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Subject: ""Civil rights movements need people to work from the inside." - Dyson" Previous topic | Next topic
Creole
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Fri Aug-23-19 10:38 AM

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131. ""Civil rights movements need people to work from the inside." - Dyson"
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Fri Aug-23-19 10:42 AM by Creole

  

          

https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/jay-z-didnt-sell-out-by-dealing-with-the-nfl-this-is-just-how-activism-works/2019/08/23/17178210-c520-11e9-9986-1fb3e4397be4_story.html

By Michael Eric Dyson August 23 at 10:40 AM
In 1963, Malcolm X, who advocated armed self-defense of black folk in the face of white supremacy, flayed Martin Luther King Jr., who preached nonviolent resistance to social injustice. “The white man pays Rev. Martin Luther King, subsidizes Rev. Martin Luther King, so that Rev. Martin Luther King can continue to teach the Negroes to be defenseless,” Malcolm charged. He was a “modern Uncle Tom.” Elsewhere, Malcolm dubbed King “the best weapon that the white man . . . has ever gotten.”

I remembered these bitter charges as controversy dogged the announcement this month that Jay-Z’s company, Roc Nation, had signed a contract with the National Football League to advise on live music, entertainment and social justice projects. Jay had stood up for former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick. He wore Kaepernick’s jersey while performing on “Saturday Night Live,” advised other performers to boycott the Super Bowl halftime show and rapped on 2018’s “Apes---,” “I said no to the Super Bowl: You need me, I don’t need you/ Every night we in the end zone, tell the NFL we in stadiums, too.” Now he’s doing business with the organization that colluded to banish Kaepernick for kneeling during the national anthem to protest racial injustice. Associated Press sports columnist Paul Newberry called Jay a “total sellout,” suggesting he’d buried his conscience in cash. Kaepernick’s lawyer said Jay’s “cold blooded” move “crosses the intellectual picket line.” Jay’s justification : “I think we’ve moved past kneeling. I think it’s time for action.”

Kaepernick and Jay-Z are not the modern-day equivalents of Malcom and King, but those pairs reflect an eternal tension — the outside agitators who apply pressure and the inside activators who patrol the halls of power, bringing knowledge and wisdom — in civil rights and black freedom movements. King worked with the Eisenhower, Johnson and Kennedy administrations to better conditions for black folk and to craft civil rights legislation. Jay, for his part, has advocated for social justice in his music and beyond the stage for more than two decades — by writing op-eds and creating an organization to lobby for criminal justice reform; by bailing out Black Lives Matter protesters; by supplying legal help for black victims of racism; by creating documentaries about victims like Trayvon Martin and Kalief Browder; and by speaking out about police brutality and racial injustice.

The choice between Kaep and Jay, between Malcolm and King, is a false one. We need all of them, and it is far too early to judge what Jay will make of this opportunity with the NFL.

Jay’s action fits into a tradition of social protest, forged by Jesse Jackson, that extends King’s work: You protest a company — say a shoemaker or an auto dealership — for its unjust practices; you force those involved to acknowledge their error; you negotiate for better terms of engagement; you interact with the folk you once protested in an effort to make progress. In 1996, after several Texaco executives were taped making racist comments about 1,400 black employees who had filed a class-action discrimination suit against the company, Jackson organized a picket protest, then forged connections with Texaco board members that led to a corporate mea culpa and an out-of-court settlement of more than $175 million with the company’s black professionals, middle managers and other workers.

This reflected a shift in civil rights strategy from street protests to suite participation. Jackson leveraged the threat of boycotts and the rhetoric of persuasion to get more blacks placed on corporate boards, compel banks and major companies to direct more business to minority-owned contractors, and help integrate more black and other minority folk into the nation’s economic power base.

It is true that the NFL did not explicitly acknowledge wrongdoing in Kaepernick’s case, though the league did settle his grievance lawsuit in February, suggesting that it recognized his claim of collusion as a real legal threat. Jay cannot make a team hire Kaepernick, and perhaps Roc Nation could have refused a contract until Kaepernick got a job, which would have been a just outcome. But it is also true that social justice doesn’t hinge exclusively on Kaepernick’s employment. The fact that many team owners support an openly racist president demands an attempt to grapple with them. And it may be a sign of progress that those same owners got into business with a rapper who calls President Trump a “superbug.” Jay’s noisy opposition to white nationalism is just as important as how his partnership may provide the league cover.

