Saturday, April 11, 2009

More on Nigerian Politics


Ojo Maduekwe's crashing stock‏

by Okey Ndibe

Ojo Maduekwe’s crashing stockBy Okey NdibeForeign Affairs Minister Ojo Maduekwe should be ashamed of himself. Any man who lies against children is contemptible, and that’s exactly what Mr. Maduekwe did. Early in March, Mr. Maduekwe had traveled to Geneva as head of the Nigerian delegation to the United Nations Universal Periodic Review on human rights. The event is used to survey the state of human rights across the globe.

Last November, Britain’s Channel 4 TV had broadcast a documentary on Nigeria’s “witch children.” It was a harrowing look at the horrors visited on thousands of children in Akwa Ibom and elsewhere. These children are first stigmatized as witches and wizards and then subjected to excruciating torture.

In short, the program unmasked the human capacity for evil. Channel 4 took viewers on a graphic tour of some deranged churches and their so-called pastors and prophets who rake in huge profits from declaring children as witches. One of the featured “men of God” is a man named “Bishop” Sunday Ulup-Aya. A self-styled “poison destroyer,” he openly boasts that he had physically liquidated 110 witches and wizards. Ulup-Aya’s eyes appear glazed and his slurry speech suggests drunkenness. He’s shown ordering a child to drink a concoction meant to “destroy the poison” of witchcraft. Then the reporter informs us that the concoction is made of strong alcohol, a substance called “African mercury,” and the “bishop’s” own blood.

Hard as it is to imagine, the child who’s shown drinking the strange concoction is one of the lucky ones. The program revealed that some of the children are simply killed. Some are driven out, forced to live in the open like wild animals. Some are tied to trees and starved for several weeks. Some are disfigured with acid, scalded with boiling water, or scarred with fire. The camera showed a young girl in whose skull some superstitious fool had driven a six-inch nail.

This chronicle of gruesome torture is still available online. To see this unflinching portrait of cruelty, just go to www.youtube.com and type in “Africa's witch children”. But be cautioned: It’s a stark, wrenching expose. The images are hard to watch and impossible to rub out of one’s mind. When I first saw it four months ago, I sat before the computer and cried for a while. I shuddered with the shame of being a member of a society that, out of deep and festering ignorance, would unleash such violence on children.

What does it say about us when we stand pat and permit nefarious elements among us to brutalize children, including toddlers? Were the police ignorant about the bloody goings-on? Are we not all implicated, to one degree or another, by the dehumanization of vulnerable children?

A teeming league of fake pastors and ignorant seers prey on children, I believe, because the child-victims are largely voiceless, with few or no options to stand up in their own defense.

It was natural that the question of Akwa Ibom’s tortured children should come up at an international forum on human rights abuses. But when the question was put to Mr. Maduekwe, he reportedly replied that the “children were paid to say they were tortured.”

That’s a callous, despicable response. It’s either the minister never bothered to watch the Channel 4 report – in which case, his fitness for a ministerial post should be called to question – or he somehow felt it was okay to discredit victims of heinous human rights abuses. In that event, we should wonder whether Mr. Maduekwe has a heart at all.

The larger crime here is that, after Channel 4’s exposure of the shameful abuse of children, the Nigerian government pretended nothing was amiss. Mr. Maduekwe might have helped to mobilize a national effort to rescue the besieged children of Akwa Ibom. He might also have persuaded Mr. Umaru Yar’Adua to send a tough bill to the National Assembly stipulating stiff punishment for those who harm children in the alleged name of combating witchcraft.

Since Mr. Maduekwe failed to do this, he had no leg to stand on when he was asked what Nigeria was doing to save children from mindless abuse. Caught in a bind, a good diplomat might have bought time by stating that his government was weighing a number of corrective measures. Instead, Mr. Maduekwe compounded his government’s betrayal of these beleaguered children by painting them as rented scam artists.

This foreign minister took a low, cowardly road precisely because he knows that the children are in no position to counter his lie, much less drag him to court for defamation. Yet, in the court of public opinion – and especially in Nigeria’s humane sector where conscionable men and women care about the fortunes of children – Mr. Maduekwe’s stock has crashed to the bottom.

(okndibe@yahoo.com)
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Saturday, April 4, 2009

April is National Jazz Appreciation Month (JAM)


Archie Shepp










April is National Jazz Appreciation Month (JAM)

Saturday Apr 25 3P NMathis Volunteers @ International Women In Jazz
Women’s Festival Fri – Sat 24 – 26 Apr @ St Peter’s Church NYC
212.935-2200/718.468-7376


Feeling the pinch at the grocery store? Make dinner for $10 or less.

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Friday, April 3, 2009

Brilliant analysis - with genuine humor


Sponsored by Rep. Tim Briggs, D-Montgomery County, it has 37 co-sponsors and asks everyone to turn out all lights for an hour to address global warming. It also urges Gov. Rendell to order "all lights in all Commonwealth buildings" switched off, too. Could make for a fun Saturday night at Graterford (a prison in Pennsylvania), eh?


Dear friends,

On the link below, Philadelphoa Daily News columnist John Baer delivers an incredibly brilliant, yet humorous, analysis of Pennsylvania state politics that could be applied to any of our fifty states. Enjoy!

G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.philly.com/dailynews/local/20090323_John_Baer__Who_says_Legislature_does_nothing__Go_ask_any_box_turtle.html
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Saturday, March 28, 2009

Why do we use the term "African American"? (originally posted July, 2008)

"African Americans are a people who grew out of the mixing of various groups of African peoples (that is, individuals who belonged to many cultural backgrounds throughout, mostly, West Africa). We were forced to unite because of our shared oppression and exploitation..."

Dear friends,

Booker T. Washington wrote, "During the period of servitude in the New World, the Negro race did not wholly forget the traditions and habits of thought that it brought from Africa. But it added to its ancestral stock certain new ideas."

I am an African American (I do not use a hyphen, because I refuse to consider myself an abbreviated American.) Yet, many of my fellow countryfolks feel confused about how they should address African Americans, generally, because it seems as though our terms of self-description change from time to time...

However, the term itself (African American) is not new; rather, it points to the natural direction being taken by a people who grew out of a distinct cultural experience, having survived the ravages of time, in a nation that is founded upon both greed and white supremacy. Therefore, by calling ourselves African Americans, we are merely returning to our true identity as human beings.

NOTE: When people hear the term "white supremacy", they usually either think of those who parade around in white bedsheets - like the Old South's KKK (Ku Klux Klan) or others, in blue uniforms, such as the FOP (Fraternal Order of Police) in places like Philadelphia and New York City. In other words, many citizens in this country do not see themselves as "white supremacists", per se. However, I use the term “white supremacy”, because a person can come from any European, Asian, or Latin country tomorrow, completely disregard his or her true familial past and declare himself or herself “white” - thus becoming part of an artificial "majority" group. Additionally, by calling himself or herself "white", that same person just mentioned, automatically, inherits a history that includes the likes of the original Pilgrim group, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and Abraham Lincoln (none of whom, as far as I know, are of either Irish, Italian, Polish, Russian, German, Asian, "Hispanic", Jewish, or French descent), along with enjoying privileges and advantages over me and people who look like me.

Although around 130 years or a little more than five generations ago, author and formidable scholar George W. Williams asserted that, at the time, many African peoples worldwide preferred to be called "Negro" (see his History of the Negro Race in America), it appears that the expressions "Negro" and "colored" actually gained their popularity after the North American Civil War. Available literature only shows that prior conflict, the word "Africa" almost always prefixed the names of our organizations.

For example, beginning during the last quarter of the 18th Century, with Richard Allen and his friends' Free African Society, in Philadelphia, to the founding of the A.M.E. (African Methodist Epsicopal) church, which spread across the nation soon afterwards, all the way to the Afric-American Female Intelligence Society of Boston - a highly-respected activist group that existed for more than 40 years or almost two generations before and during the North American Civil War, we never forgot our African origins.

