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A Black President? Sure. But If We Don't Do Nothin' He Won't Do Nothin'
Bill Quigley
20 Feb 2008
🖨️ Print Article

amiri_baraka_02

a speech by Amiri Baraka, recorded earlier this month in Newark

Give Obama a break, some of his supporters argue. He's got to get elected first.  Till them he can't be seen acknowledging the needs of Black America for job creation on a vast scale, for an end to foreclosures, the repeal of No Child Left Behind, the equitable rebuilding of the Gulf Coast, and lowering of the prison population and cutting military budget to free up money for these and other human needs. 

Poet, playwright and longtime activist Amiri Baraka has a different take on the Obama candidacy, and the responsibility of the politically conscious. 

In this speech he cautions those who imagine  Obama will make a difference without a strong left movement pressuring and pushing him further and faster than he and his corporate backers really want to go.  

 

 "Even if there's gonna be a black president," said Baraka in Newark early this month, "if we don't do nothin' he won't do nothin'... the less we do, the less we can expect Obama to respond to  us..."

Baraka took to task those who criticize Obama without actually organizing anything on the ground in their communities.

"The question," he said, "is what will you do, where will you go with the one opening that they leave you which they claim is democracy."

This is a 36 minute audio recording.  Click the flash player below to hear the streaming audio.  If you prefer to download the MP3 file instead, click the mic icon at right.small_mic
 
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