Jay did not write off protest when he said we are “past kneeling.” He simply cast Kaepernick as a runner in a relay race rather than a boxer fighting alone in the ring. The Players Coalition, for instance, was founded in 2017 by Philadelphia Eagles safety Malcolm Jenkins and former receiver Anquan Boldin to tie kneeling to serious and thoughtful action. It promotes social justice advocacy, education and distribution of resources on the local, state and federal levels. When it accepted nearly $90 million from the NFL to advance its agenda in November 2017, then-49ers safety Eric Reid, Kaepernick’s courageous compatriot, called the thoughtful Jenkins a “sellout” and a “neocolonialist.”

But consider its efforts so far. As part of the $89 million that the players got the NFL to commit over a seven-year period, $8.5 million was allocated in 2018. Players identified key issues of racial and social inequality where they thought they could make the biggest impact, including police and community relations, criminal justice reform, and educational and economic advancement. Players led the working group that distributed millions to the Advancement Project, the Center for Policing Equity, the National Juvenile Defender Center, the Anti-Recidivism Coalition, the Campaign for Black Male Achievement, the Civil Rights Corps and VOTE. After Trump canceled a White House invitation to celebrate the Eagles’ 2018 Super Bowl victory, Jenkins skipped a traditional news conference and drew attention with a series of signs clarifying that player protests weren’t about the national anthem but about social inequality.

When white institutions and individuals sincerely ask for help (that sincerity may be doubted and only later revealed to be genuine, or the request may begin as insincere but evolve with more contact and better understanding), it is a good thing to supply it. Malcolm X once famously rebuffed a young white student who tracked him down in New York to ask what she could do to help the cause. His response took her aback: “Nothing.” It makes for great theater and dramatic storytelling, but it was the wrong answer.

Things are never ideal, and systems of white oppression co-opt us all: teachers, leaders, advocates, athletes, organizers. Look at me. I have spent nearly five decades — in speeches, books, my courses — advocating for social justice. I also work at Georgetown University, a school that sold 272 enslaved souls, including children, to bankroll its future. This is how the world works: All of us have blood on our hands and dirt beneath our nails, and we can scarcely afford to reject every institution we encounter as irretrievably tainted.

The charge of being a sellout, and the instinct to “cancel” people indicted in this way, often comes full circle. (Malcolm was later deemed a traitor to his cause and murdered by members of his own group.) The language of betrayal cannot provide lasting moral satisfaction. Instead, we need a vocabulary of moral accountability and social responsibility that is nuanced and capacious, giving us air to breathe and room to grow.

Jay’s deal with the NFL represents a valid and potentially viable attempt to raise awareness of injustice to black folk, and to inspire the league to embrace just action for the black masses. It may fail — and it certainly should not be used to diminish Kaepernick’s noble, iconic battle — but the effort is not a repudiation of justice. It is an attempt to make justice real for black folk far beyond the elite circles in which Jay and Kaepernick travel. Jay-Z, whose résumé is suffused with activism that cost him money instead of accruing him profit, has earned the right to try this. Even if Jay stands to make a tidy sum with the NFL, his history suggests that he has put his money where his ethics are — and declined to let his capitalist instincts outweigh his ethical imagination. Alongside scolding, resisting, protesting and cajoling, there is a need for strategy, planning, listening, learning and moving forward to test the application of principles embodied by people like Kaepernick.

Jay and Kaepernick will not be the last civil rights activists who represent different poles of the movement. This history is rich: King, Rosa Parks, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, the Freedom Riders, the Congress of Racial Equality and a host of other organizations occasionally bickered over methods and messaging and strategy. Iconic figures got bruised (James Baldwin, iced from speaking at the 1963 March on Washington, felt wounded but still kept up the freedom fight), swept aside (Ella Baker didn’t get her due when working with King’s sexist organization) or minimized (grass-roots activist Fannie Lou Hamer wasn’t universally applauded by black elites when she lived).

It is not wrong for Kaepernick to receive every nickel he has earned from Nike and the NFL, or for Reid and Jenkins to continue to get paid for their talents in the league they push to do the right thing. And it is hardly wrong for Jay-Z to do well while doing good. They are all motivated by grand ideals and good ends. Even Malcolm X, once he freed himself from his earlier narrow views, knew that he was wrong and concluded that “Dr. King wants the same thing I want — freedom!” So does Colin Kaepernick. So does Jay-Z. And so should we.