As well, because of the proliferation of the abolitionist movement that grew correspondingly with the manumission of each captive worker (so-called slave), Black self-help groups, whose purposes were for the economic and social progress of the aforementioned manumitted captive workers, began to flourish. One such group was the Peace and Benevolent Society of Afric-Americans of Connecticut - which thrived around the same time as the previously-mentioned women's group (see Black Abolitionists, by noted historian and scholar Benjamin Quarles. Also, there is other literature concerning African American organizations corresponding with that period in works like Lerone Bennett's classic, Before The Mayflower.)

But is "Black" also a legitimate identity reference? I think that it is. In fact, if we take guidance from Professor Lloyd Hogan's classic "The Principles of Black Political Economy", we see that he has identified five criteria that distinguish African American or Black people as a group that has proliferated. for centuries, within its own environment. They are: 1) Common origins on the continent of Africa; 2) Common history of exploitation as a homogeneous slave working class for more than 250 years; 3) Common exploitation as a more or less homogeneous class of landless peasants for approximately 100 years in the southern United States; 4) Common experience of exploitation as a homogenous wage laboring class since the last generation or so of their history; and 5) Conscious individual acceptance of being Black.

Perhaps, the most crucial aspect of Professor Hogan's abovementioned criteria is the "conscious individual acceptance of being Black." After all, regardless of one's historical experience, at least in the United States, the term "Black" is usually pretty specific. For example, if people are talking about either Rudy from Saint Croix or Ludwig from Antigua, they call him a Caribbean or West Indian. If they are talking about either Okey or Sahalu from Nigeria, they call him an African. However, if folks are talking about Paul from Boston or Barry from Amherst, then they say, "He's a Black man."

Note: This should be spelled with an upper case "B", even though the standard has been set by "white" newspaper editors and educators who, usually, spell it with a lower case one (b). As usual, others outside of our group are defining us by their own measure, as opposed to us doing it for ourselves. Nevertheless, when referring to African Americans, "Black" is a proper noun - not a common one, because it points to a specific group. On the other hand, the lower case "w" should be used for "white", since those who embrace or "cling to" that moniker do not represent a specific culture. Therefore, it is a common noun.

There are, of course, many women of European descent who have had, at least, one child by a man of African descent. Our future president is such a person. Moreover, it is usually necessary for these kids to identify themselves as "Black", for two reasons. They are: 1) Such offspring often have non-pale skin complexions and, as a result, are automatically considered "non-white" anyway - and treated as such. 2) Their mothers typically call themselves "white", thus confusing said youths' about their all-important identities. Moreover, it places children in the position of having to choose sides, as it were. Yet, at least to me, it seems that no one should ever ask a child to choose sides, when it comes to loving his or her parents. Instead, we should only encourage each child to LOVE his or her parent(s). Period.

So, obviously, African Americans are not a monolithic group per se, due to our varied familial backgrounds, income levels and social statuses (as folks like the wealthy entertainer Bill Cosby remind us, when he labels so many of us the "lower echelon"). Nevertheless, because we can be found in all areas of society (except for the ruling class), our ideas and aspirations are quite diverse.

Additionally, a number of us have physical characteristics that make us indistinguishable from many other cultural groups (for example, European American, EarlyAmerican Native, Asian American, Latino, and so forth.) As a result, unwittingly, many non-African American citizens currently associate with African American people who may not even identify themselves as such. On top of all that has been mentioned thus far, as well, the fact must be appreciated that African Americans are a people who grew out of the mixing of various groups of African peoples (that is, individuals who belonged to many cultural backgrounds). We were forced to unite because of Our shared oppression and exploitation.

Prior to the North American Civil War, African Americans tended to form coalitions with EarlyAmerican Natives and, at times, European Americans too (particularly, Irish Americans). Note: I use the term "EarlyAmerican Natives" (with neither a space nor a hyphen between Early and American), as opposed to "Native Americans", because I find the latter term divisive - and offensive to many. After all, most citizens of this country feel "native" to this land. Consequently, at least to me, the feeling of both separateness and aloneness that already lingers, quite naturally, in each individual, in any civilization or culture, worsens. Therefore, I feel that we do not need to "add insult to injury", as it were, by using words that may cause some of the resentment and hostility that can be engendered when people feel that they are being excluded. Hence, in order to distinguish that particular body of people from all other groups in our society, I use the aforementioned term Early American Natives.

At any rate, the identity that we now use, African American, represents the evolution of a people who have, through no choice of their own, struggled together for equality, dignity, and justice, for centuries. This, obviously, has been the same dilemma for all other groups who have come here, outside of the early ruling class. In fact, after the North American Civil War, African captive workers (so-called slaves), according to international law, should have been offered the opportunity to return to Africa. Instead, these now former captives were hoodwinked into accepting partial citizenship and thrown into the plantation economy of sharecropping. As a result, our forebears began identifying themselves according to descriptions that were made by those who did not even acknowledge, much less respect, our aforementioned forebears' ability to know what was best for themselves and those future generations of African Americans that would follow.

Today, we are an African people, and the largest group of those in this country who call themselves "Americans" who have been here since the 17th Century. Period. Moreover, for centuries, there were always folks coming/being brought here from Africa, both legally and illegally; they reminded our ancestors of their former homes - and cultural experiences. Therefore, our forebears never lost all of that which was African in them. Rather, they passed it on to future generations. Therefore, as far as contemporary African Americans go, we have learned to express what is left of our "Africanisms", as it were, within a different context.

Finally, three generations ago, the great Marcus Garvey pointed out: "This propaganda of dis-associating Western Negroes from Africa is not a new one. For many years white propagandists have been printing tons of literature to impress scattered Ethiopia, especially that portion within their civilization, with the idea that Africa is a despised place, inhabited by savages, and cannibals, where no civilized human being should go, especially black civilized human beings." - Marcus Garvey (Philosophy & Opinions of Marcus Garvey, edited by Amy Jacques-Garvey)

One Love,
G. Djata Bumpus
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Thursday, March 26, 2009

Brief note to the New York Times about the "Economy"

"...the intention for infinite growth in a finite market of consumers must necessarily go bust, at some point."

To the Editor:

The article called “Geithner Calls for Major Overhaul of Financial Rules” By EDMUND L. ANDREWS and LOUISE STORY, Published: March 26, 2009, proves that neither Obama nor anyone in his administration knows anything about the financial system, much less how to improve it. The problem is not hedge funds or “greed” on Wall Street. Rather, it is the proliferation of finance capital which allows businesses to survive even when they are no longer creating customers. Moreover, the intention for infinite growth in a finite market of consumers must necessarily go bust, at some point.

G. Djata Bumpus
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In light of the Obama victory, Ronnie Polaneczky invites us to care (originally posted 11/14/08)


Nevermind black, white, yellow, red, or brown . How about African American, European American, Asian American, Early American Native, and Latin American, for example.

Dear friends,

I waited a week to post the piece on the link below, because I wanted the hoopla and celebration over President-elect Obama to have sudsided. To be sure, we need to change our language. After all, "language is thought". Have you ever said to yourself, "I can't think of a word for it."?

One of the main ways to accomplish that, at least to me, will be for people to start describing themselves according to their cultural pasts, instead of their skin complexions. Nevermind black, white, yellow, red, or brown . How about African American, European American, Asian American, Early American Native, and Latin American, for example? That way, we will be able tp recognize each other's humanity.

In any case, Ronnie Polaneczky of the Philadelphia Daily News, a longtime friemd of mine, presents a very powerful invitation for all of us here. Please both onsider and enjoy the caring and warmth that she shares.

