
I have only recently re-discovered Sister Queen Assata Shakur, no in exile in Cuba (though recent rumors have it that she's moved to Venezuella). I had, at one time, not been so comfortable with what I perceived as black cultural nationalism, or what I once called the nostalgic self-indulgence surrounding claims of ancient black global supremacy. I also wanted to avoid the establishment of, and/or worship of, savior-gods.
But, in this day, when black leadership simply doesn't exist [DOESN'T EXIST], I find myself leaning towards the establishment, in my mind, of an almost fetish-like honoring of that sister. I mean...WHO ELSE??
Her words are very simple; and her words are very important. I hope that we do not wait until 200 years for now to give her her propers. Honor her. And honor her now. Honor her by action. Honor her by feeling her in our heart, and allowing that to motivate us in a new direction.
In my view, at this time in our history, Assata Shakur is the only [ONLY] symbol of real resistance, and the real desire to be free, on the set. I pray that the Most High (God, Universe, whatever) protect her, and keep her safe from the FBI, which has a $1,000,000 reward on her head. Yes, the bounty on her head has gone up. Type in, "Assata Shakur wanted" to see the FBI poster on her.
Love her. Otherwise, I mean, what are we talking about? Ya'll hear me? We talking about MOTHER. Hear it. I'm not going to elaborate. There is a vital secret in her existence, and in her persona as a symbol, and in what she symbolizes.
By the way, here is a most beautiful song dedicated to her: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LrWxrFr7TL4
And if you're not into ANY form of rap, I ask you to allow yourself to get to the chorus. It is soul stirring.
We need something new. The intellectuals; the politicians; the preachers [CERTAINLY not the preachers!] are not taking our people ANYWHERE. We need Assata. We need to keep her alive, both physically and in our hearts.
I say it again: There is a SECRET in her existence, I do believe. I hope we see it, and benefit from it.
I've Had About All I Can Stand From Amy Goodman!
I don't really know the issues involved in this situation other than to say she has been a tireless hypocrite on Latin American issues, so I assume she must be getting Black American issues wrong as well.
I can nit-pick about her useless and canned opinions on Hugo Chavez and Rafael Correa, but at least she goes "bobby-soxer" about them, rather than do the absurd "communist" propaganda thing the rest of the American media does. She just has these fantasies that they are modern day Che Guevaras instead of very bright, very people-focused, social democratic capitalist heads-of-state who know what they're doing and play it straight.
It's on the issue of Honduras, though, where she absolutely outdid herself in "Bobby-Soxer" hypocrisy. When Zelaya was running for president and when he won, she had no love for him at all because he's basically a pro-business centrist. That has a very different meaning in Latin America than it does in the USA where it conjures up images of Corporatism. Not so here. It just means that he offered a lot of tax incentives for entrepreneurs and developers who stuck to the strictest building safety codes and that sort of thing. Whatever. I don't live there, but before the coup, it was doing well economically.
Well, since the coup, she can't get enough of Zelaya and Honduras. I was thinking "gee whiz, Amy, it was your guy Obama who did this, so why do you even care? And besides Obama's still aiding the installed Michelletti government, so what problem do you have with the coup? Besides, even if Zelaya was returned to power, it's not like he's now Che Guevara either. He'd still be the same pro-growth centrist he always was. And Tegucigalpa will still be richer than the shanty towns."
Her piece on the Union Bank Of Switzerland case really takes the cake. She gets so mad at Obama for golfing with the CEO of the American subsidiary of the bank, while the guy who cut a deal with the government to testify against some other random bankers in the high-net worth department who all apparently conspired to commit tax fraud, got 40 months. Well, that was the deal his attorney agreed to, so I assume the guy was willing to take that deal. Despite her all-inclusive knowledge about international banking and tax law (she knows nothing!), she failed to see what the real CORPORATIST GANGSTER PROBLEM with the whole thing was. The US government and the CEO of the American subsidiary basically used a garden-variety federal tax-fraud indictment against some employees to OVERTHROW THE MERZ GOVERNMENT OF THE DIRECT DEMOCRACY OF SWITZERLAND! She was so obsessed that that there was untaxed American earnings in Swiss banks that were in the names of "the rich" that she forgot about national sovereignty and privacy laws in other countries.
