Thursday, November 4, 2010

The Consequences of the American Caste System

Last night I was reading What A Black Nerd Know... (Brick One) by Jay "Owl" Farand; please take the time to read the COMPLETE post, it is filled with knowledge and wisdom. There were many things said that I could quote from the post, but one thing that stood out for me was this particular sentence:


Similar to how Black people will point the finger at other Blacks for not doing what they are doing, and yet, we all are at the bottom of this caste system.”


This reminded me of conversations that I have with my father, whom I constantly build with, as we often see the effects of this system in our everyday lives. I pulled up this excerpt my father emailed me from The Consequences of the American Caste System by John Uzo Ogbu:


Caste-like Minority Status

The author defines three types of minority groups:


Autonomous minorities like Amish, Jews and Mormons are groups that aren't subordinate to a dominant group politically and economically.


Immigrant minorities that came to American more or less voluntarily. They may be poor and work in lower paying jobs, but that fact doesn't reflect their true status in the total hierarchy, because these groups don't see themselves as low caste. They see low paying jobs as temporary and better than what they left back in their home country. They also compare themselves not with the dominant group but those they left behind. They tend to do relatively well in school, even though they don't share the same culture as the white middle class. These include Chinese, Filipinos, Japanese, Koreans, etc.


Caste-like minorities were incorporated into the country more or less involuntarily and permanently. These include blacks, American indians, Mexicans, Native Hawaiians, Puerto Ricans. Membership is acquired at birth and retained permanently. Regarded by white majority as inferior and not desirable as neighbors or workmates. They lack political power and are economically subordinate. They face a job ceiling, and are not hired on the basis of training and skills like other minorities.


Caste-like groups also reject the ideology and beliefs of the dominant group that rationalize their position. They believe their problems are due to the "system" and racism than their own inadequacies. They may develop a "collective institutional discrimination perspective". This leads them into channel efforts into collective struggle.


Caste-like minorities are not the same as racial minorities.


Race becomes a significant variable in school performance only when the groups are stratified. Blacks have received status summation and a job ceiling not faced by lower class whites. Unsuccessful whites blame themselves, unsuccessful blacks blame the system. "What distinguishes blacks from lower-class whites is not that their objective material conditions are different, but rather that the way the minorities perceive, interpret, and respond to their conditions are different."

It goes on to discuss the differences in IQ scores among black students, and how caste factors into those differences. IQ scores are often used by schools to segregate children, the same schools that tell us that a caste system only existed in India long ago, and many believe that today in America we live in a society free of class or caste. Just like some feel amerikkkan chattel slavery is a thing of the past, and think we are living in a post-racial America.

The troubles of black people in Amerikkka are many, but together and with an understanding of the system we can begin to correct the problems that befall us.

I am thankful to have a father that continues to teach me the truth about the world we live in; knowledge is power, so I share it with you as I learn and grow.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

AGAIN a MURDER at the hands of those we pay to PROTECT & SERVE. can you say "FUCK THE POLICE"?

Carmen and Michael Ojeda were at a playground with daughter Briana Ojeda on Friday when she started having trouble breathing during an asthma attack.

In their rush to get help for Brianna, the Ojedas turned the wrong way down a one-way street just around the corner from the hospital to avoid traffic and accidentally hit a parked car.

Then Carmen Ojeda flagged down a marked NYPD police car for help.

The uniformed man who got out of the car screamed, “What the f**k are you doing going down the wrong way,” then “smirked” and said “I don’t do CPR,” Michael Ojeda told reporters.

The uniformed officer then attempted to box them in when they asked to continue on to the hospital, while a passer-by named Scott Voloshin performed CPR.

Voloshin says he’s certain the man who refused to assist them was a cop.

Eventually the Ojedas—followed by the uniformed man—arrived at the hospital, where the apparent officer ripped up a ticket he was writing for them when he heard Briana was dead.

