Black Agenda Report: Issue for: May 2 – May 8
Black Agenda Report
The weekly magazine of African American political thought & action
Issue for: May 2 – May 8
All stories are available at: www.BlackAgendaReport.com
BAR-produced stories:
Hip Hop Profanity, Misogyny and
Violence: Blame the Manufacturer
by BAR executive
editor Glen Ford
The often convoluted debate over
hip-hop lyrics and images frequently misses the point: mass
marketed rap recordings, videos and stage acts are corporate
products, and the artists are virtual employees and
subcontractors of huge multinationals. Corporate control of
the cultural marketplace is the real villain in this story,
not artists who did not pick themselves for stardom and
cannot on their own alter boardroom business models.
Corporations have been usurping and reshaping Black mass
culture for decades – hip-hop is just the latest product
line.
Freedom Rider: “These People Frighten
Me”
by BAR editor and senior columnist Margaret
Kimberley
Former Alaska Sen. Mike Gravel is right to
be scared of most of the Democratic field of presidential
candidates. Except for Ohio Rep. Dennis Kucinich, the
contenders jockey for the title of
most-likely-to-attack-Iran. Impeachment “is the only way
to discredit Republicans enough to insure a Democratic
victory in 2008,” but House Speaker Nancy Pelosi will hear
none of that. Even if the Democrats somehow triumph, nothing
much will change, because the frontrunners are all beholden
to Big Money and enthralled with war.
A
‘Ho’ By Any Other Color: The History and Economics of
Black Female Sexual Exploitation
by contributing
editor Dr. Edward Rhymes
While white women’s
sexuality is celebrated in movies and magazines, Black women
acting out the same behavior are relegated to the ranks of
whoredom. This gross double standard is rooted in slavery
and super-exploitation of Black females, who were made prey
to white male lust and depicted as sexually animalistic, in
addition to bearing the burden of unremunerated labor.
Conversely, “ even at her most licentious,” a white
woman “is made to appear innocent, wholesome and strangely
virginal.”
Big Media Censor the Kucinich-Gravel
Tag Team
A Black Agenda Radio Commentary by Glen
Ford
Even when the evidence of their eyes and ears
says otherwise, the corporate media will continue to insist
that Barack Obama is an anti-war candidate. Obama’s
foreign policy belligerence was on display at the South
Carolina Democratic presidential debate, revealed under
pressure from candidates Dennis Kucinich and Mike Gravel.
However, the exchange – the most newsworthy moments of the
debate – was immediately downplayed by corporate media,
who are in the reality-suppression business, not the news
business.
Other articles in this issue:
May Day in LA: "We Will Not Be Divided"
by Cynthia
McKinney
African Americans and immigrants must band
together to resist a forced march to the bottom, said the
former congresswoman in a May Day speech in Los Angeles. The
United States government should oppose, rather than abet,
corporate policies that force people across borders. The
Democratic Congress is way behind schedule in addressing
critical issues such ensuring Katrina survivors’ right of
return, and repealing George Bush’s tax cuts, the Patriot
Act, the Military Tribunals Act and the Secret Evidence
Act.
Why Black Workers Should Support Immigrant
Rights
by John Parker
Black workers are
constantly told that immigrants are determined to take their
jobs – the same line that was fed to white workers about
Blacks moving to industrial cities from the South, in past
eras. The author, a Los Angeles resident, says empowering
local police to act as immigration agents threatens all
people of color. He compares the separation of immigrant
families by deportation to the separation of Black families
at slave auctions. There is plenty of common ground for a
strategic Black-immigrant worker alliance.
The
Democrats and U.S. Mercenaries in Iraq
by Jeremy
Scahill
In addition to the other, many shortcomings
in the Democrats’ Iraq “withdrawal” legislation, the
measure fails utterly to deal with the 126,000
“contractors” in Iraq – tens of thousands of whom are
armed mercenaries. The private force rivals the uniformed
services in size, and earns far more money, all of it paid
for by U.S. taxpayers. Unaccountable to U.S. military or
Iraqi law, the mercenaries are a shadow army undergirding
the occupation – and a corporate profit center for George
Bush’s friends.
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