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A lot has to happen if the NAACP doesn’t want to become what many already say it is, namely obsolete.

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Bush Is Not The NAACP ‘s Problem

By Earl Ofari Hutchinson, AlterNet. Posted July 9, 2007.


A lot has to happen if the NAACP doesn’t want to become what many already say it is, namely obsolete.

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One thing is certain President Bush won’t be back at the NAACP convention this year. NAACP chairman Julian Bond made sure of that when he dumped every ill from the Iraq war to the Katrina aid flop on Bush’s head in his opening speech to the NAACP’s 98th convention in Detroit this week. This was the sort of kick Bush in the teeth slam that Bond has virtually held a patent on since Bush took office. In fact, before Bush graced the organization’s dais last year, the NAACP had made Bush’s snub of the group a ritual. The NAACP would formally invite Bush to speak. And Bush would quickly beg off with either the politicians’ standard excuse of a scheduling conflict, or simply ignore the invite. Bond would then brand Bush as insensitive, uncaring, and an enemy of civil rights and blacks.

When corporate friendly former NAACP president and CEO, Bruce Gordon pitched Bush to speak last year, and he accepted, that was a hopeful sign that Bush’s deep freeze of the group had ended and the NAACP would pull its punches in pounding Bush. But with Gordon out after only 19 months at the helm, the Bush détente is over. While Bush is a pliable punching bag again for the NAACP, the stark reality is that if Bush weren’t in the White House, the NAACP would still be in trouble.

The NAACP’s embrace of showy, symbolic fights, such as a gimmicky but irrelevant funeral for the N word at this year’s convention, and its blatant push of any and all Democrats, does little to solve the heavy duty problems of drugs, crime, and gangs, soaring joblessness among young blacks, and the astronomical black prison incarceration rate. The annual report cards that NAACP officials issue on racial progress in financial services, auto retail, telecommunications, and the advertising and marketing industries, and procurement and vendor relations and foundation and corporate giving has absolutely no bearing on the plight of poor blacks.

NAACP officials have talked incessantly about attracting young, fresh faces and talent to the organization. There’s good reason. The rap against the organization is that time has passed it’s aging, staid, old guard leadership by, and that it needs a youth shot in the arm. There’s a problem with that too. The majority of young blacks were born after the titanic battles of the 1960s against legal Jim Crow segregation. They weren’t forced to drink from colored only water fountains, attacked by snarling police dogs, and cattle prod welding sheriff’s deputies, kicked and spat on at lunch counters, and had doors slammed in their face when they tried to get a room at a hotel.

That experience and the civil rights activism that swept away those barriers is a foreign concept to them. But that activism is precisely what made the NAACP the nation’s best-known and respected champion of civil rights for nearly a century. The clash between the organization’s past and where young people are at today is probably too great to overcome.

The NAACP’s dilemma in trying to rekindle the flame of civil rights activism and appeal to young people is compounded by the its top-heavy emphasis on corporate dollars to bankroll its operations. A tilt by the NAACP toward a hard-edged activist agenda carries the fearful risk of alienating the corporate donors and the Democratic politicians that the NAACP leaders carefully cultivate. The organization depend on them to gain even more jobs, promotions, and contracts for black professionals and businesspersons, to bag contributions for their fundraising campaigns, dinners, banquets, scholarship funds and programs, and increased political patronage.

The irony is that even with those corporate dollars, the NAACP still teeters on the brink of financial calamity. A month ago it closed most of its national offices and laid off 70 employees. The NAACP is in yet another fight for its life to keep the doors open, and unless it can figure out a way to stir more blacks to cough up the nickels and dimes as they did for decades past to keep the group going it faces even tougher sledding in the future.

The NAACP is at yet another crossroads. It is ridiculed by young blacks as irrelevant, criticized by activist blacks as too conservative, and ignored by the White House. Yet, despite its flaws it’s still the only true national civil rights organization going. It can reclaim its cutting edge leadership and activism by mounting a no-holds barred assault on the towering social ills that still torment poor blacks.

While Bond’s opening speech Bush bash was a good stem-winder, it won’t do much to bridge the gulf between the two black Americas, one poor, frustrated, and alienated and the other prosperous, and upwardly achieving. That’s what has to happen if the NAACP doesn’t want to become what many already say it is, namely obsolete.