The NYPD claims the uniformed man in an NYPD cruiser may have been a security guard or volunteer auxiliary officer.

Whoever stopped Ojeda eventually followed her to the hospital. After a doctor broke the news that Briana had died, the “officer” ripped up a ticket he had been trying to give Carmen, Michael said.

A source said every cop in the local precinct was interviewed and none was at the scene.

Briana, who was set to enter the sixth grade at St. Francis Xavier School, wanted to be lawyer and would donate her allowance money to help animals, her mom said.


  • DAYS LATER...


Officer Alfonso Mendez, the cop accused of being unhelpful to Briana Ojeda while dying of an asthma, attack shaved his head in an apparent attempt to throw off witnesses, the child's family charged Thursday.

"We think there was an attempt to alter his appearance," said Bonita Zelman, lawyer for the family of Briana.

At least three witnesses claim Officer Alfonso Mendez, 30, had a healthy head of hair, albeit a receding one, a week ago today when he stopped Briana's mother in Brooklyn as she was rushing the girl to the hospital.

It took detectives four days to identify Mendez as the cop accused of refusing to help the 11-year-old child because he didn't know CPR. Briana died in the emergency room, leaving her parents heartbroken and fuming over the cop's ineptness.

When he was tracked down by detectives Tuesday, Mendez was sporting a shaved head.

"Don't you think that's an admission of guilt?" Zelman said of Mendez's changing hair style.

Zelman said Briana's mom, Carmen Ojeda, only recalled that the cop who stopped her was wearing a hat. But three witnesses reported the officer as having plenty of hair on the sides.

"When I saw him, he had hair," said Sam Ali, a deli worker who called 911 when he saw the Cobble Hill incident [Eutisha Rennix] ordeal unfold.

Another witness, Wendy O'Connell, insisted Mendez had hair when he confronted Briana and her mother.

"He looks drastically different," said O'Connell, studying the fresh photo of Mendez.

"He went from hair to bare. He still has that smirk on his face," added witness Erica Domenech.

Mendez's attorney declined to comment.

The cop, assigned to the 84th Precinct in downtown Brooklyn, has been suspended without pay and will likely face a departmental charge for failing to take proper police action.



Sunday, August 1, 2010

I’m on some SANKOFA-ism… and it’s about damn time!

I’m on some SANKOFA-ism… and it’s about damn time!

For me, right now I am in a state of metamorphosis. I first became aware of the word SANKOFA from the name of a brother I follow on twitter, Bilal ‘Coach’ Sankofa, a poor righteous teacher in my opinion. The word Sankofa perfectly describes what it’s going to take for me to shed the learned behavior, mentality, and religion that have been forced upon me since the day I was born. As a young adult I allowed myself to be distracted; prior to my period of ‘wandering’, I used to stay building on ‘deep’ topics, and even so, I probably don’t know half of the greatness that originates from within Africa, for there is plethora of it. That will soon change.

I posted the above title on FB as a status update and a sister commented “watch the movie… it’s deep.” I have to admit, I had never seen or even heard of the movie. I found Sankofa; the movie, and within the first 10 minutes it conjured up gut-wrenching reminders of what my ancestors were subjected to. The whole movie was intriguing; the scene where the slave master and priest force THEIR god and religion on Mona DEFINITELY stood out. The tear-jerker… at the end when Mona emerges from the pits of the dungeon, sort of resurrected, and an African woman clothes her naked body, hugs her, and says, “My child welcome back. Embrace Me.” That’s what I’m on.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Protect & Serve, Or Just Beat You To The Curb?...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E9w9AfptGGQ&feature=player_embedded

On one hand this woman may have been guilty of obstruction; though her reasons to feel a need to do so may have been justified, I'll give the police the benefit of the doubt that she was in the wrong. BUT being wrong does not give police the right to use unnecessary force.
The officer had other choices besides punching her in the face, I'm just thankful he didn't shoot/kill her, in the USUAL police fashion.
The behavior here is typical of what an abusive man would do to his wife, or what some ignorant or intoxicated male would do to a female.
This was a street fight, and not a trained professional diffusing a situation.
If it were a white woman this would have happened? NO. Ask Zsa Zsa Gabor.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Strange Fruit as performed by Billie Holiday