G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.philly.com/dailynews/local/20081106_Ronnie_Polaneczky__My_wishes_for_a_new_American_vocabulary.html?adString=pdn.news/local;!category=local;&randomOrd=110608034620
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The passing of a True Legend Ioriginally posted 12/25/08)

Eartha Kitt's courageous pioneering and consistent display of confidence, whether in performance or in life, helped define artistic and social expression in this country and around the world. And it did so for both females and males, while inspiring so many women generally, for two and one-half generations.


Dear friends,

We all "come in - going out". We forget that while we are here caught up in the throes of life. Nevertheless, for me, the timing of her passing is quite interesting, because I was supposed to catch her performance with the Springfield (MA) Symphony Orchestra on my/our oldest daughter's upcoming birthday (Feb. 7, 2009). Tickets went on sale back in June, so I guess that this is a surprise to everyone.

Eartha Kitt's courageous pioneering and consistent display of confidence, whether in performance or in life, helped define artistic and social expression in this country and around the world. And it did so for both females and males, while inspiring so many women generally, for two and one-half generations. Yet, oddly enough, many, if not most, women in America, today, are unaware of her role as a liberator, as so many other women have now followed her.

At any rate, the link below gives a short biography of her.

One Love!

G. Djata Bumpus
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eartha_Kitt
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Wednesday, March 25, 2009

an upcoming tribute to Dr Barbara Ann Teer - a pioneering artist/activist

THIS EVENT IS SOLD OUT!!!
Please join AVERY BROOKS and ALICIA KEYS and other guests as they celebrate the launch of the 41st year andre-institution of theCommunication Arts Program Symposiums This Friday March 27, 2009 at 6:30PM Suggested donation $20 Students $10 It's about a thought provoking soul stirring evening...



Love lives forever." - Steveland Morris

Dear friends,

Dr. Barbara Ann Teer (June 18, 1937 - July 21, 2008) was featured on this blog during August of last uear, shortly after her passing. The info below is about an important upcoming event in New York City later this month. The work of this great woman continues.

One Love,
G. Djata Bumpus




SAVE THE DATE!!! March 27, 2009
Dr. Barbara Ann Teer's Institute of Action Arts will launch it's 41st Year with the re-institution of its Communication Arts Program Symposiums


Please join us:
Friday, March 27, 2009 at 6:30PM

for a thought-provoking and soul-stirring evening with
Avery Brooks, Alicia Keys, and other guests

Suggested Donation: $20 - Students: $10

http://www.nationalblacktheatre.org/

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Saturday, March 21, 2009

President Obama's "joke" about the Special Olympics

"I accept his apology. It was sincere. It was meaningful. And it was nice of him to say that. Every athlete out there is just being the best they can...I bowl just for fun. The last time I bowled, I think I scored a 245. I actually could kick the president’s butt at bowling. But I wouldn’t make fun of him if I did.” - a Special Olympic athlete

Dear friends,

While I find it silly and petty for the mainstream media to make such a big deal out of President Obama's joke with Jay Leno Show on the Tonight Show, on the link below, the short piece from the Boston Herald makes it apparent that Obama’s quip was not planned, because, actually, it made no sense.

Therefore, it should have been left alone. President Obama was wrong, but what kind of integrity do government- and corporate-controlled media have, if they feel that that was "news"? Moreover, why are so many print journalists, for example, whining about possibly losing their jobs, because newspapers are not selling, when these type of tattle-tale stories about the president are all that they have to share?


One Love,
G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1160032&srvc=news&position=0
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Friday, March 20, 2009

A response to my comments on President Obama's "State of the Nation" address

He doesn't at all sound like a former community organizer when he talks economics.

Dear friends,

The brief comments below were sent to me, via e-mail, in response to comments that I posted here on this blog on February 24(2009). They are in regards to President Obama's "State of the Nation" address last month (February). The author of the comments is someone who is very special to me, but who does not want to go on record in public, at this time, with criticisms of President Obama. Nevertheless, while he will remain anonymous, he has given me permission to print the missive. It is just too powerful for me not to share it.

Cheers!

G. Djata Bumpus
*****************************************
Interesting. I didn't listen to his speech, but it seems like there is no intention of any real discussion of real change. In that respect I think he's most guilty of trying to appease those in power.

He doesn't at all sound like a former community organizer when he talks economics. I'm hoping at least there is some sincerity in his education policy. I knew he was going to be weak against the military when he started talking about Afghanistan. One thing that no one is even going to consider addressing is why has this country so thoroughly entrenched itself in dependence on war. This is the real problem with the way this economy is organized. They have never been without a war and don't appear to be capable of existing without it as the major outlet and control for the economy.

The last couple of Bush years brought this to stark reality. Was it complete stupidity or just incredible incompetence that the US embarked on a war in which we ended up with a trillion dollar deficit while those we were fighting against came out of it with billions in surplus? Is not economics a major military front? Don't they use sanctions and embargoes and other economic weapons as part of a complete military strategy in the modern world? Then how did this come about? I choose to believe that the Bush family are and have for many generations been war profiteers. They certainly didn't lose money. Why couldn't they see to it that this country's people didn't lose and suffer? The whole charade is disgusting.
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AIG giving back money...what's that all about?

"At least to me, from "gay marriage" to "global warming" to the latest red herring issue "AIG bonuses", our federal government has yet to provide any relief to everyday citizens, in a variety of areas..."

Dear friends, At least to me, from "gay marriage" to "global warming" to the latest red herring issue "AIG bonuses", our federal government has yet to provide any relief to everyday citizens, in a variety of areas. Only the big banks and equally large businesses from here to Europe seem to be receiving benefits. Meanwhile, the consistently useless politicians of the US Congress are cashing in on our illusory "tax dollars", by holding "committees" and other such nonsense about making sure "the people's money" is being spent properly. Right.

What a laugh. The same Congress that enabled the impropriety now has imposed punitive taxes on the same people that the former were claiming to be helping by authorizing the "Bailout" in the first place. Worse yet, at least some of these people who received bonuses are not even in this country. Moreover, what will "giving back the money", which is 165 million dollars out of a “Bailout" package of almost 800 billion dollars, do for the current economic shortfalls of Americans?

The fact of the matter is: none of the "Bailout" money has any genuine "value" anyway. That is, through unconscionable maneuvering that makes Bernie Madoff look like a petty thief, the president. Congress, and the Federal Reserve Bank, like gangsters in a cellar, are simply printing up more and more money and giving facilitating more and more credit to big banks and companies.

And so, , for example, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said about one aspect of the "Bailout", called the Supplier Support Program, "...will help stabilize a critical component of the American auto industry during the difficult period of restructuring the lies ahead...The program will provide supply companies with much-needed access to liquidity to assist them in meeting payrolls and covering their expenses, while giving the domestic auto companies reliable access to the parts they need."

In other words, the "Bailout" money is simply more finance capital (please peruse my post called "The Federal Bailout - a panoply of illusions", re-posted on Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2009). Allowing banks to control the flow of capital of businesses will, inevitably, lead us right back to the present situation. Businesses must perform. Otherwise, let them go out of business! That is the way that it works for ordinary (i.e., smaller) businesses, after all.

Still, it is no accident that former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson who was Bush's guy and Geithner both have intimate connections with Goldman Sachs, a recipient of "Bailout" dollars. So why is Goldman Sachs not being asked to return their "Bailout" money, in what is so obviously a conflict of interests? Meanwhile, the other day, Bloomberg.com reported, "March 18 (Bloomberg) -- Goldman Sachs Group Inc., the largest U.S. securities firm to convert to a bank, closed above $100 in New York trading for the first time since Oct. 24 as investors gained confidence the company will become profitable. "

Finally, we are being told that American taxpayers own 80% of AIG? They also told us about Santa Claus. It is only military might that matters. Everything else is hogwash. That answers the question from my dear friend in the previous post.