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Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. His new book The Latino Challenge to Black America: Towards a Conversation between African-Americans and Hispanics (Middle Passage Press and Hispanic Economics New York) in English and Spanish will be out in October.

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Thank you for the informed analysis.
Posted by: Sojourner on Jul 9, 2007 2:51 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I first joined NAACP at the local level during the '60s. Then I rejoined after the Katrina tragedy, but not locally. So I have not kept up.

I was nonplussed at Bush's appearance last year. The man is without shame to have arrived without sackcloth and ashes.

I have a professional relationship with some of the white do-gooder/visionaries who helped with its founding. Our organization today has the same problems with young recruits. No one seems willing to "dream the impossible dream" that gets the blood rushing and succeed enough to inspire the lethargic.

As always, success breeds its own demons. "Freedom, they say, is a constant struggle." Add to that, "against one's own temptation to hopelessness."

The door will always open, if people will knock and seek and ask. That never changes.

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Walk with me..and understand how stilled (by jews) waters run deep.....
Posted by: ekipnrut on Jul 9, 2007 3:20 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]

NAC1


NAC2
[excerpt]:
With Jews holding the purse strings to many ostensibly Black organizations, in 1976 Black activist Julian Bond sought the directorship of the NAACP. Although critical of Israel, Bond found it necessary to sign a yearly "Black Americans in Support of Israel (BASIC)" statement "if he was to have any chance of winning the NAACP position, given the powerful influence of Jews within the organization." [GINZBURG, p. 169] In the early years of the NAACP, adds Hasia Diner, "heavy Jewish involvement may explain why the [NAACP] conference passed the 'Russian Resolution,' which protested the expulsion of Jews from the city of Kiev, Russia." [DINER, p. 136] Later, African Americans like William Pollard, Deputy Director of the NAACP, took "many trips" to Israel, although socialization to the Jewish/Israeli perspectives was not always completely successful. [STARR, J., 1990, p. 251]
Clues to the nature of Spingarn's NAACP may be gleaned from the following quotes from B. Joyce Ross, author of J.E. Spingarn and the Rise of the NAACP:
* "Spingarn's failure to relinquish the power he wielded in the NAACP comprised one of the greatest paradoxes of his career." [p. 69]
* "Spingarn's familiarity with New York's most reputable financial institutions and his expertise in the management of stocks and bonds enabled him to become one of the key formulators of the NAACP's financial policy." [p. 57] (He also had a "special influence" at publishers Harcourt, Brace and a "special relationship" at Alfred Knopf). [LEWIS, p. 562]
'The NAACP became a closed corporation ... [resulting in] a tremendous narrowing of the broad base of authority suggested by the Association's constitutional structure, with a concomitant tendency toward a self-perpetuating Board of Directors." [p. 52]

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mick3
Posted by: mick3 on Jul 10, 2007 12:01 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The NAACP needs to take on a few current problems for blacks in the US. Voting rights. Jobs. Racist police. Ghetto attitude toward learning and achieving/terrible schools. Of the last, you can't have decent schools based on local property taxes. That equals a guaranteed caste system. On the other hand, what use is a good teacher when ignored by students and their parents? As for racist police, I watched the LA fascists, called locally the police, while growing up a long, long time ago, and my conclusion: Were I black in LA, I would have to kill someone in uniform. But first of all, all votes must count and be counted, accurately and honestly. Work on those issues, and watch what happens with the jobs issue.

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Old Heads and Old Thinking Not a Very Potent Cocktail
Posted by: dlf on Jul 12, 2007 6:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I worked for a non profit that raised money for many organizations including the NAACP. I found most of the older organizations, with the exception of animal rights and environmental groups, suffer the same disease. They continue to bring an old paradigm to old and new issues, they are sucking the lifeblood from their members (many over 70 years old), and they have no new wins in the win/lose column.

