Taylor's death a grim reminder for us all
Jason Whitlock
/ FOXSports.com
Posted: 43 minutes ago
http://msn.foxsports.com/nfl/story/7499442?MSNHPHCP>1=10637
There's a reason I call them
the Black KKK. The pain, the fear and the destruction are all the
same.
Someone who loved Sean
Taylor is crying right now. The life they knew has been destroyed,
an 18-month-old baby lost her father, and, if you're a black man
living in America, you've been reminded once again that your life is
in constant jeopardy of violent death.
The Black KKK claimed
another victim, a high-profile professional football player with a
checkered past this time.
No, we don't know for
certain the circumstances surrounding Taylor's death. I could very
well be proven wrong for engaging in this sort of aggressive
speculation. But it's no different than if you saw a fat man fall to
the ground clutching his chest. You'd assume a heart attack, and
you'd know, no matter the cause, the man needed to lose weight.
Well, when shots are fired
and a black man hits the pavement, there's every statistical reason
to believe another black man pulled the trigger. That's not some
negative, unfair stereotype. It's a reality we've been living with,
tolerating and rationalizing for far too long.
When the traditional, white
KKK lynched, terrorized and intimidated black folks at a slower rate
than its modern-day dark-skinned replacement, at least we had the
good sense to be outraged and in no mood to contemplate
rationalizations or be fooled by distractions.
Our new millennium strategy
is to pray the Black KKK goes away or ignores us. How's that
working?
About as well as the attempt
to shift attention away from this uniquely African-American crisis
by focusing on an alleged injustice the white media allegedly
perpetrated against Sean Taylor.
Within hours of his
death, there was a story circulating that members of the black press
were complaining that news outlets were
disrespecting Taylor's victimhood
by reporting on his troubled past
No disrespect to Taylor, but
he controlled the way he would be remembered by the way he lived.
His immature, undisciplined behavior with his employer, his run-ins
with law enforcement, which included allegedly threatening a man
with a loaded gun, and the fact a vehicle he owned was once sprayed
with bullets are all pertinent details when you've been murdered.
Marcellus Wiley, a former
NFL player, made the radio circuit Wednesday, singing the tune that
athletes are targets. That was his explanation for the murders of
Taylor and Broncos cornerback Darrent Williams and the armed
robberies of NBA players Antoine Walker and Eddy Curry.
Really?
Let's cut through the
bull(manure) and deal with reality. Black men are targets of black
men. Period. Go check the coroner's office and talk with a police
detective. These bullets aren't checking W-2s.
Rather than whine about
white folks' insensitivity or reserve a special place of sorrow for
rich athletes, we'd be better served mustering the kind of outrage
and courage it took in the 1950s and 1960s to stop the white KKK
from hanging black men from trees.
But we don't want to deal
with ourselves. We take great joy in prescribing medicine to cure
the hate in other people's hearts. Meanwhile, our self-hatred, on
full display for the world to see, remains untreated, undiagnosed
and unrepentant.
Our self-hatred has been set
to music and reinforced by a pervasive culture that promotes a
crab-in-barrel mentality.
You're damn straight I blame
hip hop for playing a role in the genocide of American black men.
When your leading causes of death and dysfunction are murder,
ignorance and incarceration, there's no reason to give a free pass
to a culture that celebrates murder, ignorance and incarceration.
Of course there are other
catalysts, but until we recapture the minds of black youth, convince
them that it's not OK to "super man dat ho" and end any and every
dispute by "cocking on your bitch," nothing will change.
Does a Soulja Boy want an
education?
HBO did a fascinating
documentary on Little Rock Central High School, the Arkansas school
that required the National Guard so that nine black kids could
attend in the 1950s. Fifty years later, the school is one of the
nation's best in terms of funding and educational opportunities.
It's 60 percent black and located in a poor black community.
Watch the documentary and
ask yourself why nine poor kids in the '50s risked their lives to
get a good education and a thousand poor black kids today ignore the
opportunity that is served to them on a platter.
Blame drugs, blame Ronald
Reagan, blame George Bush, blame it on the rain or whatever. There's
only one group of people who can change the rotten, anti-education,
pro-violence culture our kids have adopted. We have to do it.
According to reports, Sean
Taylor had difficulty breaking free from the unsavory characters he
associated with during his youth.
The "keepin' it real" mantra
of hip hop is in direct defiance to evolution. There's always
someone ready to tell you you're selling out if you move away from
the immature and dangerous activities you used to do, you're selling
out if you speak proper English, embrace education, dress like a
grown man, do anything mainstream.
The Black KKK is enforcing
the same crippling standards as its parent organization. It wants to
keep black men in their place — uneducated, outside the mainstream
and six feet deep.
In all likelihood, the Black
Klan and its mentality buried Sean Taylor, and any black man or boy
reading this could be next.
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