One Love,
G. Djata Bumpus
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More from Black Doctor Website






10 Best Fitness Tips For The Summer


Dear friends,

On the link below are some tips for the upcoming summer season, from a great
newsletter.

One Love, One Heart, One Spirt,
G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.blackdoctor.org/articles.aspx?counter=26133
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Sunday, March 15, 2009

Elmer Smith on Madoff versus Ali Baba and the rest (originally posted 1/28/09)


"It's hard to gauge another man's needs. But after the first $30 billion or $40 billion, you'd think he could push back from the table..."

Dear friends,

There has been much fanfare, deservedly so, about Bernie Madoff, a person who is accused of bilking investors out of some $50 billion. On the link below, the incomparable Elmer Smith of the Philadelphia Daily News articulates this whole affair, as only he does. Enjoy!!!

G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.philly.com/dailynews/local/20090116_Elmer_Smith__Madoff_deserves_respect_-_from_other_inmates_serving_life_terms.html
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Thursday, March 12, 2009

MWS Journal -- Godfathers of Gangster Rap by Melvin Smith

"The argument is that titles like Get Rich or Die Trying will sell, but uplifting songs won’t. If that is so, why aren’t Stevie Wonder and Smokey Robinson broke?" - Rev. Barbara Reynolds

Dear friends,

The short, but brilliant, letter below was "copied" to me via e-mail by a comrade-in-the-struggle, as it were. His name is Melvin Smith. He is a serious brother with a long history in our centuries-old movement for equality, dignity, and justice. He has given me permission to share the letter with you.

Cheers!

G. Djata Bumpus
************************************
MWS Journal
22-Feb-2009

This is the comment that I tried, unsuccessfully, to post [inserted below] at the Seattle Medium (a part of Black Press USA network). Follow this link to the article in question: “Black Leaders Silent As Black Rappers Create Environ Of Death And Abuse”by Rev. Barbara Reynolds, NNPA Columnist, originally posted 2/19/2009

My comment:

This commentary by Barbara Reynolds, as usual, is a model of integrity and courage. I am inspired by her continued presence and unrelenting struggle in the increasingly compromised currents of American journalism.

Some apologists for the American status quo and some presumed defenders of African American dignity will probably claim her remarks here to be old hat and merely a rehashing of Bill Cosby's widely noted complaints about lifestyles of the Black poor, but the substance of Reynolds' charge is far deeper and greater. She reveals the core of the problem and blames "white" power appropriately, whereas Cosby (in his earliest tirades, at least) denied and ignored that aspect of our problem.

While the destructive effects of a sordid but "successful" rap music scene are evident nationwide, the toll is increasing internationally as well. Ms. Reynolds correctly identifies the underside of cultural imperialism in a nation founded and guided by "white" supremacy/privilege. Our attitude and active response to this particular form of attack should be to resist and repell it now. The bottom line is Black people's survival and redevelopment on this planet.


--MWS (aka Melmanjaro)
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"Auto" Bailouts ignore the inner powers of working people (originally posted 12/17/08)

Instead of camping out on the Hill, maybe Messrs. Chrysler, Ford and GM should seek advice from some of the women at Home Care Associates, who have found a way to bail themselves out while also investing in themselves. ..

Dear friends,

The story on the link below is an absolutely beautiful one - in all ways. It was penned by Annette John-Hall of the Philadelphia Inquirer. Her work has graced this blog on several occasions. Enjoy!

G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.philly.com/inquirer/columnists/annette_john-hall/20081207_Annette_John-Hall__While_helping_others__investing_in_themselves.html?adString=inq.news/annette_john-hall;!category=annette_john-hall;&randomOrd=121208084221
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Should "Global warming"and "Gay marriage"be real concerns?

"More than 70 kids and their parents filed a class-action lawsuit today against two Luzerne County judges who detained thousands of teens in juvenile detention centers from which they received more than $2 million in payments. "

Dear friends,

Please look at the two links below. President Obama and his colleagues may be missing the point. That is, at least to me, it seems that there are larger concerns about what is going on in this nation other than getting money to (i.e., subsidizing) big banks and corporations under what is euphemistically called the "Federal Stimulus Plan".

G. Djata Bumpus

http://www.philly.com/philly/news/breaking/40353522.html


http://www.philly.com/philly/hp/news_update/20090310_Former_Bucks_prosecutor_sentenced_for_corrupting_teens.html
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Friday, March 6, 2009

About Chris Brown and Domestic Violence, from a boxer's perspective

“If someone loves you, then the only response that s/he has when angry with you is to simply cut off communication. In other words, s/he does not speak either to or with you. The thought of violence from either side, is never an issue... if someone initiates violence towards you, regardless of their relationship to you, whatever you thought your relationship was, you were wrong – and you better make that person be the one who screams for the cops.”

Dear friends,

Back in the Fall of 1997, I attended a conference at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, that was focused on the effects of the, at the time, newly-legislated welfare reform on domestic violence. In other words, the main concern was: Would women stay in an abusive relationship, since they would no longer be able to get help (welfare) for their children. In order to contribute to the dialogue, I delivered a short paper there that was based upon my experience as a boxer.

The main point of my thesis was, and still is: Batterers are weak men who delude themselves into thinking that they are champion boxers, for a moment, when dealing with females. For instance, when a boxer confronts an opponent, that fighter does not just say to himself or herself, "I'm gonna knock this person out." Rather, s/he is thinking, "All right, I'm gonna move side-to-side, then jab to the belly, and come up and jab to the head." Or, “I’m gonna weave under the jab (of the opponent), then come up and hit him/her with a left hook on the chin.

Boxing is about "controlled fear". Both fighters are aware of their possible defeat, so they come out with their hands up, in order to protect themselves. They never come out with their hands by their sides (i.e., down). It's all about control.

Moreover, as the rounds go on, each fighter is trying to gain control of the space (i.e., the ring), so that the opponent can be more easily controlled. If the fighter is more of a “runner” like, say, Muhammad Ali or his daughter Laila, then, in order to control the space, one must be a slugger or “banger”, like Joe Frazier or his daughter Jackie and “cut off the ring” (i.e., get the person against the ropes), if success is the intention. So, in boxing we say, “You fight a boxer and box a fighter.”.

Otherwise, if not “cut off”, the runner will dance around and dart in and out, landing punches. Either way, each boxer must be patient, in the face of danger, and use a variety of techniques in the attempt to attain control.

Likewise, the man who normally seems like such a nice guy, and who, in fact, seems like the most unlikely person to be a batterer, suddenly, sees himself as a boxer. In other words, in a dispute with a female, he finds himself in a situation where he feels that he can "control" the situation with violence, if nothing else is working. After all, usually, women are not socialized to "hit" much less hit back.

So this normally “nice” guy, suddenly, in his own mind, turns into Muhammad Ali, Joe Frazier, or Mike Tyson for that matter. Just as the boxer thinks about the next move by saying, “I’m gonna hit the chin with a right cross and come back with a left hook.”, the batterer, either standing, or in the case of Chris Brown sitting with whatever kind of look on the face, says to himself, “If she says that again, I’m gonna knock her upside her head.” In other words, he feels that he is in "control", like a boxer is against an opponent. To be sure, that same guy (batterer) would never think of doing that with another male (unless the guy was half his size and had a docile personality). But at this moment, he is “in control”.

So Chris Brown is a loathsome coward. Can he change? We should hope so. However, he should do that with someone other than Rihanna, the young girl who comes from the land of my grandparents. The fact that he has so quickly resorted to another form of control to “win” her back is both pathetic and sad on Rihanna’s part, but that pitiful fact is also true of all of her male relatives and so-called “friends” who have allowed Brown to be able to walk around without crutches still.