--- praying for peace, love, and power

  

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The RocNational Football deal [View all] , legsdiamond, Thu Aug-15-19 05:56 AM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
He left this off 4:44
Aug 15th 2019
1
Yeah. She got a point.
Aug 15th 2019
2
      True
Aug 15th 2019
4
           Oh, plenty of people on here question Kaps settlement agreement
Aug 15th 2019
15
           I should have known
Aug 15th 2019
18
           Kap's lawsuit was an employment dispute
Aug 15th 2019
27
Hov been about a dollar above all else. This aint new.
Aug 15th 2019
3
I don't really mind him taking an opportunity to do both.
Aug 15th 2019
5
what was the point of saying we're past kneeling?
Aug 15th 2019
6
Yes that was stupid.
Aug 15th 2019
8
how does change happen?
Aug 15th 2019
7
Like this
Aug 15th 2019
9
change happens in a myriad of ways.
Aug 15th 2019
10
The shondo this sent through my spirit, sir....
Aug 15th 2019
47
Change occurs from the inside out. It was (is) never gonna happen...
Aug 15th 2019
11
By changing your stance when they offer more change
Aug 15th 2019
12
      when did he use his name?
Aug 15th 2019
26
           I’m not going to say Jay hasn’t done good things
Aug 15th 2019
32
                this is crabs shi*...
Aug 15th 2019
38
                     Read Damali’s post
Aug 15th 2019
45
                          I did...
Aug 15th 2019
48
                               It’s a fact that Jay wore Kaps jersey
Aug 16th 2019
59
                                    help me figure out if I’m crazy...
Aug 16th 2019
62
                                         For me kneeling is enough if someone wants it to be enough
Aug 16th 2019
63
                                         what does that even mean?
Aug 17th 2019
79
                                              Why stand
Aug 17th 2019
81
                                         Kaep never said stop balling
Aug 16th 2019
65
I think there is a reason Cap is kind of silent.
Aug 15th 2019
13
A lot of folks side-eyed Kap for taking the settlement
Aug 15th 2019
14
kinda weird that folks look it sideways.
Aug 15th 2019
16
if the case went forward it would show the NFL’s collusion
Aug 15th 2019
20
Homie, the boycott is real.
Aug 15th 2019
22
Sorry but I don’t believe it to be more than a few folks
Aug 15th 2019
31
      you don't have to believe it for it to be true.
Aug 15th 2019
54
           It ain’t
Aug 15th 2019
55
                How do you define a boycott?
Aug 16th 2019
60
                Impact.
Aug 16th 2019
66
                     Would you consider BDS not a boycott for those participating?
Aug 17th 2019
70
                There are levels of NFL fans
Aug 24th 2019
137
Only the ignorant folks would do that.
Aug 23rd 2019
136
right...
Aug 15th 2019
19
It conflates the Players Coalition with Kap
Aug 15th 2019
17
I wonder how much Kap wants a job these days?
Aug 15th 2019
23
      RE: I wonder how much Kap wants a job these days?
Aug 15th 2019
24
      I thought it was social justice...
Aug 15th 2019
25
      What social justice action item will this address...?
Aug 15th 2019
40
      True
Aug 15th 2019
33
      gee i don't know. ask his IG account where he posts about training
Aug 15th 2019
53
I think we’ve moved past kneeling
Aug 15th 2019
21
Jay tap dancing is some bullshit.
Aug 15th 2019
28
Jemele Hill said it best:
Aug 15th 2019
29
i dont know that she did sis
Aug 17th 2019
68
seems our culture dont like or understand change from within
Aug 15th 2019
30
If you believe this is change from within... lmao
Aug 15th 2019
34
i believe none of us know wtf is going on behind the scenes
Aug 15th 2019
37
      so how do you know that change is happening from within?
Aug 20th 2019
127
So you saying during the Bus boycott some Black celebrity
Aug 15th 2019
35
It would be like the Olympic committee telling John Carlos and
Aug 15th 2019
41
      Exactly
Aug 15th 2019
42
      Breh
Aug 15th 2019
43
      BOOM
Aug 15th 2019
52
      Damn. Good call.
Aug 15th 2019
56
seems like you dont understand what real change is. n/m
Aug 16th 2019
61
Exactly how much money is the NFL gonna pony up
Aug 15th 2019
36
Less than the tax incentives they get from the stadium deals
Aug 16th 2019
64
      Have they actually released the details of how much $$$
Aug 19th 2019
94
To understand Jay-Z's move, please refer to the Barclays' Center