Besides, the maximum if all of the Justice Department claims is true that they could possibly get if they could get every dime would be $90 Billion over ten years. $90 Billion is ONE-MONTH of war in Iraq. So, what the hell is she going on about? How would she feel if President Merz overthrew Barack Obama's government?
I am truly amazed that these fake liberals have the same desire to use law enforcement to punish others and go far beyond proportionality when they think they have their hands on the levers.
Glass houses and stones, Bobby Soxer. Glass houses and stones.
Chickens
Chickens come home to roost, Ishmael Reed. I've been living in Europe for decades, so I missed the hyper-real Bush, Clinton and Bush II eras. I don't know how badly it has lobotomized everyone there, i.e. I don't know how much insanity is taken for normal now. But I do remember the seminars I took with Gates during my last year at Cornell, which I believe was his as well. I remember how he dissed Baldwin, Morrison (yes he did) et al. in favor of the style and .............of Alice Walker, using some hedonistic(s. Pasolini,
Scritti Corsari, Freibeuter Schriften
), dilettante post-structuralist weapons. Although many Blacks consider him to be part of an inaccessible elite, if they really were familiar with that elite, that academic world, its recent past, then they would know the true value of their ideas, and all of their academic activity. It is not academic in the least. With or without integrity, they aren't even good scholars.
In any case, I remember a speech given by Baldwin at Cornell during my last semester. It was so uplifting, better than anything I heard in any seminar, and largely helped my years in Europe to be quite productive, helped me to be a valuable witness.
However, chickens come home to roost, Ishmael Reed. I'm old enough to know how horribly you dissed Baldwin, how you tried to stamp him as a worthless "cocksucker", and how you jumped on that dilettante, hedonistic(again see Pasolini), post-structuralist bandwagon. So people like you deserve what you get. You should have been defending the rights of disenfranchised Black sisters and brothers with the same old-fashioned, infinitely valuable weapons of James Baldwin and Dr. Frances Cress Welsing. Truth remains truth, integrity remains integrity. I don’t want to hear any of your……
After (Irish??) beer how long will Gate's "ephiphany" last?
As I've stated elsewhere here at BAR, you gotta listen to Gates reactions after his arrest, his "press conference" of sorts and you will fall out of your seat. For a so-called public intellectual of his so-called stature, I damn near fainted when he expressed astonishment that he was a regular ol nigga. He didn't use those words mind you, but his mind is easy to read. Poor Skip couldn't believe that he was treated "like one of them?" He expressed shock and surprise that police actually DID f****k with Black folks for no reason.
After kissing up to Obama and Crowley and getting emails (no doubt) from his corporate minions LET'S SEE HOW LONG HIS EPHIPHANY LASTS? Bet you he and Obama water down their comments to a pablum, nonsensical level, and in essence apologize to Crowley and all the White listeners/viewers. It will be in effect, "Let's kiss and make up, it was a misunderstanding, my bad too." I don't expect a wellspring of scholarship relating to racial inequalities in the justice system (or elsewhere) from Skip Gates, I don't expect some impassionate railing against the "system." Skip will do what Skip does best, which is to use his $5 vocabulary to miminize and wisk away the impacts of institutional and individual racism. I'm waiting with baited breath to see the "new scholarship" from Gates.
When Skip and Obama get through with us negroes we'll be apologizing to white folks for asking for slave reparations.
(I didn't know he penned an Op-Ed accusing Blacks of antisemistism that is an eye opener and makes me despise him even more as a sell-out). Plus, I always thought niggas caught up in the system loved them some Jewish lawyers??
Great essay, Mr. Reed.
Skip Gates
Straight no Chaser Bro Reed. I only have one comment regarding Gates. Dr. Baba John Henrik Clarke was asked to respond to a comment by Gates during a debate Baba Clarke was having; Baba Clarke replied do not compare what I have said or done with skip gates, " a professional white ass kisser". End of comment.