In any case, he should, at least, be tried for “obstruction of justice”, since it is unlikely that she will testify against him now, since he has, deliberately, conned her into keeping him out of the slammer, by getting her to “reconcile”.

Finally, as I teach and have taught each of my students (some 2600 - with over 500 of them female) and have been doing so for a living, since 1988, “If someone loves you, then the only response that s/he has when angry with you is to simply cut off communication. In other words, s/he does not speak either to or with you. The thought of violence from either side, is never an issue. However, if someone initiates violence towards you, regardless of their relationship to you, whatever you thought your relationship was, you were wrong – and you better make that person be the one who screams for the cops.” Dig? That is what I taught my son and both daughters (the youngest has sparred with Jackie Frazier), starting all three - now adults - on each of their second birthdays.

G. Djata Bumpus
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Is the GOP's Michael Steele really a Devil?



Tall and handsome, Steele had a full head of hair back then. He also had a nice singing voice and was light on his feet, as he sang with an evil sneer, "the hopes that were dashed, when the stock market crashed, ha, ha, ha, ha, those were the good old days."






Dear friends,

I am not sure of what I was thinking,. when the Republican Party chose an African American male named Michael Steele to be their point man. I thought that he would be a formidable opponent to the Democratic Party. Yet, at least to me, it seems that, unless he makes a complete turnaround, he is going to be an embarrassment to everyone. After all, upon his recent criticism of Rush Limbaugh, a premier hypocrite, Steele backed down from Loudmouth Limbaugh, after having originally lambasted the fraud.

At any rate, on the link below, a dear friend of mine, Jenice Armstrong of the Philadelphia Daily News, whose work has appeared on this blog, a number of times, has a more personal appreciation for Steele.

Cheers!

G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.philly.com/dailynews/features/20090305_Jenice_Armstrong__New_play_for_GOP_s_Steele.html
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Monday, March 2, 2009

Black Doctor Website


"BlackDoctor.org) -- When the oil in your car is low, the oil light comes one. When there is something wrong with your engine, the engine light comes on. When there is something wrong with your body, a light doesn’t pop on, but your body usually sends out a flare when something has gone amuck..."


Dear friends,

On the link below you wil find an extraoirdinary Website that delivers a free newsletter about health - at least once per week. All adults can benefit from occasionally perusing it.

One Love,
G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.blackdoctor.org/articles.aspx?counter=33989
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Friday, February 27, 2009

The GOP has an uphill battle courting African Americans


"Although Lincoln gets credit for freeing the slaves, he was more interested in saving the Union than in making sure African Americans were treated fairly..."


Dear friends,

The recent appointment of Michael Steele, an African American, as chairman of the Republican Party represents the acknowledgement of the fact that the African American vote cannot be taken for granted as it has been by the GOP since the Sixties.

On the link below, in his usual brilliant fashion, veteran columnist George Curry who is now with the Philadelphia Inquirer takes us on an historical tour of the relationship between Blacks and the GOP, from Lincoln until today.

Cheers!

G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.philly.com/inquirer/columnists/george_curry/20090219_Beyond_the_Spin__How_the_GOP_lost_blacks.html
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Thursday, February 26, 2009

Humor - What if President Obama's familial roots were Nigerian instead of Kenyan?






"We have much reason to be thankful that President Obama is not of Nigerian origin..."





Dear friends,

As my longtime dear friend and brother, Nigerian educator, scholar and author Okey Ndibe has insisted, “Africa has been portrayed as a continent of losers. Who wants to be associated with losers?”.

Consequently, one of the most symbolic victories for those of us who have spent so much of our energies contributing to the struggle, over the past several centuries, to win the minds of African people here in the Diaspora - as well as those on the Mother continent - has been the election of a person to the presidency of the United States of America who has an African name. Many more African Americans will now not be so ashamed of being associated with Africa.

After all, as has been pointed out on this blog in the past, the great Marcus Garvey reminded us that, “"This propaganda of dis-associating Western Negroes from Africa is not a new one. For many years white propagandists have been printing tons of literature to impress scattered Ethiopia, especially that portion within their civilization, with the idea that Africa is a despised place, inhabited by savages, and cannibals, where no civilized human being should go, especially black civilized human beings." (Philosophy & Opinions of Marcus Garvey, edited by Amy Jacques-Garvey)

And so the other half of what we call racism - that is, the systematic oppression and exploitation of, particularly African American people in this country – in its historical context, has been what I call programmatic self-hatred. Moreover, this “other half” of racism, that is, self-hatred, unfortunately, is displayed by African Americans in a wide range of situations. For example, it is evident when some of our folks will not acknowledge their African American fellows on the streets (by either looking downwards or turning their heads) - to drive-by shootings in ghettos. As well, through our government- and corporate-controlled media, Black self-hatred is showcased daily through popular “comedy” television shows and movies, along with the equal buffoonery of “Black” plays in theatre houses all across America, all of which provide themes that allow us to either laugh at ourselves, or, in the case of many Black “dramas”, have European American (i.e., white) folks feeling sorry for us.

But racist self-hatred runs through the blood of all non-European peoples these days. That makes sense, since just as in other forms of oppression like sexism, for instance, the oppressed must necessarily internalize their oppression, in order for the injustice to proliferate. Otherwise, the oppressors would have to constantly spend their time killing and engaging in other abuses, in an attempt to get the latter to conform. To be sure, in that kind of scenario, the rulers would be unable to get their victims to do much work, much less make profits for them.

Finally, on the link below is a beautiful and humorous piece from a new online news service called the "Nigerian Village Square". With all of the corruption and internecine warfare that seems to be so endemic to most of the domains of the continent (i.e., Africa), let us hope that those of us in the Diaspora, someday soon, emotionally, spiritually, and practically re-unite with our people on the continent, and embrace Africa’s return to the prosperity She once knew. As well, let us hope that one day the continent will be called the United States of Africa.

One Love, One Heart, One Spirit,
G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.nigeriavillagesquare.com/articles/sheyi-oriade/thank-god-obama-is-not-of-nigerian-o.html

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Monday, February 16, 2009

Swimming in a sea of leaves


"Instead of forcing him from his pedestal, Phelps' recreational use of marijuana will no doubt push the pendulum further along the road to liberalization of pot laws..."

Dear friend,

In light of the decision by law enforcement authorities in South Carolina not to press charges against mega-champion Olympic swimmer Michael Phelps, it seems appropriate for me to share the thoughtful piece on the link below that was written by a longtime friend of mine who writes for the Philadelphia Daily News, Jill Porter. Her work has appeared on this blog in the past.

Cheers!

G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.philly.com/dailynews/columnists/jill_porter/20090204_Jill_Porter__Phelps_a_toke-ing_of_pot_legalizers__affection.html
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Friday, February 13, 2009

Patty Jackson says, "Go! This is a 'must see' exhibit!" )originally posted 1/15/09)


"Would America have been America without her Negro People?" - Dr. W.E.B. DuBois (1903)


Dear friends,

For the past two weeks, just as she did for ten months prior to the election of President Barack Obama, the legendary WDAS FM radio personality Patty Jackson of Philadelphia has been vigorously inviting folks to learn, understand, and, consequently, appreciate the historical experiences of African American people and how those experiences are enmeshed in the total social fabric of what makes American culture. Through the Tavis Smiley-sponsored touring museum called America I Am, we all can do just that. The exhibit will be housed in Philly through much of the Spring. Therefore, anyone who plans on travelling that way (Philly), over the next five months, can check it out. Please click on the link below to find out more.

G. Djata Bumpus
http://americaiam.org/

PS Please catch Patty on weekdays, from 10am to 3pm, at http://www.wdasfm.com/ Cheers!
Read full post

Sunday, February 8, 2009

What's up with Etta James calling President Obama's ears big?

