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
  • omnibus

Eshu’s Blues: We Are the People With Boxes On Our Heads
michael hureaux perez
15 Oct 2008
🖨️ Print Article

Eshu's blues: we are the people with boxes on our heads

by BAR columnist michael
hureaux

"The current political discourse of black folks is driven
by an ice cold commodity fetish."

It was just a matter of time.  We all saw last spring how the Clinton machine was positively
itching to shout the "n" word down in the Carolinas before Miss Ann and Ol'
Colonel Clinton got served their walking papers by large black sections of the
voting public.  So it just stood to reason
that the McCain machine, unable to shake off the tendency of Johnnie to remind
people of a dried-up artichoke would try to figure out a cagey way to play the
old skin game. The prime obstacle to the "nigger, nigger"  play is the political savvy of Senator
Obama, Senator Biden's "clean and articulate" running mate, who has distanced
himself from we more Wrighteous black folks with our tiresome Jeremiads, and
thereby lightened the burdens of sweaty white progressives who've long been
looking for a black leadership that tows the party line without question.

Still, Senator Johnnie Mac had to give the old school a
crack.   And so it was that some of his
nuttier white supporters got so worked up they were chanting "Kill him!"
whenever Obama's name was mentioned the other day at a rally where
Governor Palin was speaking.  Senator
McCain, to his credit, noticed that the atmosphere at some of his rallies was
beginning to resemble a Klan rally, which isn't good form in the U.S.A., where
the racism of the moment prefers metaphoric if still sophomoric tone.  

Today, we are informed by John McCain, Senator Obama is a
"good and decent family man."  According
to the mainstream press, this upset many of Senator McCain's followers, who
actually booed him as he continued to suggest that William Ayers is only one of
Senator Obama's supporters, and that his acquaintance with Ayers doesn't make
Barrack Obama a terrorist. 

The idea that Senator Obama might be a "good and decent
family man" is a difficult notion for those factions of the "republican" party
who dig "national hate week" to swallow. 
But let us judge not that we be not judged.  There are certainly both those supporters and opponents of
Senator Obama who fail to understand that the Golden Child is keeping company
and lending support to patriotic war criminals whose crimes make all the
transgressions of Ayers and his Weatherman sect colleagues rosy by
comparison.  But that's another story,
one that the passion of the political season has successfully pre-empted. 

"Some of McCain's nuttier
white supporters got so worked up they were chanting "Kill him!" whenever
Obama's name was mentioned."

Until that reality penetrates the layers of true believer
nonsense generated by our quadrennial circus this year, the politics of Black
America are going to see a serious fleecing. 
So hungry are we as a people for any validation of a "famous first" that
we are willing to embrace the same savage spectacle that has driven white
America out of its mind for centuries. 
I hate to say this about us, but it's true.  Like many white residents of the United States, the current
political discourse of black folks is driven by an ice cold commodity fetish, a
mass absurdity addressed most eloquently by a sketch I saw performed in front
of television cameras outside the "democratic" convention by the Church of the
Sub-Genius twenty years ago. 

The guerilla street theater performed by the Sub-Genius
featured a bunch of people walking around outside the convention hall with
cardboard boxes on their heads.   When
asked just what it was they were trying to say, they answered, "We are the
people with boxes on our heads."  And
that is the politics of black America right now. 

With the ascension of the black machine politics of would-be
President Barack Obama, we have achieved in our public polity a narcissism and
cultiness as craven and manipulative as anything that ever came out of the
mouth of a white politician. But one way or another, the items inside the
carton atop our heads are going to keep creeping out.  This being an election year, no one is really going to hold our
so-called leadership accountable for the intentional and slow destruction of
the public sector in our "democracy," or the Black Hole of debt the financial
elite have acquired for us, or the atrocities overseas which they so glibly
claim demonstrate that we actually are a "shining city on the hill." But
somewhere, underneath all the glitz, we all know that there actually is an
alarm bell sounding.  And like the man
said, send not to know for whom it tolls, baby.

michael hureaux is a writer, musician and teacher who lives in southwest
Seattle, Washington.  He is a longtime
contributor to small and alternative presses around the country and performs
his work frequently. Email to: tricksterbirdboy@yahoo.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


  • Abolitionist Law Center
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Ending Life Without Parole, Death by Incarceration, in Pennsylvania
    11 Oct 2024
    Quinn Cozzens joins us to discuss the case of Derek Lee, convicted of felony murder and sentenced to life in prison without parole for a killing he did not commit. Derek Lee is challenging his…
  • Revolutionary Blackout Network Logo
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Syria and Imperialism: A Revolutionary Blackout Network Conversation
    11 Oct 2024
    Margaret Kimberley, Black Agenda Report Executive Editor, was recently a guest on the Revolutionary Blackout Network with hosts Nick Cruse and James Fauntleroy. This is an excerpt of their wide-…
  • Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
    Eric Adams and the Death of Black Politics
    09 Oct 2024
    The indictment of New York City mayor Eric Adams is the latest example of moribund Black politics. Rich donors and corporate media decide who will be elected to office, while the people’s needs go…
  • ​​​​​​​ Ajamu Baraka, BAR editor and columnist , Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
    October 7th, The Election and Capitalist Crisis, A Conversation with Ajamu Baraka
    09 Oct 2024
    Margaret Kimberley and Ajamu Baraka discuss the US upcoming presidential election, and the historic events unfolding in Western Asia - where Israel continues its onslaught of the region with an…
  • Editors, The Black Agenda Review
    ESSAY: Rethinking Race, Rethinking Class, Charles W. Mills, 1995
    09 Oct 2024
    “We need to give greater theoretical centrality to the fact that European conquest of the world has established what is in effect: global white supremacy.”
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us