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Ali Akbar Talks aliakbar.net

October 20, 2008 - Monday 

Category: News and Politics

Identity

What makes Obama "black?" It's a question that's been swirling in my mind for well over a year now. I've been putting off writing this, because I'm honestly afraid of what I might say. What will I feel? Will I be another Uncle Tom? Hell, what made President Clinton the "first Black President?"

It matters not. You see, intellectual honesty means more to me. My country means more to me.

I haven't taken a firm position on the use of the N-word, but I do intend to use it here.

Barack Obama shares my skin color. In fact, he and I share more of the same skin pigmentation than Rev. Al Sharpton. We both glow a little yellow. I get mine from my father, while he gets his from a dash of makeup and his father, I suppose.

I'm certainly Black. A Black isn't a person with a shade of brown in their skin. That's ignorant and my contention is that it's racist.

A Black is a person who is African American. Their roots are invisibly tainted by the worst point in American history. Slavery brought Africans and people of dark color into a relationship forced by Caucasians. People were brutally taken from their homes, deprived of human rights, all dignity, and physically raped. The government that would free them would then tell them they were second-class citizens. Blacks were forced into a permanent class of poverty and deceit.

We were labeled "Nigger."

Those are my roots. They aren't pretty – but they are mine and they forced my blood line into a greater plan called America.

I take great exception when friends brush off the history of my origins as simply, "the past."

I remember the first time when the word "Nigger" was lodged at me as a child. I didn't know how to react. I knew I was Black, but I was not his Nigger. Even to this day, Nigger, the term hides in the dark and whispers behind my back. It sends chills down my spine. I fear their ignorance and relish in the pride that I am Black. I have a rich cultural history that has impacted and built this country into the very nation it is today.

My people built this nation. My people have bled for the chance at liberty. My people marched in the streets while being physically ripped away from their bones for a cause against injustice. My people sit in seats of government, churches, and influence. I am a Black.

No matter your color… No matter your race, you can relate to me. We're American.

That's what I share with Barack Obama. He is American.

We don't share a past. We don't share an origin. Barack Obama is not Black.

Obama cannot be rattled by the word Nigger. He has no origin to the hate or bigotry. Obama cannot even relate as a primary source to the current sufferings of the African American community.

This election, with the aid of the free press and all too willing politically correct Parties – Obama has been dubbed with a history and origin that is not his own. He has stolen Nigger from history.

His dad is a Kenyan. Obama has a history, an origin, a family with roots. Obama has been given privilege and only had a taste of the modern African American community with poisons of his own choosing. He has sampled the worst and then preached with the best. I am offended. He is an African who is an American – but he is not Black, he is not an African American, and he is most certainly not a Nigger.

An entire continent of people who share my skin color call the community that belongs to my mother "Black" as a term of less than. "Nigger" is a word that is used among Africans as a term for African Americans.

My identity has been stolen in attempt to paint something that is not there.

Issues

Obama promises more of the economic same. While he'll "spread the wealth," he promises no meaningful inroads in breaking the barriers that keep African Americans in a substandard social and economic class.

Civil Rights leaders fought first for those basic rights that were guaranteed to the disenfranchised, and then set their eyes to education before anything else. It is of the greatest importance to point to Barack Obama's education policy and fundamentally where his philosophy is rooted.

Chairing a board that holds the view that the public education system's primary cause should be to "radicalize" children is not beneficial to the African American community. The community is riddled with substandard books, teachers, and financing – yet Obama's record reveals that plunging children into the political process to make uninformed decisions plays chief among his "top priorities."

The Chicago public school system pays its teachers among the best in the entire country. However, what we discover is an environment of corruption, the highest dropout rates, and children who graduate without being literate. The Chicago public school system and teacher's union cannot be tied to Obama in geography alone, when he has given them his full weight when he was a State Senator and vice versa.

More Black children will grow up in an environment worse than what their parents were given and it's appalling. This is racism at its most powerful. A community denied of education cannot better itself. Young adults are not given choices but a primitive environment of survival of the fittest.

When Obama won the Iowa caucus, it wasn't until South Carolina's primary where he finally talked about in very broad terms, 'the community.' He dare not touch the issues he discussed affecting the African American community before his first victory.

Shame will befall upon the African American community if we choose to give Barack Obama our silent blessing while he ignores our issues, our heritage, and our origin. There's no requirement to be Black, he cannot change who he is.

Most will never feel the scorn or the lost identity that comes with being biracial. I, however, have found one consistent point of refuge in my mother's community. Black people crave "authenticity" and in agreement with Tom Joyner – there is nothing like "Black love."

I want the pleasure of voting for the first viable African American candidate, regardless of Party, but a shell won't do. I'll wait for the real deal.

Frank Boone

 
It is very nice to hear from you, (from the inside so to speak) of a world that I can only empathize with. I truly wish that ALL Americans would live by the words of Dr. King. "judge a man on the content of his character and not the color of his skin". That seems to be a problem in 21st Century America. When we stood by (as a Nation) and allowed immoral behavior by our President, that had so little respect for his office that he perpetrated his sexual exploitations of an intern in the very Oval Office that is the seat of power for the whole of this planet! No moral outrage at a congressman having oral sex with a "male prostitute" in the cloak room of the US House of Representatives. True enough that the ignoring the education of the African Americans in favor of "diversity" and "political correctness" has led the African American community into a culture that will take generations to undo. Teenage pregnancy in over whelming numbers, having multiple children by multiple fathers and then relying on the taxpayers to help pay for the children's care, while the "baby's daddies" continue impregnating more and more women with children they will never help raise. I'm not sure we can turn this behavior around even in a few generations. It may take as century or more and that is only if we buckle down and demand accountability from everyone for their actions.