"...if Etta James is so caught up on Obama having big ears, then why did she marry a “white" man? To be sure, Bob James has big ears..."

Dear friends,

I normally do not bother with the stupidity of folks in the entertainment industry. However, recently Etta James, a popular singer of old, made a comment about President Obama that should be challenged. She made a disparaging remark about Obama's "big ears".

Actually, Etta James has a nerve, since she married a "white" man named Bob James - a great musician (James is his surname- not hers). The fact of the matter is: Obama's mother was "white". Europeans have larger ears than Africans. That's a physiological fact! The next time you have a chance, look at ANY European American's ears. They are bigger than those of African Americans. Period. It was a natural part of coming from a cold climate that they have large ears (to help deal with the cold). Black folks have small ears compared to "whites".

Moreover, due to the historical “mixing” between Africans and Europeans, there are some African Americans with larger ears than their European American counterparts. Therefore, if Etta James is so caught up on Obama having big ears, then why did she marry a “white" man? To be sure, Bob James has big ears, just as Africans have kinky hair. The kinky hair kept us from getting caught up in the large amounts of vegetation of warm climates.

At any rate, at least to me, Etta James chumped herself off, by saying something so stupid. She hates her Blackness. Beyonce merely represents a mirrored image of Etta's own self-hatred of being Black. That's her problem. Still, I'm proud of Beyonce. It's just unfortunate that neither she, Jay Z, or her parents know much about human physiology or their people.

One Love.,
G. Djata Bumpus
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Sunday, February 1, 2009

Quincy Jones has started a petition...(originally posted 1/19/09)

We in the arts need this and the country needs the arts--now more than ever...

Dear Friends,

Quincy Jones has started a petition to ask President Obama to appoint a Secretary of the Arts. While many other countries have had Ministers ofArt or Culture for centuries, the United States has never created such a position. We in the arts need this and the country needs the arts--now more than ever. On the link below, please take a moment to sign this important petition and then pass it on to your friends and colleagues. Peace.

G. Djata Bumpus
www.petitiononline.com/esnyc/petition.html
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Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Response from an Elder about "inalienable rights"?

"To alienate any person is to bring a sure division between that person and another who are expected to receive the same judicial treatment in a humane way as is defined by the Constitution..."

Dear friends,

Below, is a brief response about last week's piece called " 'Inalienable Rights' and gay marriage", from my Mother (who just turned "84" the day before President Obama's inauguration). She mentions the fact that the principles upon which this country was founded ignore the reality that there were many "captive workers" (so-called slaves) here, and the injustices did not stop there.

I think that it is extremely important to note here that slavery was a class institution, not a "race" one. As a matter of fact, many of the so-called "slaves" were European American or "white", albeit mostly "indentured servants" or temporary slaves. As well, at least as early as 1656 in Boston, we know that there were also a number of Black slave masters. In the 19th Century, there were, in fact, thousands of Black slave masters controlling many more thousands of "slaves" - both Black and "white". Also, thousands of Blacks fought on the Confederate side, during the Civil War, to expand slavery. In order to investigate my assertions, please simply go to your Web browser and/or the local library; as well, if you live in either New England or the South, go to your town or city records department.

In any case, we have not heard from my Mom, in several months, on this blog. As always, I am both honored and pleased to share her thoughts with you.

One Love, One Heart, One Spirit,
G. Djata Bumpus
*****************************************
Dearest #5 son Djata,

Let me tell you what I see that is an integral part of the U.S. Constitution and its "inalienable rights" crap. It was written, while black men and women and their offspring were "slaves" in a system that legally used them as marketable commodities. Were these persons entitled to the same rights as their white officials and neighbors? The answer is an unequivocal "NO".

Need I say more? To alienate any person is to bring a sure division between that person and another who is expected to receive the same judicial treatment in a humane way as is defined by the Constitution. But, if that person has all the physical body parts in the right place and a mind that functions, then you allow him or her to toil laboriously equal to a mule, and not be treated as humanely as the law should allow, where are the "inalienable rights"? Sweet or correct words do not "cut the mustard". America is famous for words that do not match deeds.

Keep the Faith,

Love,
Mom
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"Racial Profiling" is still "over-the-top" - in New York City alone

"The NYPD is on pace to stop and question a record half a million citizens this year - about 80% of them black or Latino, a new report says…In 2007, for instance, the last complete year of data, cops arrested only 5.8% of the 472,096 people they stopped (27,632)..."

Dear friends,

With an African American governor of New York state, and, now, an African American president of the United States, hopefully, the figures that were just released four days before President Obama's inauguration, on the link below, will be a thing of the past - very soon.

G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2009/01/15/2009-01-15_blacks_and_latinos_make_up_about_80_stop.html
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Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Bumpus on "Inalienable Rights" and Gay marriage

"... the concept of "rights" is a human creation that has only been around Western civilization since the 18th Century..."

Dear friends,

Just the other day, I sent a letter to my local newspaper, regarding an article by nationally-syndicated columnist George Will about gay marriage. Considering the recent defeat that African Americans helped to give to proponents of gay marriage in California, on the same day they voted for Barack Obama to become our nation's 44th president, I thought that it is time that I comment on this subject. As well, hearing our new president make a reference to "inalienable rights", during his inauguration speech, seemed to make this post fitting. The letter appears below.

One Love,

G. Djata Bumpus
**********************************************
To the Editor:

George Will's piece called " 'Natural justice' and gay marriage", posted 1/15/09, reveals the discussion of gay marriage to be exactly what it is: A total distraction, if not a red herring.

The idea of "inalienable rights", much less "natural justice" ignores reality, sending us into the murky world of mysticism and illusion. That is, the concept of "rights" is a human creation that has only been around Western civilization since the 18th Century.

"Rights" are fought for - not bestowed upon a person, by either the State or Providence. They are not “inalienable". Proof? For most of human history, people socially reproduced themselves as slaves and serfs (called "share-croppers” in America). To be sure, in the aforementioned societies, people had no “rights”. Moreover, being either a slave or serf had more to do with military puissance than blood line. To make an extra point about why "rights" are not inalienable, The Patriot Act, endorsed by politicians like former President George Bush and then Senator Barack Obama, has taken away all of our rights as private citizens. For example, that law now allows any person in this country to be secretly taken into custody, without a warrant or even access to an attorney, and no one even has to know where the abducted person/citizen is.

In any case, drivel by Will and his ilk, about marriage being defined as a union between a "man" and a "woman" circumvents what we know as human logic. After all, these notions of "gender" (man and woman) mean nothing, aside from their uses as social constructs that deny half of the population equal “rights”.

As my oldest daughter, a medical scientist, has insisted to me, for years: Gender is much different than sex and we have to eliminate it. Sex is, of course, biologically relevant but gender roles are social constructions that are completely out-dated. We cannot be okay with getting rid of some and not getting rid of others.
There are obvious biological differences between males and females. Certainly, males and females are not the same. However, those differences have no bearing on my ability or responsibility with regard to paying a mortgage, dinner bill or engaging in service to my community and society.

Moreover, two relevant questions, regarding all civil rights issues seems to be: Why is it that ever since 1866, every thirty or forty years, the US Congress finds itself passing more civil rights legislation? In other words, why don’t they “get it”?

Mr. Will - and others like him, may consider starting dialogue about - and trying to resolve - real issues like human exploitation and oppression (e.g., violence against all women and non-European American men, as well as poverty - in terms of food, clothing, housing and health care), instead of apologizing for them (i.e., exploitation and oppression) with fantasies that help make these injustices proliferate.


Finally, while I am still quite confused about the concept of "sexual identity", I encourage all of those who describe themselves as being “gay” to continue fighting, vigorously, for their rights, as all other groups before them have had to do in order to acquire them. Cheers!