Aug 15th 2019
39
What black folks got displaced by Barclay's Center?
Aug 15th 2019
49
Check the graph in the link
Aug 15th 2019
51
See also - "Jay-Z Sold Out Brooklyn" -swipe -
Aug 19th 2019
90
Is he going to apologize to Travis Scott?
Aug 15th 2019
44
Artist are paid union scale to perform at the SB
Aug 15th 2019
46
I mean it was kind of shitty to do before Kap got a settlement and
Aug 15th 2019
50
Look at Nessa, Eric Reid, Yourrightscamp social media
Aug 16th 2019
57
jay-z could have gone with walmart, mcdonalds, popeyes
Aug 16th 2019
58
what, yall thought jay z was different?
Aug 16th 2019
67
bah.
Aug 17th 2019
69
Jigga man did some crab stuff and you’re mad at ... black people?
Aug 17th 2019
72
crazy, right?
Aug 17th 2019
74
I actually find this to be a really thought-provoking take
Aug 17th 2019
76
      If my aunts were men they’d be my uncles
Aug 17th 2019
77
           If the Jay Z deal solves climate change I’m all for it.
Aug 17th 2019
80
Wow that interview he did on the MFL channel tho
Aug 17th 2019
71
The long con Jay-Z Reportedly to Get Majority Ownership in NFL Team
Aug 17th 2019
73
no he won't.
Aug 17th 2019
75
His Nets shares were a conflict for the NBA
Aug 18th 2019
84
Dwindling NFL ?
Aug 18th 2019
85
Ice Cube owns an NFL team?
Aug 18th 2019
87
      I never said he did. I questioned the Black gangster rapper label.
Aug 18th 2019
88
Yeah. You have no idea what you are talking bohrr
Aug 18th 2019
89
True, majority owner is incorrect
Aug 18th 2019
86
Headline is wrong. The article says significant ownership, not majority
Aug 19th 2019
91
Late Pass already corrected in 86
Aug 19th 2019
95
Apparently he's gonna get 5% of the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Aug 19th 2019
92
      Then he will hire Kap and we will love him again.
Aug 19th 2019
93
      So he is taking over David Tepper's shares...
Aug 19th 2019
97
           That’s a necessary step to getting your own team
Aug 19th 2019
111
Some ninja on BlackTwitter said:
Aug 17th 2019
78
LMAO
Aug 17th 2019
82
Haha
Aug 17th 2019
83
F**k Freddie Gibbs
Aug 19th 2019
96
He beat the rape case.
Aug 19th 2019
110
A woman said she DREAMED that he raped her, & they locked him up
Aug 19th 2019
117
Get that money Jay!
Aug 19th 2019
98
Because of this if it's true
Aug 19th 2019
99
      I got no problem with him doing Dupri that way because:
Aug 19th 2019
100
      Yeah that's terrible
Aug 19th 2019
103
           Nah. Competition is natural.
Aug 19th 2019
104
                It's beyond competition
Aug 19th 2019
106
                RE: It's beyond competition
Aug 19th 2019
107
                     You missing the big picture.
Aug 19th 2019
108
                Nah. That’s that Hollywood Shuffle
Aug 19th 2019
109
      Is Jermaine popping like that now?
Aug 19th 2019
101
      Yep
Aug 19th 2019
105
      That's JD's fault...who could've talked Jay out of it?
Aug 19th 2019
113
           fair point...
Aug 19th 2019
114
           Nah the problem is Jay Z told JD not to do something he did
Aug 19th 2019
116
                That's still JD's fault and maybe it was the timing?
Aug 19th 2019
121
                     That doesn't let Jay Z off the hook.
Aug 20th 2019
123
Jay called JD to discourage him from making a similar deal with the NFL
Aug 19th 2019
102
damn...
Aug 19th 2019
112
smh
Aug 19th 2019
115
      lmao.. the hero worship for Jay and Bey is crazy.
Aug 19th 2019
118
      lol off the charts
Aug 19th 2019
119
           You ain’t know Harriet was a minority owner of a plantation?
Aug 20th 2019
122
                lmao
Aug 20th 2019
124
                LOL
Aug 23rd 2019
134
      That clip was on-point den a muhfukka!
Aug 19th 2019
120
           Reading this thread reminded me of that.
Aug 20th 2019
125
fam im so fucking pissed at jay z over this.
Aug 20th 2019
126
fair point...
Aug 20th 2019
128
But shouldn't folks be tired of canceling black men?
Aug 20th 2019
129
      yeah these cancellations are getting stupid at this point.
Aug 20th 2019
130
      This is the typical response when it’s one of their favs
Aug 23rd 2019
132
This is the same dude that made 2nd album with R. Kelly AFTER the tapes....
Aug 23rd 2019
133
Hovteps? Oh shit... lol.
Aug 23rd 2019
135
No one knows the terms of the Jay deal
Aug 24th 2019
138

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