Southern trees bear strange fruit,
Blood on the leaves and blood at the root,
Black body swinging in the Southern breeze,
Strange fruit hanging from the poplar trees.
Pastoral scene of the gallant South,
The bulging eyes and the twisted mouth,
Scent of magnolia sweet and fresh,
Then the sudden smell of burning flesh!
Here is fruit for the crows to pluck,
For the rain to gather, for the wind to suck,
For the sun to rot, for the trees to drop,
Here is a strange and bitter crop.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

To whom it may concern, Justice for Aiyana Jones

"Something has to be done about the murder of Aiyana Jones, an innocent 7 year-old child, killed at the hands of police.

There is no excuse for this. Not one.

Something has to be done about the MANY innocent black people who have been killed by those WE pay to "protect and serve".

How long will America continue to allow the police to kill innocent black people and get away with it?

How long will the police be suspended WITH pay after MURDERING innocent black people.

How long will police officers get a mere slap on the hand while innocent black people receive NO JUSTICE?

We are no longer separate, but we definitely are NOT treated equally.

This country was built off the backs, sweat, tears, and destruction of my black people. We are owed so much more, and I refuse to allow these tragedies to continue.

I am only one person, but with the help of many that feel the same as I do, changes WILL be made.

Will you be an innocent bystander, or will you take action?

What do you REALLY stand for?"



This is a letter I wrote and emailed to our President, Senators, Representative, and will mail to the Supreme Court. My resources are limited, but it is a start, and you can do the same for free. If you choose to, copy my letter verbatim, speak your mind; whatever you choose to do, we must ACT.

I will lift my voice higher than facebook, twitter, and blogs against the atrocities committed against my people. Though I do not trust ANY politician, nor have faith in the Mock Democracy of this so-called great country, I vote, always have. So pessimistically, I write this letter to whom it may concern, knowing they are not.

Below are links to the President, Senators, and Representatives. Please write to them, we've got to FLOOD them with our concerns.

Aiyana is not the first, there are so many others I can list; but I will do what I can to make her the last victim of police brutality.


http://www.whitehouse.gov/contact

https://www.senate.gov/general/contact%5Finformation/senators%5Fcfm.cfma

https://writerep.house.gov/writerep/welcome.shtml

http://usgovinfo.about.com/blsupct.htm

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Thursday, May 13, 2010

SHUT THE FUCK UP ALREADY!

everybody doesn’t like what you like, how you like it, and why you like it. try NOT to argue the minuscule things.
i can’t stand folk trying to get famous on FaceBook, take that BULLSHIT somewhere else, i don’t wanna hear it, you crowding my timeline!
p.s. you are not Khaled, you are not “THE BEST!”
p.s.s.s.s. if i wanted to hear a sermon i’d go to church.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

No End in Sight

Today I went to check my email and saw an article on Yahoo! Health, midway through reading I come across this quote:

Problem is, a lot of what food marketers try to sell us as “juice” is about as healthy for you as, well, being chased down a highway in a white Ford Bronco.”

Why the fuck & what the fuck does O.J. Simpson have to do with health? Why would the author mention that? It’s so far off base. Only a racist would have that punchline in their back pocket waiting to use it EVERY chance they got, another blow for the black man.

This shit is getting real old. As I read in an article posted onTheGrio.com, a black man who has been accused of doing wrong will be persecuted and nailed to the cross by the media, guilty until proven innocent. Even if proven innocent, biased opinions & perspectives outweigh what the courts have decided. His white counterpart in the same predicament is seen as just another person who has made a mistake… no big deal.

I ask myself, when are THEY going to get over it? I see no end in sight.