Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Make Hip Hop, Not War: The Tour
Bill Quigley
18 Apr 2007
🖨️ Print Article

Make Hip Hop, Not War: The Tour


By BAR Executive Editor Glen Ford
 

By BAR Executive Editor Glen Ford

 "Genuine
hip hop culture is not gangsta rap, but reflects the core progressive character
of Black America."
HipHopYearwoodMic

"Our president is addicted to war," said Rev. Lennox
Yearwood, head of the Hip Hop Caucus, on the first leg of a national "Make Hip Hop, Not War" tour. "We knew
that, but we held out hope that this congress would have done an intervention.
But our congress is co-dependent. They act just like the person who is
addicted, as well."

The young minister spoke at Manhattan's West Park
Presbyterian Church, a magnificent edifice that has been condemned to death by
gentrification, just as minority communities have been condemned to a slow
death by the onrushing forces of hyper-capital. And as Black New Orleans was
sentenced to death. "Instead of building levees, Bush built bombs," said
Yearwood, who was raised in Louisiana.

The massive redistribution of America's wealth to the
rapacious "defense" sector and the most wealthy segment of the population, if
allowed to continue, will doom any hope of revitalization of the nation's inner
cities, which are rapidly being dispersed by the same forces that that will
soon raise million-dollar condominiums on the site of the West Park
Presbyterian Church in New York City. We are all facing social death.

"'Instead
of building levees, Bush built bombs,' said Yearwood."

Hip hop's massive international appeal has the potential to
create rivers of communication among the sufferers. At the heart of the culture
- the real one, not the industry-manufactured variety - is the essential
internationalism and human compassion of the African American
population-at-large, a culture that has been hijacked by huge corporations that
put forward a caricature of Black life. An array of hip hop artists have joined
with Rev. Yearwood to present the other face of Black culture and politics.

The national tour is designed to demonstrate that genuine
hip hop culture is not gangsta rap, but reflects the core progressive character
of Black America. "It's time for the streets to rise up, for us to rise up, to
say that we are not caught up in that mess," said Rev. Yearwood.

Alternative media is key, since corporate media is the enemy
- the purveyor of lies. "The revolution may not be televised, but it will be
uploaded," Yearwood told the 200 or so folks who inaugurated the tour.
"Humanity is counting on us."

There is much work to be done. In the United States,
populations are methodically segmented by the corporate media, and white
supremacy still rules even in leftist circles. "We noticed that during the
immigration rallies, they were all brown, and during the Katrina rallies, they
were mostly Black, and during the anti-war rallies, they were mostly white."

The hope is that a common language created by the Black
culture of hip hop will bridge this gap in politically effective ways, rather
than cosmetic ones. There are many performers willing to serve in this
struggle. "Articulate," a rapper, educator, Howard University alumnus and
activist from Washington, D.C. told the Manhattan crowd, "I think of myself as
an artist for the people."

"The
diversions of Black culture so effectively created by corporate America have
allowed the marginalization of our best and brightest."

These "artists for the people" exist in every community, but
must be supported by those who claim to represent Black America. The diversions
of Black culture so effectively created by corporate America have allowed the
marginalization of our best and brightest - the true cultural warriors and
heroines.

The "Make Hip Hop, Not War" movement finds only lip-service
support from the white-dominated anti-war "movement," which finds itself unable
to include the most anti-war segment of the American public: Black people. Rosa
Clemente, of Pacifica's New York radio station WBAI and a founder of the
National Hip Hop Political Convention, says, "This is why the anti-war movement
is not working. How are you going to have an anti-war movement that
marginalizes Black people?"

Probably 80 percent of African Americans would support the
ejection of George Bush from the White House. That's part of the agenda of the
tour. "On April 28, when this tour is over,
let it be impeachment day," said Rev. Yearwood.

If it were up to Black people, it would be so.

BAR Executive Editor Glen Ford can be
contacted at Glen.Ford (at) BlackAgendaReport.com.

 

 

 

 

 

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • Editors, The Black Agenda Review
    SPEECH: Everybody is Quiet But the Nationalist Party, Pedro Albizu Campos, 1950
    30 Oct 2024
    Hardly a “floating island of garbage,” Puerto Rico remains a colony, treated like trash by the US. Read this ledger of the cost and crimes of the US colonial project.
  • Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor
    Jean Leonard Teganya Faces Torture in Rwanda
    30 Oct 2024
    Rwandan President Paul Kagame’s regime continues its lawfare against Rwandans in the Western diaspora.
  • Abayomi Azikiwe, Black Agenda Report Contributor
    BRICS Declaration Reinforces Call for Multipolarity
    30 Oct 2024
    Kazan summit rejects unilateralism advanced by the West.
  • sputnik
    Jamarl Thomas
    The Life and Times of a "Russian Propagandist"
    30 Oct 2024
    RT and Sputnik weren’t closed for getting it wrong. They were closed for getting it right.
  • Tunde Osazua
    Weaponizing Aid: How USAID and the Global Fragility Act Sustain U.S. Imperialism in Libya
    30 Oct 2024
    The Global Fragility Act is a mechanism through which the US gives itself the authority to utilize soft power in Africa through organizations like USAID. The act places a specific focus on Libya,…
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us