To call this
young man delusional and indoctrinated into progressivism by his expensive public
school education in America is an understatement. Since he has never lived in any
stifling communist paradise he yearns for, this young man is in no position to
understand that common sense was in short supply or non-existent in communist countries.
Associating “common sense” and “progressivism” is oxymoronic or delusional at
best.
I asked him
how he arrived at such silly description of an ideology that killed my father
and 100 million other people who lived and toiled under communism as
subsistence drones who were truly oppressed. His inadequate explanation was
that we came from “different worlds and different experiences.”
It was
counterproductive to explain to this confused young man that United States is
the best and the most tolerant place in the world to live. The identical talking
points about modern oppression, which are repeated ad nauseam by famous and infamous
talking heads, are manufactured by the profitable race baiting industry that conveniently
ignores and turns a blind eye to the real oppression occurring around the world.
Ensnared by
the racial division rhetoric constantly coming from this administration and the
media, this young man believes that the Black Lives Matter movement is a lofty
endeavor and not a paid organization supported by left wing groups to promote
violence and social unrest. To this young man, the much maligned police and the
military are the enemy and the oppressor, not the Thin Blue Line between
anarchists and the rule of law.
He probably studied
revisionist history in his classes and skipped the part about the Soviet Union’s
KGB, German Democratic Republic’s Stasi, and Hitler’s Gestapo, examples of real
oppression against religious groups, ethnic groups, and innocents who held
divergent opinions.
I was
confused when black people started calling themselves African-Americans. Most
of them were many generations removed from their African ancestors and have
never been to Africa, yet the fascination and the draw to identify with people
from a continent away who happen to share their skin color is powerful. And
what about white people from South Africa who immigrated here? Are they allowed
to call themselves African Americans?
The rest of
us call ourselves Americans and it would be nice if someday everyone would be identified
or self-identify as just Americans. But the division lobby is very powerful,
how else can they control the narrative and power if they don’t keep voters,
citizens, and students divided along racial and ethnic lines?
I suppose we
cannot understand who we are if we cannot understand how we were created and
where we came from, what shaped us into who we are today. It is important to
know and understand what made each of us unique.
I can attest
to the feelings of confusion even when we are actually born in a far-away place
and go back decades later to revisit our roots and where we grew up, only to
find ourselves strangers in our own lands because, while we were pining for our
lost youth and roots, the place of our birth had changed and people had moved
on, we could no longer recognize what we remembered. But identifying with a
place you had never set foot on, whose culture, customs, and language you did
not understand, is quite puzzling.
Recently I
read about the journey of a successful black man, Keith B. Richburg, who
actually went to Africa to find his African roots, to see where his ancestors were
sold and bought from four centuries ago.
Shelby
Steele, writing in praise of Richburg’s book, Out of America, A Black Man Confronts Africa, said:
“Black
America has always imagined Africa like the adopted child imagines the
birthparent. The dream is that Africa holds a truth for us. Keith Richburg
marches through that dream and finds that he was an American all along.”
Richburg
went to Africa as a journalist in 1991-1994 and reported on “the famine and
anarchy in Somalia, genocide in Rwanda, the Liberian ‘wackiest, ruthless, and
uncivil war,’ and the failing state of Zaire.” (p. 134)
He wanted to
identify with Africa but instead, as Newsweek wrote, he bitterly repudiated
Afrocentrism. “As a black American
returning to the land of his ancestors, he filters all he sees through the
prism of his racial identity. Instead of empathy he feels only a deepening
sense of estrangement.”
Richburg
wrote, “I was thankful to have been born in America, where even for a black
man, a descendant of slaves, anything and everything was possible.”
Returning to
Africa in 2006, Richburg found Somalia “as depressing as when I first visited
there in 1991.” When he reported on Zimbabwe in his book, it “had growth rates,
high literacy, and the ability to feed itself.” But the 2006 Zimbabwe was an
abysmal place. Mugabe had destroyed the middle class, ruining the formerly
prosperous African country, causing half of its 12 million citizens to be dependent
on international food aid. Inflation was running at “200 million percent,”
epidemics flared up, and there was no water, sanitation, health care, and
schools, the basics offered by a properly functioning society.
Having
watched the “… dead float down a river in Tanzania,” having come close to being
killed in Somalia and ignored by American soldiers driving by who could have
saved him from a dangerous situation when he waved his press credentials and
passport, scared in the realization that they only saw a man who looked like a
potential Somali murderer, Richburg thanks God today that he is an American. As
a black man in Somalia, he “was constantly at risk.” (pp. 84-85)
Richburg watched
his journalist friends die at the hands of warlords in Somalia, victims of the
very population they tried to help when they brought the plight of Somalis on
camera, for the world to see. Hopes were quickly dashed, he said, that “Africa
might become the testing ground for the New World Order.”
South
Africa’s “racial groupthink” helped him realize that everyone was defined and
categorized according to the color of their skin. Although growing up as a
“black kid in a white country,” he avoided being defined by the color of his
skin and believed Martin Luther King’s vision of a man being defined by the
content of his character. Richburg avoided the label “black reporter,” he
preferred “good reporter.” Yet he found out that various African dictators
suggested that, “as a black reporter, I was supposed to report more favorably
on them.” (p. 195)
He wrote in
foreword that, seeing “a black man, the son of a Kenyan exchange student and a
white woman from Kansas, as president of the United States and the most
powerful person in the world, I feel that, whatever the cynics said, the faith
I put in this country has been more than vindicated.”
Out of America ends on an upbeat note. People may
think of Richburg as an Africa hater, racist, or even a “self-hating man who
has forgotten his African roots.” Can we forget something we never really knew
in the first place? He is grateful to have been born a black man in America. …
“Everything I am today – my culture and attitudes, my sensibilities, loves, and
desires – derives from that one simple and irrefutable truth.” At the end of
the day, we are not hyphenated, we are all Americans. The people of Baton Rouge have shown the world
a united American front of brotherhood, courage, and dignity.
Yes, we are ALL Americans, where if you work hard you can get somewhere. And don't forget: "In countries where people are free, people are not 'equal.' In countries where everyone is 'equal,' people are not free."
ReplyDeleteWe are ALL Americans.
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