G. Djata Bumpus

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Remembering Dr. King - a truly religious person

"Since I am a preacher by calling, I suppose it is not surprising that I have seven major reasons for bringing Vietnam into the field of my moral vision. There is at the outset a very obvious and almost facile connection between the war in Vietnam and the struggle I, and others, have been waging in America..."

Dear friends,

The piece on the link below was written by Will Bunch, an insightful journalist who works for the Philadelphia Daily News. In light of Dr. King's recent birthday celebrations and all of the talk of "his" dream, this brief, but brilliant, blog post by Will is extremely timely and important.

G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/attytood/Remembering_the_other_Dr_KIng.html
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The Lemon Tree - an important book

: Generally, the State of Israel denies its responsibility in the exodus of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from their homes..."

Dear friends,

On the link below is a book review that in and of itself is incredibly revealing, in terms of the situation in Palestine/Israel - both historically and currently. Additionally, it serves as a preface to further discussion on this blog which will happen in just a few days, about that region.
G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.levantinecenter.org/levantine-review/reviews/lemon-tree-recounts-personal-stories-palestinians-and-israelis
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Saturday, January 10, 2009

Joe the Plumber going to Israel as a "war correspondent"

Maybe, he will find a place in Israel. (No further comment)

Dear friends,

This person who has acquired the moniker "Joe the Plumber" has found a job, for a change, albeit temporary. Maybe, he will find a place in Israel. (No further comment)

G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.philly.com/philly/hp/news_update/20090107_ap_joetheplumbertobecomewarcorrespondent.html
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Martinez on Saving the Newspaper Business


"While today’s struggling newspapers offer occasional bells and whistles in their effort to appeal to those who don’t read newspapers it won’t be long before they realize their pathetic efforts at redesign aren’t working and begin taking lessons from the supermarket tabloids..."

Dear friends,

It is always a pleasure to share thoughts from my good friend Al Martinez. Like him, his messages are timeless, as the link below proves. Enjoy!

G. Djata Bumpus
http://almartinez.org/wordpress/?p=26
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Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Happy New Year - with a wonderful musical experience

African-American musicians, singers, and composers have contributed immensely to our cultural history. The Ritz Chamber Players are proud to continue this great heritage and tradition...

Dear friends,

I recently came across a Website that blew my mind - literally. It belongs to a group of musicians who call themselves the Ritz Chamber Players. They really deserve widespread support. Please check them out on the link below. Particularly, please listen to some of the samples of what they play, in the "listening room" - and Enjoy!

Happy New Year!!!

G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.ritzchamberplayers.org/index.html
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Thursday, December 25, 2008

Women "of color" in the Obama Administration

"...sends a strong message that the Obamas want to use the White House strategically, to maximize its use in a way that is consistent with their philosophy — [to] open it to a broader range of people,”

Dear friends,

While I do not either like - or use - the term "people of color", because, at least to me, it validates the phony claim that so many "Americans" make of being "white" as opposed to calling themselves European Americans (many Latinos and Asians do it too), I was forwarded the link below by a dear friend. It gives us an early glimpse at President Obama's direction.

Happy Holidays!!!

G. Djata bumpus
http://ybpguide.com/2008/12/15/the-women-of-color-in-the-obama-administration/
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Tuesday, December 23, 2008

More sad news about corruption in Nigeria




Nigerians who are plain tired of the Yar’Adua regime’s claims to living out the rule of law found reason last Thursday to be nauseated. A Federal High Court in Enugu convicted former Governor Lucky Igbinedion of Edo State on a one-count charge of corruption. His punishment? To pay a fine of N3.6 million. That’s not even a slap on the wrist; it’s a pat on the back – or even a lover’s hum in the ear!


Dear friends,

It seems everywhere we look politicians, in almost every city, hamlet, and country, around the world, are being exposed as crooks. On the link below, Okey Ndibe reveals more of the corruption that must be stamped out in order for the people of Nigeria to be able to start working for that country's and, in fact, the continent's progress. Moreover, African people in the Diaspora should pay attention to this, because we do have a stake in Africa's rebirth.

One Love,

G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.nigeriavillagesquare.com/articles/okey-ndibe/rule-of-law-for-the-lucky-2.html
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Wednesday, December 17, 2008

What is really going on with the Auto Industry?


"...every one of us must carefully scrutinize American businesses to see if they are actually working in the best interest of the nation, or only themselves..."








Dear friends,

The current “help” for which the Big Three US automakers are asking from our government would not be so, if they did two things. They are: 1) Appreciiate the fact that the purpose of a business, if it wants to last, is to "create customers" - not maximize profits. In other words, if the only interest of a business is “profit-maximization”, then the results will not be any different than they are for an illegal drug dealer. To be sure, the “entrepreneur” just mentioned is only thinking about NOW - not the future. It should be no surprise then why the business of drug dealing always ends the same way: Dead. 2) "Innovation" should be part of the operation of any business that plans on being competitive. That is, if a company is not constantly striving to refresh both what it produces or services and the way that it then provides and distributes its commodities, it will, eventually, begin to lag behind other companies in its specific industry.

Nevertheless, on the link below, Fatimah Ali of the Philadelphia Daily News - who, as far as I have experienced - is not one to smooth over her beliefs - provides a brilliant analysis, regarding the quandary in which Ford, Chrysler, and GM currently find themselves.

Cheers!

G. Djata Bumpus
<http://www.philly.com/philly/opinion/20081209_Fatimah_Ali__Detroit_s__Model_A__mindset.html?adString=ph.opinion/opinion;!category=opinion;&randomOrd=121108101536
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Thursday, December 11, 2008

Roland Martin on Political Corruption in Illinois

The fact is, the vast majority of politicians in the Land of Lincoln are well-meaning people who truly care about the public trust and don't sell their office to the highest bidder. But when you have future politicians raised in the "Chicago way" or "Illinois way" of how to be a politician, it is reasonable to expect to see this kind of stuff.



Dear friends,

With all of the recent talk of corrupt politics in Chicago, along with the "tale-no-prisoners" mentality of media hype from Ann Coulter-types, it is refeshing for me to be able to share (if you have not read it yet) an informative and thoughtful piece by the very formidable Roland Martin, regarding the aforementioned controversy. Cheers!

G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/12/09/martin.chicago/index.html

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Is Corruption in Politics "Normal"?


A few months ago, after I wrote a column critical of Justice James Ogebe’s shocking validation of Umaru Yar’Adua’s “election” as president, I received a letter from a self-styled “political realist.” He accused me of political naivety for expecting the judiciary to invalidate a presidential election, however fraudulent its conduction.





Dear friends,

We have all heard the phrase "power corrupts". No political system on this planet has not had its share. Nonetheless, these type of matters must be viewed in the context of the historical and cultural experiences of the varied domains. No country has the answer to the problems of another (country).

On the link below Nigerian scholar/activist Okey Ndibe addresses the issue of corruption in his native land - and offers solutions, as well. Nigeria has the largest body of people of African descent in the world, followed by Brazil, and then the United States. Let us pay close attention to what is going on with our brothers and sisters there.

One Love,
G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.nigeriavillagesquare.com/articles/okey-ndibe/nigerians-should-learn-from-thai-example-2.html
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Craig's List Follies




I once used it to unload an old but still-serviceable dresser, and I have a friend who actually landed a rather desirable TV job through what's basically an Internet grab bag. ..





Hey folks,

For a little change of pace, here are a few wisely-expressed words of entertainment for ya, on the link below, from a very special Philly person who stays in the know.

Cheers!

