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

Song Parody: Teaching White People What Racism Means
Rev. Reynard N. Blake Jr
05 Nov 2014
🖨️ Print Article

by Reverend Reynard N. Blake, Jr.

See harmful loan schemes and tricks black folks go through

Criminal justice makes prison work fruitful

Sentence black guys with the long stints they’ll bring

Greenbacks accrue from high speculating

Song Parody: Teaching White People What Racism Means

by Reverend Reynard N. Blake, Jr.

[parody based on the song, “My Favorite Things” from the movie “The Sound of Music”]

“Reverse” and “racism” is hard to fathom

White people claiming that that’s what could happen

How could this happen when white folk run things?

There are some issues worth considering

White people complain when black people get blue

Gunshots for black men when stopped by the state troops

Breathing for black men seems hard when disdained

Teaching white people why racism stings

Did Africans lynch whites and started laughing?

Was rape o.k. for white boys on slave lasses?

Serving white masters and black women chained

These were examples of white privileging

When the dogs fight

And whites see it

And the owners’ black

They’re quickly forgetting lives snuffed through lynching

But then whites don’t give a damn

[Repeating the cadence of first 4 stanzas]

White folk thought chapters of racism smitten

Whites conquered their sins and blacks knew they didn’t

Watch lender packages tied up with strings

Then some blacks lose all their financial means

See harmful loan schemes and tricks black folks go through

Criminal justice makes prison work fruitful

Sentence black guys with the long stints they’ll bring

Greenbacks accrue from high speculating

Lacking investment in schools or in transit

Low-pay has black folks’ lives shortened with hardships

Watching whites whisking black neighborhoods plain

Gentrification finds black folk leaving

When the young die

When the Right wing

Think crime’s mostly black

I’m thinking Ferguson whites feel the same things

And, then I get steaming mad

Reverend Reynard N. Blake, Jr., M. S. is an ordained Baptist minister living in East Lansing, Michigan with his wife Karen Kelly-Blake, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Center for Ethics and Humanities in the Life Sciences at Michigan State University (MSU). He earned his Master of Science degree in Community Development-Urban Studies from MSU and a Bachelor of Arts degree in English from the College of Charleston (SC). He has authored and co-authored several articles on faith-based community development and is also a poet, essayist, and social critic. His work has appeared on Black Commentator, Michigan Family Review, Op-ED.com, the Online Journal of Urban Youth Culture and Black Agenda Report. He is putting on the final touches on a book of political parody and poetry; no publisher yet.  He would appreciate any input on where and how he can get it published. He can be reached at reynardblakejr@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


  • Black Alliance for Peace Haiti/Americas Team
    MOLEGHAF: Update on Armed Attacks in Port-au-Prince
    23 Oct 2024
    Western imperialist-backed paramilitary violence in Port-au-Prince, Haiti has escalated in the last year. As the conditions on the ground worsen, MOLEGHAF puts out this call to allies around the…
  • Jonathan Cook
    The West's Support for Israel's Genocide is Destroying the World as we Know it
    23 Oct 2024
    The old world is dying once again, but the US-Israel axis is wrong to suggest it is slaying monsters. It is the monster.
  • Lylla Younes
    Black Residents in Cancer Alley Try What May be a Last Legal Defense to Curb Toxic Pollution
    23 Oct 2024
    In St. James Parish, a zoning ordinance divides industrial development along racial lines.
  • Justin Podur
    Yahya Sinwar Wrote His Own Story
    23 Oct 2024
    Yahya Sinwar was a man who became a larger-than-life symbol of Palestinian resistance and struggle. Myths and rumors surrounded him in life and now in death but he did not need anyone, friend or foe…
  • Austin Cole
    Municipalism, Economic Development, and People Power for Participatory Democracy – A Conversation with Nicholas Richard-Thompson, Part I
    23 Oct 2024
    As part of this research on grassroots economic projects toward Black Liberation, Austin Cole spoke with Nicholas Richard-Thompson about his community organizing, expanding definitions of…
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us