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Fallen Child
Bill Quigley
03 Jan 2007
🖨️ Print Article
child grave

by Paul A. Moore
 

The Miami-area teacher demands accountability from ‘men in power’ for the violence that is claiming so many young lives – an appalling number of them, his students. Ghetto life, it appears, is expendable.

 

In Memory of Another Fallen Child:  An Open Letter to Miami Gardens Mayor Shirley Gibson by Paul A. Moore

“The young victims had something in common. All of them were powerless.”

A quiet but cheerful young man named Daniel Barjon graced one of my American Government/Economics classes at Miami Carol City High School last year. Daniel’s younger brother Myckenley “Mike” Barjon was gunned down in front of the family’s Miami Gardens home this school year just before Christmas.

Between this year and last, Daniel has survived the violent deaths of his brother, classmates Evan Page, Sherika Wilson Lynch, Jeffrey Johnson, Jr., and James “JT” Anderson, the 16-year-old son of our school’s media specialist. These dead children are among 30 young lives violently extinguished in Miami-Dade County in the past 18 months. As far back as February 1968 the Kerner Commission reported that, “Our nation is moving towards two societies, one black and one white – separate and unequal.” That may help explain why all the victims have been young people of color. But they had another thing in common to explain why they are now gone. All of them were powerless.

The latest casualty was typical. In his too short life Mike Barjon was buffeted by forces he could not see nor comprehend. The last of those forces were rounds from an assault rifle in the hands of another young man about his age. Mike’s death will set off another agonized search for cause among the people who care about these children. Men with power and their accomplices will suggest we blame the children themselves, or their parents, or that we all accept a share of the blame. Because when you blame everybody, you really blame no one and the status quo is preserved. To clear away that smoke is to see that men with power set in motion the forces that killed Mike and they are responsible, if not yet arrested, for his death.

As Malcolm X used to point out, men with power have always seen to it that liquor stores and drug dens are ubiquitous in certain communities. Forty years after Malcolm’s assassination the despised and dispossessed are also being plied with high-powered weapons. The selling of these weapons is quite a profitable enterprise so men with power allowed the governmental ban on the sale of assault weapons to lapse on September 13, 2004. With the river of guns and dope flowing freely into communities like Miami Gardens, men with power need only create a culture that glorifies their marketing strategies.

“When you blame everybody, you really blame no one and the status quo is preserved.”

Twenty years ago a young man named William Roberts graduated from Carol City High. The conventional wisdom among the students today is that Roberts a.k.a. “Rick Ross” is a success story. After all he reportedly puts on a different pair of new shoes every day of the year, he wears a $200,000 wristwatch, and drives a Benz and a Hummer with a “pro paint job n----a you just can’t rob.” Recite his signature lyric in the classroom, “Every day I’m hustlin’” and students’ faces light up. Meanwhile, the stories of Nat Turner or Rosa Parks, the names Paul Robeson or Wynton Marsalis elicit blank stares from the same audience. Men in power need ignorance to thrive.

William Robert’s stage name Rick Ross is an homage to one of the biggest publicly identified drug dealers in US history, “Freeway” Ricky Ross. The Rick Ross persona fronts for, glorifies and glamorizes drug trafficking, gangsterism, pimping, materialism, misogyny, hedonism, and gun play. But for whatever influence Rick Ross may have, the human casualties are rightfully laid at the doorstep of The Universal Music Group (UMG) and it’s parent conglomerate Vivendi Universal. The Universal Music Group describes itself as “leading the music industry in global sales… Our global operations encompass the development, marketing, sales and distribution of recorded music through a network of subsidiaries, joint ventures and licensees in 75 countries, representing approximately 98% of the music market.” Vivendi created Rick Ross in their boardroom like the US CIA created “Freeway” Ricky Ross to funnel aid to the Nicaraguan Contras. Vivendi takes home the profits generated by their cartoon gangster, William Roberts gets some shoes and a shinny watch.