G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.philly.com/dailynews/features/20081204_Jenice_Armstrong__Be_careful_what_you_post_on_the_Internet.html?adString=pdn.entertainment/features;!category=features;&randomOrd=120408030346
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Thursday, December 4, 2008

Steve Coons, a true warrior - father, teacher and scholar

"For us, warriors are not what you think of as warriors. The warrior is not someone who fights, because no one has the right to take another's life. The warrior, for us, is one who sacrifices himself for the good of others. His task is to take care of the elderly, the defenseless, those who can not provide for themselves, and above all, the children, the future of humanity." ---Sitting Bull

(February 13, 1947 - December 1, 2008)


Dear friends,

Although the passing of a loved one is never timely, I am both honored and proud to have known Steve Coons for most of my adult life. He was a father, longtime economics professor, and activist/scholar. But what I knew him to be most proud of was his accomplishments in his role as a father to his children and many others.

We enjoyed talking with each other about many issues. Parenting, political/social concepts, and boxing were our favorite topics to discuss. The talks were sometimes charged with sincerity, but in a loving way. We shared ideas.

Steve and I watched our progeny grow from being small children to becoming extremely competent adults. In our personal e-mails, over the years, we often bragged/teased each other, so proudly, asserting our roles as "proud Papis". He even has grandchildren, by the way.

He visited my boxing school only a couple of years ago. He was accompanied by one of his beautiful and incredibly talented daughters - Michelle. The pair had come back to Western Mssachusetts from California, for a few weeks, as Steve sought further expertise in dealing with his medical condition (cancer). In the picture below, he appears with Michelle and my brother Eshu (who shared a lifelong best friendship with Steve), and myself, immediately prior to the four of us going to "greeze" at a great local seafood restaurant.


left to right - Djata, Steve, Michelle, Eshu

Earlier this year, when I established this blog, I received a much-appreciated comment about the blog from Steve. It reads:

Gosh Djata! This is very impressive, also "positive" as all get-out! Way to go Brotha'! Very positive! I see you're a doer! Good inspiration for me. Everytime I go to get serious about my writing, I seem to have a setback due to my health issue. Nonetheless, in terms of your blog,....I'm glad I opened it up! I read the wonderful Father's Day message, then saw the Introduction video on one of your local new's stations covering You and your gym.

I know my younger brother, Robert, would probably enjoy that
(being a boxing coach, himself). Lastly, I saw the excerpt from the Panther play, which, of course,is based on the book (you gave me a copy of the book the last time we were back East).

I, particularly, like the words on Mom. Give her my best!

I liked your bio in there as well! I will read the rest of the Blog data/info later as I didn't have a good day today. Nevertheless, the main reason I am responding, of course, is to congratulate you on the (new) impressive blog! Great job Djata! Keep-up the good work!

Regards,
Bro' Steve

P.S. I will send the blog address to as many people as I can (starting with my family members)!


I thanked Steve back then, in June, for his generous comments. Additionally, I was happy to let him know recently that this blog is now being read by people in thirteen countries around the world. To be sure, what I share here and have shared before is in no small part due to my spirited discussions with Steve Coons. Moreover, he is not dead, per se; rather, his existence has taken on a new form. That is, his legacy will be carried on by his children, grandchildren, other loved ones, and all those he taught from the East Coast to the West Coast, during the past several decades. Moreover, as another great Steve (Wonder) once put it: Love lives forever.

Much Love to the Coons family - Always.

G. Djata Bumpus
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A Song for Steve Coons, by Eshu Bumpus

That sunset, at last when all was said and done
Our Brother, with all his battles finally won
has traveled to a great ancestral place
But I know there's a smile upon his face
Because he knows he left behind
A deep and lasting love

This morning, in our world of war and strife
We take time just to celebrate his life
Our Brother, who with all the things he taught
And battles that he fought, he never once forgot
To give us a deep and lasting love

Always full of wisdom, strength and joy
He was both a teacher and a friend
In each of us some part of him will live on
And on that you can depend

This heartache, over losing my best friend
In my heart, this friendship never will end
My brother, Although today we say goodby
Know that forever I will try
To follow what you taught
To give the best I've got
To give a deep and lasting love
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Friday, November 21, 2008

Another response to President Obama's choice of Chief of Staff

I'll certainly give President Obama the chance to show that he's really the one "running the ship." No president is free of obligations to and constraints imposed by the powerful, because all presidents need the powerful behind them to get elected...

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Dear friends,

Below, is another response. This is in reference to my good friend, Corky Siemaszko of the New York Daily News, by another dear friend, Neil Zagorin, who commented earlier about the issue of President Obama's choices. Moreover, I both welcome and encourage others to contribute to any dialogue that appears on this blog.

Cheers!

G. Djata Bumpus

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Hi Djata,

It was great to see the reply by Corky Siemaszko. I just want to run by a clarification of my original reply, so that it reads like heartfelt opinion about ideas and policies, and not like negative> words about personalities.

I'll certainly give President Obama the chance to show that he's reallythe one "running the ship." No president is free of obligations to and constraints imposed by the powerful, because all presidents need the powerful behind them to get elected.

I hope that President Obama will be more responsive to the rest of us than President Bush, Jr. has been. Making Mr. Emanuel chief of staff would be good if it works out as Mr.Siemaszko suggests. It was also a good choice if Mr. Emanuel was due something because of his position in the Democratic Party, and the alternative was to give him a Cabinet post. Do we need another Secretary of the Treasury, or Labor,who's committed to the idea that the economy should be "freed up"for entrepreneurship by removing the structures that allow average people tohave a stake in economic growth?

I hope that Mr. Emanuel's appointment as chief of staff was not a signal to the folks who got us into this economic mess (while lining their pockets) that they will always have access and a warm reception. I hope that Corky Siemaszko is right.

I want to be clear. I have nothing personal against Rahm Emanuel, and just want to be sure that what I wrote makes it sound that way. As far as I know,he's intelligent, personally honest,> hard-working, and very competent. He might be a great congressional representative. And if he plays political hard-ball, I can't see how the conservatives have anyreason to gripe after the way their boys in DC have played the game inrecent years.

My concern is that, after almost a decade of a crude "the rich get richer" program, he's a smart, hard-working and competent exponent of a sophisticated "the rich get richer" program rather than a "we haveto balance all our needs" program. I'm alarmed that an exponent of this position will be in such a crucial position in the chain of command, andthat the boss would want him there.

Eake care,

Neil
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Hate Crimes - it's gonna get worse

The blow to racist indecency, with the election of President Obama, will garner greater negative reactions than the country is experiencing right now...

Dear friends,

The article on the link below was written by a columnist with whom I have had contact - via e-mail - a number of tmes over the years. She is Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Susan Snyder. Moreover, it is a pleasure to share this very informative piece that reveals the fact that: The blow to racist indecency, with the election of President Obama, is garnering many negative reactions. Wait until he actually gets into office.

G. Djata Bumpus
http://www.philly.com/philly/hp/news_update/20081115_Hate_crimes_up_on_campuses__group_says.html?adString=ph.news/news_update;!category=news_update;&randomOrd=111508014457
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Friday, November 14, 2008

Another friend makes a comment about Obama's Chief of Staff choice

Yeah, his Wall Street connections are troubling. But he’s not steering the ship. Obama is...

Dear friends,

In my drive not to be "fair and balanced" like Fox News, below, I am presenting the response that I received from a very good friend of mine, "Corky" Siemaszko, who also happens to be a staff writer for the New York Daily News, regarding Rahm Emanuel - President-elect Obama's choice to be his Chief of Staff.

G. Djata Bumpus
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Djata,

Actually, it might be good for Obama to have a tough guy like Rahm Emanuel who will kick some a-- as chief of staff. And, as an exiled Chicagoan whose late mother was represented by Emanuel, I give the guy props for reaching out to the constituencies that did not vote for him. My old neighborhood voted en masse for the Polish candidate, Nancy Kaszak, not for Emanuel. He didn’t hold it against Polish Village.

Yeah, his Wall Street connections are troubling. But he’s not steering the ship. Obama is.

Corky
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