Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Why Black MisLeadership Won’t Sign the Anti-War Petition
Glen Ford, BAR executive editor
26 Jan 2011
🖨️ Print Article

A Black Agenda Radio commentary by Glen Ford

“We vow not to support President Barack Obama for renomination for another term in office, and to actively seek to impede his war policies unless and until he reverses them,“ says a petition signed by hundreds of social activists, only a handful of them Black. The baton of progressive political and moral leadership may be passing from Black America, dominated by a venal misleadership class that refuses to actively oppose President Obama’s wars.

Why Black MisLeadership Won’t Sign the Anti-War Petition

A Black Agenda Radio commentary by Glen Ford

“These African American misleaders are the political heirs to those Blacks that derided Dr. King for taking his stand against Lyndon Johnson’s war.”

A Petition is making the rounds, in which hundreds of signatories have vowed to oppose President Obama “as long as he supports war.” It’s the kind of message that Dr. Martin Luther King would have signed onto. We know this, because that’s precisely what Dr. King told President Lyndon Johnson, in April of 1967: that he would oppose his president and onetime ally as long as Johnson continued to wage war in Vietnam. Many believe that’s the reason Dr. King was assassinated exactly one year later.

There are very few Black names on the current anti-war petition, but not because Black notables fear assassination if they oppose Obama’s wars. It is because the narrow and selfish class that has come to dominate the political life of Black America thinks it can do better for itself by collaborating with the war makers than by opposing them. Believing themselves to be somehow wired into power through the Democratic Party and their corporate connections, these African American misleaders are the political heirs to those Blacks that derided Dr. King for taking his stand against Lyndon Johnson’s war. They are the same opportunists that berated Dr. King for sacrificing what had been a close, working political relationship with the most powerful man in the world, over the issue of war. Dr. King’s answer to them was that the war must be opposed, not only on moral grounds, but because it condemned the poor of the United States to remain in that condition, by draining the government and society of all available resources “like some demonic destructive suction tube.”

“Obama’s multiple and expanding wars are no less antithetical to the interests of African Americans, today.”

Dr. King was saying to the Black leadership class of his day: it may serve your personal interests to collaborate with President Johnson and pro-war Democrats and thus remain in good standing with power, but you are harming the interests of the poor, of Black people as a whole, and of all humanity. To be on the wrong side on the war, or to engage in endless dithering and delay in order to avoid confrontation with power on the issue of war, is to work against the fundamental interests of one’s own people. Dr. King was forced by urgent necessity to break with President Johnson because war was against the interests of the Black America.

Obama’s multiple and expanding wars are no less antithetical to the interests of African Americans, today. The “demonic destructive suction tube” that feeds a trillion dollars a year into Obama’s wars strips Black America of all hope of emerging from permanent Depression. As long as such fantastic sums are expended on war, there is no escape from an economic race to the bottom that will mangle Black society beyond recognition.

The Black misleadership class, fearful to protect their own, tenuous political and corporate connections, give lip service to peace but refuse to confront the President that makes war. In thrall of power in a Black face, and hoping some of the benefits will accrue to themselves, they allow the baton of progressivism to pass from the hands of Black America, or fall to the ground. History will look on them with revulsion.

For Black Agenda Radio, I'm Glen Ford. Sign the anti-war petition at WarIsACrime.org.

BAR executive editor Glen Ford can be contacted at Glen.Ford@BlackAgendaReport.com.

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • Jon Jeter
    Following Kamala’s Script, Maryland Governor Vetoes Reparations Bill, Angering Black Voters He Will Need in White House Bid
    28 May 2025
    By vetoing a bill to study reparations, Maryland Governor Wes Moore has aligned himself with a long line of Black Democrats who prioritize white approval over their own base.
  • Anthony Karefa Rogers-Wright
    The Fall of 2020: How Liberals Ceded Solidarity and Engineered Social Justice Solitude
    28 May 2025
    The 2020 uprisings could have sparked a multiracial working-class movement against systemic oppression, but liberal elites defanged its radical potential. By reducing Black liberation to performative…
  • Raymond Nat Turner, BAR poet-in-residence
    One Big Beautiful Bank Job!
    28 May 2025
    "One Big Beautiful Bank Job!" is the latest from BAR's Poet-in-Residence.
  • Black Alliance For Peace
    From George Floyd Back to the Structural Violence of Capitalism
    28 May 2025
    With the ritualistic murder of George Floyd by the occupation forces referred to as the police that roam the streets and barrios of the Black and Brown colonized communities in the United States, the…
  • Tamara Gausi
    ITUC-Africa General Secretary, Akhator Joel Odigie: “It is time for Africans to chart and determine our progress on our terms”
    28 May 2025
    As workers across Africa face growing challenges, the leadership of the African Regional Organisation of the International Trade Union Confederation remains crucial in the fight for labor rights and…
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us