When men with power decided to encourage young people to put material wealth above even life itself they used Curtis “50 cent” Jackson among others to deliver the message. Vivendi Universal and fellow media behemoth Viacom Corporation saw to the production, distribution and marketing of Get Rich or Die Tryin’ in all its incarnations. Vivendi sold the CD’s and the movie soundtrack through their record label Interscope Records. Vivendi marketed the video game 50 cent: Bulletproof. Viacom sold the book through their publishing subsidiary Simon & Schuster and made the film through Paramount Pictures. Viacom aired the music videos on its MTV and B.E.T. outlets.

“The Rick Ross persona fronts for, glorifies and glamorizes drug trafficking, gangsterism, pimping, materialism, misogyny, hedonism, and gun play.”

The direction that men with power are taking young people is revealed by the changes made since Viacom purchased B.E.T. from its African-American founder Robert L. Johnson for $1.44 billion in stock. Out with B.E.T. Nightly News and even a brief glimpse of real world events between the fantasy videos. In with American Gangster and a decidedly sympathetic “look at the life and times of notorious Black criminals.” After a perfunctory dose of gospel on Sundays, the men now in charge of B.E.T. promote their true religious affiliation to the Church of the Almighty Dollar the rest of the week.

Coincidentally, Mike Barjon’s death occurred in the last week of a powerful man’s term in office. That day in fact, stung by criticism that the Florida Department of Children & Families has failed to properly care for the mentally ill, Gov. Jeb Bush said, “If the governor took the wish list of every department in the executive branch and added it up, our budget would be $150 billion (double its present size). Part of being a leader is to prioritize.”

In 1995 a single tree infected with canker disease was discovered in Miami. One tree! Men with power responded with a full frontal assault on this threat to the citrus industry. Over the next ten years the state and federal governments spent $875 million in a program to cut down any tree within 1900 feet of an infected tree. Before Hurricane Wilma finally defeated the Citrus Canker Eradication Program in 2005 over 10 million trees had been removed and citrus growers had pocketed about $500 million. Homeowners whose trees were destroyed were compensated with a Wal-Mart voucher for new plant products. For men with power, one hand washes the other.

By the Spring of 2006 the deaths of so many young people in South Florida was being talked about as a crisis and wildfires were burning several thousand acres of brush and woodlands, destroying three homes and briefly shutting down traffic and commerce on some highways. Gov. Bush declared a state of emergency and called up the Florida National Guard to deal with the wildfires and pushed a measure through the Florida Legislature that earmarked $182,751 to form and staff a study group called the “Council on the Social Status of African-American Men and Boys.” So, as it turns out, Gov. Bush was close. A man in his position has the power to prioritize. A leader creates a safe and healthy place for children to live and learn.

“The time has come to demand an accountability measure of men with power.”

Gov. Bush’s legacy includes an accountability measure for Florida’s young people who do not enjoy the privileges of private schooling. Brilliant little 9-year-old Sherdavia Jenkins measured best in her school just before the fatal bullet found her outside her front door. Jeffrey Johnson, Jr. breezed past the test on his way to a full scholarship to St. Thomas University. Jeffrey’s sister is forced to use the scholarship in the wake of his death.

It turned out to be another act of futility but Mike Barjon took the FCAT a few weeks ago thinking he was going to live beyond high school. In the memory of Mike and all the fallen children the time has come to demand an accountability measure of men with power in return for our cooperation. Newly elected Gov. Crist, you will begin using your great political power to make our schools and the communities around them measurably safer or we will not allow our children and students to take the FCAT. Corporate giant Wal-Mart and your two new Miami Gardens’ stores, you will begin using your great economic power to make Miami Gardens measurably safer or we will shop elsewhere.

Yours truly,

Paul A. Moore

Teacher, Miami Carol City High School

Miami Gardens, FL

Mr. Moore can be reached at WWWKings@aol.com

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