I found that NOW and NAACP have similar problems, the primary one is that many of those who fought or lived through the struggle, haven't passed a sense of urgency on to their children. The problems faced by both of these groups have mutated, but they haven't gone away. By not sharing our personal experiences with our children, whose world may appear different, we have killed activism. The NAACP may have an outreach program, though I couldn't tell you what it is. The one I can tell you about, is constantly soliciting seniors without making any progress on the issues of health care disparities, creating apartments and nursing homes to address the shortages faced by poor Black communities, or even creating senior activity spaces. If the NAACP is going to continue to go to the well of the aged they should at least offer something in return, and they don't. If they are going to bring young people into the fold they need to listen to their concerns and build campaigns around them, and they don't. They are another corporate entity that offers little return for one's investment, the sooner they grasp that, and change, the better.

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impeachment
Posted by: gsaephanh on Jul 13, 2007 1:28 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Call in your vote TODAY for impeaching Bush and Cheney at this number: 202-225-0100

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office is taking calls voting for Impeachment of Bush/Cheney at 202-225-0100. PLEASE CALL TODAY. At the toll free capitol switchboard #s below, you can also call your particular district’s congressional representative to insist that they support impeachment for Cheney. E.g., for Rep. Dennis Kucinich’s H Res 333 for Cheney; please say:

“In addition to supporting Kucinich’s bill H Res 333, I would also support a similar Impeachment Resolution against Bush, especially after the disgraceful Scooter Libby sentence “commuting” and the following issues: wiretapping, torture, numerous 9/11 intelligence misrepresentations, the continued occupation of Iraq, gross negligence during Hurrican Katrina, the Valerie Plame CIA leak, […list your other grounds…] ..”[see resolutions on tab #2 for other grounds for impeachment]).

LANIC requests that Americans call today…Not tomorrow or next week. Every call adds to the extraordinary grasswoots and nationwide movement’s pressures on House Speaker Pelosi to act now .before further innocent lives are lost in Iraq and elsewhere. Last week 28 Americans lost their lives. Over the July 4, 2007 weekend over 400 Iraqis lost their lives…

SEND MAIL TO HOUSE SPEAKER NANCY PELOSI: Attn: Nancy Pelosi, House Representative/Speaker of the House, 235 Cannon H.O.B., Washington, DC 20515 ; Pelosi’s Fax # 202 225-8259

Pelosi’s e-mail address :

Americanvoices@mail.house.gov

CC her at: sf.nancy@mail.house.gov

Please send her a pro-impeachment email and a specific call to endorse H Res 333. Note: On Saturdays/Sundays, Pelosi’s office has a comment line at which you can leave a voicemail. Your message will be transcribed and relayed to her. Please do encourage your family/friends to contact the same number. Refer them to www.bcimpeach.com for the actual telephone #s & contact info.

Find out who your Congressional representative is and call that person. For toll free numbers to your Congress rep: (800) 828 – 0498; (800) 459 – 1887; or (866) 340 – 9281. You will be connected once you name your congress person. The staff aid should take detailed notes and provided to the Congressional representative.

Final Note: Please say “I support Impeachment based on ____. I’d like to know where “[representative name]” stands on this issue.” Let’s strike while the Libby fury keeps the iron hot! Please call and Act Now!

PLEASE ALSO CONTACT THESE KEY CONGRESSIONAL REPS RE IMPEACHMENT:
Representative Capitol Phone Capitol Fax
Howard Berman 202-225-4695 202-225-3196
& 818-944-7200 818-994-1050

MAILING ADDRESS FOR BERMAN
Congressman Howard L. Berman
14546 Hamlin Street, Suite 202
Van Nuys, CA 91411

Henry Waxman 202-225-3976 202-225-4099
Loreta Sanchez 202 225-2965 202-225-5859
D. Watson 202 225-7084 202-225-2422
LindaSanchez 202 225-6676 202-226-1012
L. Solis 202 225-5464 202-225-5467
A. G. Eshoo 202 225-8104 202-225-8890
L. Roybal/Allard 202 225-1766 202-225-0350

http://www.bcimpeach.com/

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Refreshing
Posted by: talkville on Jul 14, 2007 12:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A welcome article, although a bit defeatist and pessimistic - definitely not what is needed for NAACP or many other national and international organizations with their roots deep in social justice issues. The steady right-ward drift continues un-abated, the use of "corporate models" and corporate financialization of many great organizations needs to be countered firmly, not by declarations that they are "obsolete" but by insisting on the original founding principles - from the bottom up. No corporation has the interests of society in mind when they "donate" resources - their interest is in co-optation and a managed work-force in service of their only value: profit.

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