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No, We Haven’t

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The Obama Election was supposed to usher a new era for African-Americans. An example in Pennsylvania shows that perhaps it hasn’t. And it’s not Obama’s fault.

We kept hearing the slogan “Yes, We Can” throughout the election campaign last year. It’s hard to believe that at this time in 2008, we were staring at the possibility of having the first African-American nominee of a major political party. 12 months later, we have President Obama in office, and it seems like he has been there a lot longer.

This change was supposed to be the powder keg to spark a new pride within Black America. This pride could have carried us to new places as a culture and as a country.

Higher levels of Black student achievement.

Higher levels of Black parental involvement.

And lower levels of Black-initiated crime, particularly Black-on-Black crime.

Many of the things that the 40-Day Fast for Our Future looked to address earlier this year.

However, if the latest in Penn Hills, Pennsylvania is any indication, all we have done is elected a Black president, not selected a new Black frame of mind.

Five-year-old Mena Small, who is battling skin cancer, was on a paid trip to Disney World through the generosity of the Make-A-Wish Foundation.

Her mother and she returned home to a ransacked house.

In the small community of Penn Hills, word gets around fast. As a native, I can tell you that it always has.

People knew that Mena and her mother were leaving for Florida. The perpetrators in this case waited them out and took advantage of a vulnerable family at a great time of need.

Now, I am curious as to how we will react.

Will someone step up and speak out against this atrocity (and rectify it) or will we take the “you know how we do” attitude and be silent?

All politics aside, the Obama election was supposed to inspire a new pride within the country, particularly Black America. A new day full of new possibilities was on the horizon, a promise full of uplifting ourselves and loving ourselves more than we had.

We haven’t seen it yet, folks. Not with the continued violence in the streets. Not with the continued drop-out rates among Black children. And not with this latest example of foolishness and selfishness.

Black America is running out of excuses. And just as we are running out of excuses, we are running out of time.

Is this the incident that makes us collectively say, “Enough is enough”? Is it the next 5-year-old caught in the crossfire of bullets in a gang war? Is it the next 14-year-old we see struggling in school or in life due to a pregnancy or poverty, much of which we can prevent ourselves without the help of any sort of government?

It’s time now, folks. This latest in Penn Hills is just a new low that we cannot ignore.

Barack Obama did his part in 2008 to inspire a new way of thought and action for Black America. When will Black America begin to do its part?

Lenny McAllister is a syndicated political commentator and alumnus of the African-American Leadership Summit. McAllister is a Visiting Fellow for the Center of New Politics and Policy. Find him on Facebook (http://tinyurl.com/lennyfacebook), Twitter (http://twitter.com/lennyhhr), and www.lennymcallister.com where McAllister’s weekly video commentary can be found (courtesy of Fox Charlotte.) His book “Diary of a Mad Black PYC (Proud Young Conservative)” will be available online June 2009.

8 comments

  • Well, if you're smart enough, you know the answer.
    Obama is not fighting for blacks. He is just continueing the status pro. Blacks will continue living miserable lives during Obama and the next redneck republican president.
    I know I will be hated for this by most of you, but I'm a pragmatist. Wake up and smell the coffee. The only redemption black people have in the US is BLACK PEOPLE. You need to start cleaning your acts. Study and not smoke weed. Work and not sell drugs. Start a revolution and not wait for the white man to reach out for you. Or even an easier shorter advise. Start to be the Afrikan worriers you used to be. Peace
  • Thats what you get when you tell people you are going out of town. Hopefully next time they learn, keep it real my brotha's.

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  • lol. cmyst82 - trying to take credit for my comment rather than just believing that there are some things that conservatives and progressives can agree on ? tsk, tsk. ;)
  • Never thought I'd say this, but I agree with Erica on this one. (My comments on your post about the White Supremacist Shooter must have stuck with you EW). It's simply too much and too soon to think that the election of our President would change the conditioning of self-destruction within sections of our Black community. We've done this to ourselves by allowing our people to be enslaved by the notion that hard work means nothing if you aren't white, that it's ok to still objectify our women, being intelligent means you're losing your blackness, etc.

    Then again, let's not forget some of the social programs that were meant to do good for the "unfortunate" are very much some of the reason why certain members of our group can't seem to get out of their situations. (Welfare, Social Security, Medicare, etc). Our public school education systems are a joke, despite the amount of money we throw into it. "Investing in education" doesn't require money contrary to what government says. If it did, we would not see the abysmal G.P.A.s, graduation rates, pursuit of higher education that we've been getting for the last 20 years.

    Bottom line is, we've screwed ourselves over. We'll need another generation or two to make things right.
  • First, I also have a huge problem with the idea that there is one "black America". We are not monolithic - some INDIVIDUALS have a lack of self-pride and MANY have quite a bit. Not being nitpicky, but I think its important that if we don't want other groups to stereotype and marginalize us, we shouldn't do it ourselves. Now on the the real point:

    No one that understands the complexities of the problems that plague our communities would ever have thought that one black man, even in a position of power, could wave a symbolic magic wand and fix all of our problems. That was a tried and true, pick yourselves up by the bootstraps talking point that ignores quite a few important cultural and political contexts. I always find it amazing and laughable (if not a bit insulting) that after hundreds - HUNDREDS - of years of systematic slavery followed by other forms of explicit, legal oppression, that people expect "black people" to be all hunky dory like "everybody else". It takes time. It takes deliberate, mutli-dimensional strategy. It takes public policy, community service, faith, family development, and so much more. Not a black man in the oval office.

    I'm not making excuses for anything or anybody and I certainly share the "c'mon - we have to do better!!!" thought with you on a regular basis. I say it about twice a day. lol But you can't divorce that from history and reality. Social change is long and hard. It takes more than a spanking and a firm talking-to from Bill Cosby.

    I also think its way too soon to say that the symbolism of Obama didn't have a positive effect on Black America. The children who now believe that they can be President, who see themselves as rightful owners of this nation, would argue with you on this one Lenny. And that is ultimately the only difference that symbolism can make. Inspiration. Otherwise, it didn't take just one man to destroy our communities. It's going to more than one man to restore them now.
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