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    You are at:Home » Don’t blame the alcohol, blame the children
    Editorials

    Don’t blame the alcohol, blame the children

    June 3, 20134 Mins Read1 Views
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    Lucius Gantt
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    Lucius Gantt
    Lucius Gantt

    The Gantt Report

    Don’t blame the alcohol, blame the children

    By Lucius Gantt

          If you’re wondering why we always seem to be neglected, disrespected, rejected and objected, don’t blame it on the alcohol, blame it on the children.

    No, I’m not talking about infants and toddlers. You can blame our social status, our economic exploitation and our social degradation on our “grown’ children.

    Civil disturbances, social protests, boycotts, sit-ins, riots, melees, and government confrontations in America and around the world, for the most part, have been instigated and carried out by young people.

    From the first day the ancestors of African Americans were kidnapped , packed like sardines on slave ships and brought to American shores, it was the young African men and women that stood up, spoke out and attempted to fight the evils of slavery and the mistreatment of humans by other humans because of the color of one’s skin.

    The Nat Turners and Denmark Veseys and Harriet Tubmans of colonial America were not old, worn out senior citizens; they were young people that fought for their God given rights.

    On the continent of Africa, it was students that turned the tide in the fight against apartheid and African colonialism. When they decided to rebel, Nelson Mandela, Steve Biko and Patrice Lumumba and others were all African youth.

    In the early days of civil rights struggles, most of the marchers, most of the protesters and most of the Black community activists were young people.

    Most of The Freedom Riders weren’t community elders, most of the people that sat in at lunch counters were not old nursing home residents and the more militant Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), the Weathermen, the Black Panthers and other groups were not members at the Senior Citizens Center, but they did work with the AARP (not the old folks group), the All African Revolutionary Party.

    Sometimes the older preachers would mobilize the Black community and then leave town while the younger activists stayed in town to organize Black folk.

    Martin Luther King was not “old’ when he did what he did. Malcolm X was not old, Angela Davis was not old when she was active in the movement. Huey Newton, Rap Brown and others were not aged when they protested Black exploitation and degradation.

    Even Jesus Christ was young when he was throwing the Biblical beast bankers out of the temples!

    So, where are the young Black brothers and sisters in 2013?

    Well, they are at the mall, they are at the video arcade, they are at the strip club, they are at the dance hall, they are at the car show, they are at the hair show and instead of going after equal rights and justice they are going around chasing the cat and the snake, if you know what I mean!

    Today there are too many students that do not care and keep other students from getting their share. They sit on their asses and hope for the best, play cards, talk sheet and flunk all of their tests!

    If today’s young people will step up to the plate and continue the African American economic, social and political struggles, the OGs, the older generation of Black activists, will jump into the fray and help you.

    Young people should be writing hard hitting editorial columns, not old geezers like I’m about to be.

    Young people should be taking over and running Black community organizations like SCLC, NAACP, Rainbow Coalition and the Action Network and the old tired Uncle Toms that did well in the past but are now merely puppets of the modern day slave masters should step down or get totally out of the way.

    We need younger, but smarter, Black elected officials that will vote to support out causes instead of rubber stamping everything a campaign contributor or political party wants them to.

    We need young Black men and women to love their race, love their culture, love their community, love their institutions, love their ancestors and love themselves.

    Now is the time for young Black people to be brave, bold and smart!

    It’s not the alcohol’s fault that Black progress is not what it should be. Blame it on the children and their Uncle Tom, handkerchief headed, boot licking parents that tell the children not to stand up and speak out!

         (Buy Gantt’s latest book “Beast Too: Dead Man Writing” at any major bookstore and contact Lucius at www.allworldconsultants.net)

     

     

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    Carma Henry

    Carma Lynn Henry Westside Gazette Newspaper 545 N.W. 7th Terrace, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33311 Office: (954) 525-1489 Fax: (954) 525-1861

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