Skip Gates
This issue of Black Agenda Report and its articles on Gates is exceptional! These Black men who have written these articles are the ones we should support, and not that sorry Skip Gates! Black Agenda Report, keep up the excellent work!
The Black Bourgeois
As an addendum to my previous post, read "The Black Bourgeois" by E. Franklin Frazier. For those who are having trouble understanding individuals such as Skip & Barry, this book puts them in their proper context.
Ditto That Falsedelic
What happened to this "Sambo" was tame in comparison to what the average Black male in "Urban America" endures on a daily & consistent basis. In the words of Paul Mooney "Skip" got his "NIGGER REALITY CHECK"!
More distractions
Interesting article. I remember doing a double take when I heard Skip described as "America's Leading Black Intellectual". Good to get an insight into what Skip has been about for the last decade or so. Ultimately though, this discussion (around the web and throughout the media) is another distraction. One side hollering race, the other hollering "pull your pants up". I don't care about white racism anymore. It won't change. Ever.
Blacks need to be about the business of creating something for our children. Knowledge, not education. Businesses, not jobs. Spirituality, not religion. Respect, not tolerance. We need to get our shit together, in the face of the racism that exists, and stop worrying so much about what white folks think.
false1
Well Said
If only we had "leaders" bold enough to say what you said.
PrayTell....
I read this yesterday afternoon and had thought of posting an excerbt from it on BAR, but decided to wait and see if BAR would pick it up. I'm glad I waited. Althoug I have appreciated Gates' work, I have often questioned his politics. Mr. Reed does once again what I've come to expect from him; he's undressed history and the white/black ruling class' established Sacred Cows, revealing the naked side of the truth and how its subsequent reality can often blur our vision. Down here below.
The below sentence from the article is extremely telling in this regard and I would add Alice ( the only Black female writer worthy of an interview on a regular basis)Walker to that list of anointed African American (-exemplary chosen few-)representatives of moral and intellectual excellence.
"Amy Goodman carries on about Gates and Cornel West like the old Bobby Soxers used to swoon over Sinatra."
Also, what Reed did not mention however; but what I find most intrigueing to say the least, is the spectacle that Obama was, no doubt, pressured into making of his questionable, redoubtable leadership by in effect apologizing to the Cambridge Police department for not "calibrating" his language to the proper tolerances that ought to be allowed racist and bigoted Institutions, unlike most around the nation, when that very department refused to apologize to mr. Gates himself.
What, pray tell, do we have here, beyond what mr. Reed exposition unvails for us?
"only Alice Walker"? Amy G. had as guest on DemNow
Carl Dix recently at the same time, joint interview,
when she had as guest, Cornel West.
www.democracynow.org
Carl Dix is in video on www.wbaix.org speaking at
protest - Obama NAACP Convention (listing) in
ON-DEMAND section. Also speaking is Nellie Hester
Bailey, activist/organizer from Harlem Antiwar Coalition
and Harlem Tenants Council.
I have been listening to Mr. Reed on
WBAI, usually with Earl Caldwell, for years and I have
concluded he is a male chauvinist. I know and like
Alice Walker's work (and she is a frequent guest on
DemocracyNow with Amy Goodman), and bell hooks'
work. That you made that statement about Alice Walker
as "only" worthy... Have you heard of Esther Armah?
Are you separating out journalists? What is "writers"?
Google.(Disclosure: I am Jew, woman, nearing 70.)
Yes, I too watched both shows
Yes, I too watched both shows with West and Dix. Not withstanding Wests' successes and achievments as an American itellectual(black or white); although he was denied tenure at Harvard by the very same Mr. Sumners who now presides over Obamas treasury department; it is my opinion that West does a lot of theatre and quasi preaching in his addresses and that can bevery appealing to academic squares. He's very religious and often speaks in parables. There are many others, but you see, Harvard as I understand it, not unlike other Ivy leaugue bastions of Higher education; is a very tight knit family indeed. Amy Goodman is a Harvard alumni.
