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A. Adar

A. Adar Ayira


Last Updated: 4/3/2009

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Gender: Female
Status: Single
Age: 100
Sign: Pisces

City: BALTIMORE
State: Maryland
Country: US
Signup Date: 3/4/2007

Who Gives Kudos:


January 20, 2009 - Tuesday 

As I watch Inauguration Day activities and commentary, I am just awed –- and not in a good way –- at the “spin” being spun “. . . from sea to shining sea” regarding the significance of this election and Inauguration Day.....

If you believe the media –- as well as so many whites and some Afrikan descendants –- today is either “the culmination of a dream”; “the end of a struggle”; and / or “the culmination of what we’ve been fighting for.”....

Seriously?  We’ve been fighting for an Afrikan descendant in the White House?....

Now, MAKE NO MISTAKE, I stand with those who acknowledge this historical moment and I fully support those who celebrate this historical moment. . .I understand its emotion, its significance, its resonance to so many who have fought for so long. . .....

However, my question is “BUT WHAT ABOUT JUSTICE?”....

Because, see, that is what I thought was at the heart of the fight against racial apartheid and the other forms of oppression that was (were) delivered as a cherished twin (along with “freedom”) in the birthing of America and nurtured for the majority of its history.....

The fight for JUSTICE has lasted for 400 years . . . are we saying now that the struggle that cost so many lives (physically and metaphorically, in terms of the hopes and opportunities of A People) and spilled so much blood was so an Afrikan descendant can be the head of a country where deep inequities grow by the day, or be the “Black face” of a country that has chosen for so many years to follow an imperialistic agenda?....

Do we say “oh, that’s okay now” and continue to support decisions and choices that may represent the best economic, political, and power interest of this country –- at the expense of other countries and peoples because there is an Afrikan descendant at the helm?....

Is this truly the culmination of “the dream”, the beginning of what is being heralded as a “post racial” America when $419 million in Black wealth is being lost through foreclosures, when prisons where Black youth are being incarcerated in record numbers are one of the few thriving growth industries, where for every dollar of white per capita income, Afrikan descendants had only 57.5 cents in 2005 – down .2 cents from 2002?  Where Afrikan descendants and whites will achieve parity in high-school graduation rates by 2013, but won’t achieve parity at the college level until 2075?  Where –- for other communities – 80% of accumulated lifetime wealth begins with a gift from a relative, while for nearly 80% of Afrikan descendant children, the journey toward accumulated wealth begins with no assets whatsoever? (Stat sources: The Reinvestment Fund, University of California, Santa Barbara; US Census Bureau; and United for a Fair Economy)....

Yes, America is now in love with President Barack Obama, but will that love extend to the rest of the Afrikan descendant community?  

Or the majority-Brown and Black global community?  Will it extend past this moment to the greater issue of JUSTICE?....

Today I pray that this country has the courage and fortitude to ride the wave of this moment past self-congratulations for choosing one man (who finds America increasingly stripping him of his self-identification as “African American” and imposing on him their identification as “Bi-racial”) to embracing the moment in history in which his election and presidency affords us: inspiration and motivation to mobilize and organize in support of a true JUSTICE agenda.....

Then we can all be guaranteed to stand on the right side of history, not only in symbolism but in truth.....

Moving Forward!
....

Adar

LaGoldEyez! of American Salsa

 
I enjoy reading your blogs, in large part because of your perspective, but I have a question that I hope you won't mind answering...

What is "Justice" in your mind in regards to your community and does it encompass--largely the past injustices or more present-day ones?

And then I guess the next logical one would be, who would you like to "pay" for those injustices? I don't necessarily mean in the literal sense...but who would we be punishing?

Ha I apologize if that made little sense, but I am curious...

Thanks!

LaGoldEyez!
 
Posted by LaGoldEyez! of American Salsa on January 22, 2009 - Thursday - 12:32 PM
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A. Adar
A. Adar Ayira

 
Hi LaGoldEyez!

No need to apologize and I appreciate your curiousity!

What struck me about your comment was the question ". . .

who would we be punishing?"

In your mind, is the pursuit of justice about punishment of one group over another? Do you think that the average person would support justice for individuals who have been victimized by crimes? Or do you think that they would see "justice" as punishment for the person who did the victimizing?

Damage can be done by both individuals and institutions and it is our responsibility as citizens to support efforts and offer repair to those who this country's laws and institutional philosophies have targeted to benefit one or another GROUP of people at the expense of another.



Is acknowledging that and working to repair the impact of damage to targeted groups for the benefit of chosen groups "punishment"?

Or is it living up to who we say we are as a country and what we say we stand for as a country?

We've done just that in other instances. . .



For example, were we "punishing" non-Japanese citizens when citizens of Japanese descent received "repair" for their imprisonment in USA concentration camps during the war?

Were we "punishing" non-Indigenious citizens when Native Americans received partial "repair" of casinos and the like as a result of the wrongs done to them because they were targeted AS A GROUP for the benefit of another group by laws enacted and supported by our presidents and Congress?

Now, LaGoldEyez, I'm sure that many believed so (smile), because, after all, so many of us could say "But I didn't put Japanese descendants in concentration camps!! I didn't support laws that stole land from Native Americans and supported their killing and their being herded forcibly onto reservations! I wasn't even born when that happened! I didn't benefit from that!"

But the country implemented policy that was -- they admit now -- wrong and that targeted and damaged -- emotionally, economically, socially, culturally and in many other ways -- a whole group of people based on their ethnicity and race -- basically, based on their not being white.



Because the country as an institution enacted and maintained -- in the name of its citizens -- racist-white supremacist policies that targeted other groups for the benefit of white advancement -- and because the citizens also supported that policy by allowing it to stand -- the country -- the institution that implemented and LEGALLY supported these policies, and indeed enacted them into law -- decided to offer limited repair to those two groups that it had victimized in large part because of their non-white status.



Was that "punishment" to the rest of us?

Or was that us -- as citizens -- standing up and supporting the cause of justice and those ideals that we say we hold dear?

Thoughts?

Together We Grow,

Adar
 
Posted by A. Adar on January 22, 2009 - Thursday - 1:03 PM
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