I mentioned Alice Walker because she more than any other African American female writer/Author has been a repeated guest on DM. She was on twice before and after Obama's election as a spokes person for the moral and ethical and political ramifications of his historic election concerning African Americans; that bothers me. Now, I can only guess as to why that is, I don't know. But, it is narrowly representative of the demographic. Just as the way that DM covers the civil rights eras. It's always the usaul suspects and famous names. Where's James Farmer? I've been requesting that DM does a show on Bayard Rustin for almost three years now and his name is scarcely if ever mentioned when discussing the modern civil rights era. So, the media, and it doesn't matter who's media it is, has it's underwriters and sponsors; therefore, it has those that it favors over others when it comes to having guests. Just as Mr. Reed points out, that the white dominant establishement, which ever one you choose, decides which African American is chosen to represent its example of African American excellence. As he also asked; "who is the leading white intellectual". The establishment and the media that it controls hands us their picks and we are to accept them. T
ake the case of Wynton Marsalis; well we were handed him by the ruling elite as the representive leader of a Jazz renaisance at a time when Jazz was experiencing anything but a renaisance. It was not true, but since Wynton came (first) from the exclusive and high culture hegemony of the Classical music world, he was quite palatable to the establisment and could be easily sold to the white, middle class, record buying public and used his sophisticated presence to trick them and the rest of the public, who were rather ignorante of Jazz , into believing that hthere was indeed a new breed of inovators. And there were and are any number of musicians who could surpass Marsalis in the Jazz idiom. But, he got the stamp of approval from those who own and operate the stamps.
I don't think Reed is a chauvinist any more than Alice Walker dislikes African American men. He simply calls feminists ideaology out on its scuttlebutt when that establishment (we have an awful lot of establishments in the US don't we?) all too often rapaciousnous at the expense of the black male image in our society that often ignore societal structures involved in constructing certain, particulary negative images.
Do you refute what he's written above concerning G.Stienam and Bell Hooks?
I questioned your saying A.Walker was "only..."
I questioned what you said about Alice Walker,not that
you mentioned her.
I guessed you were going to
end with the question you did. I am not going to argue
with you about what is said about Steinem and hooks.
(I finally googled and learned that bell hooks doesn't
capitalize her name. I chided Pacifica Radio Archives
for making a mistake some months ago in not
capitalizing it.)
Are you a man? Are you a woman? I ask because you
said you don't consider Reed a male chauvinist.
Consider the "bobby socks" comment. I decided
Reed is a male chauvinist long ago.
My point about Carl Dix was that he was on same
recent segment
with Cornel West,but omitted by Reed, to make his
argument about "bobby socks".
PS: About Harvard "clubiness" - I went to a NYS Teachers
College (before called SUNY) and never heard about
Ivy League schools until I graduated (at 20), working
class, widowed mother, but I got to go on GIBill due dead
dad.
It being hot/humid, and needing some fun, I went to
google Harvard grads (not remembering Amy Goodman
went there until you mentioned it and that Harvard grads
are a "club", so to speak).
I wanted to see if there were Harvard grads that
Amy G. has been critical of, or had guests who were critical
of Harvard grads, on the show.
(Aside:I've been trying to get Amy G.
and DN to cover disability issues better/more/some
for years and years and not had success so far. I
still think it's a great show. You mentioned you tried
to get James Farmer as a subject on the show. A
good idea.)
Some grads of whom she has not been clubby with
on the show,and critical
might include: Bill O'Reilly, G. Bush (busi-
ness school), Bill Frist (former Sen.), Benezir Bhutto
(regular guests have been very critical), William
Rhenquist (former Sup.Ct. Justice), Tom Ridge (Home-
land Security), Jeffrey Skilling (Enron), Antonin Scalia
(Sup.Ct. Justice) Lawrence Summers (grad as well
as former Pres. who made that sexist remark re women
and science/math NOT). The biggest surprises on
the list of famous Harvard grads were W.E.B. DuBois,
Pete Seeger and Ted Kaczynski (unabomber).
Thanks for the push to some summer fun.
Yes, definitely a reflection of my summer, but hey,
I'm typin' The machine is still working (knock on wood).
So the program didn't and I'm back for retry.