Sincerely with All Due Respect, Frank
 
Posted by Frank Boone on October 20, 2008 - Monday - 02:21 AM
[Reply to this
Mysticsocean

 
Ali... this is very well written, and touching.
 
Posted by Mysticsocean on October 20, 2008 - Monday - 04:55 AM
[Reply to this
Ali A. Akbar
Ali Akbar

 
Wow... you read and commented. I'm touched. You would not believe the heat I'm taking for this on other blogs though. Hahaha. Like the old days: fascists to my right and freaks to my left.
 
Posted by Ali A. Akbar on October 20, 2008 - Monday - 01:48 PM
[Reply to this
David
David Theobald

 
Cool blog. I get the feeling this may be the most crucial election in the USA for generations and will make for some long nights in front of the TV here in wintery London!
 
Posted by David on October 20, 2008 - Monday - 02:01 PM
[Reply to this
Tribute to U.S. Soldiers and Veterans
Alex Slocum

 
Ali, one of the reasons I admire you so much is because you follow your heart and the wisdom of the Lord, not the advice of your critics. I aspire to do the same. If I could give more kudos, I would. Don't ever stop, and I'll be there beside you in every way I know how whenever I can.

It's been said; "The path of the righteous man is beset on all sides by the inequities of the selfish and the tyranny of evil men...."

This election has been a nasty one, but when I look back....I've watched myself and my friends like you grow in in a way that somehow, in a way I can't put to words, absolutely sings.

Obama may not be the one to truly carry the torch and bring the change that has falsely been assigned to him, but I see it as a sign that is something America truly yearns for, regardless.

I won't vote for a shell of an idea either.....but if he can't or won't bring it, we will.
 
Posted by Tribute to U.S. Soldiers and Veterans on October 20, 2008 - Monday - 02:36 PM
[Reply to this
Tribute to U.S. Soldiers and Veterans
Alex Slocum

 
And some words to live by from a man I already know you appreciate at least as much as I do; Teddy Roosevelt.

"It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better.

The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat."
 
Posted by Tribute to U.S. Soldiers and Veterans on October 20, 2008 - Monday - 02:39 PM
[Reply to this
Andrew (grow the economy)

 
Nice
Intelligent
Good
Gentleman
Excellent
Republican..................



Notice anything?
 
Posted by Andrew (grow the economy) on October 22, 2008 - Wednesday - 04:04 AM
[Reply to this
Sarah

 
Obama was raised by white people and had little contact with black people during his formative years. He is essentially like most white people having little in common with most black people. I do notice that he as a strict black people quota in the seats behind him while he gives speeches. No more than 3 are allowed.
 
Posted by Sarah on October 22, 2008 - Wednesday - 08:00 PM
[Reply to this
john

 
ali you are really inspiring, I know how it feels when people critisize you on what you believe is right. Mccain is willing to fight for us and he cares for the country first on the other hand obama is getting many voters because he says he is for the poor and he is going to take from the rich. So the poor thinks obama will resolve all there issues which is not true, First of all that is not going to happen because congress has to approve of it and which it sounds markism theories. Another thing is he is making promises that he cant keep and people think he is going to accomplish all of this. this is poltics so he is going to attract people what they want to hear, i just hope people could see the truth.
 
Posted by john on October 23, 2008 - Thursday - 12:51 AM
[Reply to this
Dennis L

 
You are a true American!!!
 
Posted by Dennis L on October 29, 2008 - Wednesday - 03:31 AM
[Reply to this
Stabbing Westward
Ian Oliver

 
i wish my military buddies down here would see the truth about obama..but they dnt

im the only mccain supporter around here besides the other seldom few.

always been a republican, Thow i have different views at times i would never vote for Obama.

as My Intructor said back in AIT

"if your wearing this uniform..you are an idiot if you are voting for obama"
 
Posted by Stabbing Westward on November 1, 2008 - Saturday - 01:43 AM
[Reply to this
Ali A. Akbar
Ali Akbar

 
Amen.
 
Posted by Ali A. Akbar on November 2, 2008 - Sunday - 11:21 PM
[Reply to this
**********************GABBRİELL******************

 
all i can do is laugh at you.....sad just sad.......
 
Posted by **********************GABBRİELL****************** on November 6, 2008 - Thursday - 08:08 PM
[Reply to this
Rob
Robert Kilker

 
I didn't follow most of that, I'm responding first and formost to your initial statement about blacks being ripped from thier native land and forced into slavery by Caucasians.
Fact is, there were no Brittish or American Slave traders marching around Africa cathing blacks in nets and hauling the off for sale, The slave traders, purchased those they would later resell from Black Muslim slave traders who sold the survivors into slavery. As they had been doing since the founding of their religion. Killing or enslaving all who would not convert as they spread their religion at the tip of a sword. I, In no way, condone Slavery. especially since some of my Caucasian relatives, Came to this country as endentured servants. And we can argue back and forth about who had it worse. But White slaves"endentured servants" were far cheaper and more plentiful in the colonies than black slaves. only difference being that while African slaves were predominently used for agriculture, White slaves rotted in Northern factories and rarely lived long enough to obtain freedom. Sure, Endentured sevatude ended long before the Black man became recognized as equall an a federal level, But for those of us working two or three jobs and still losing our homes, I don't think slavery ever ended. We just got a new Master, The nanny state federal government.
As long as our masters keep us quibbling over who had it worse, or who is superior, we might as well do it bent over a barrel of vasaline. Because Master is gonna keep raping us.
 
Posted by Rob on December 14, 2008 - Sunday - 09:53 AM
[Reply to this
Made Fuk'n Man!!!

 
Haven't been to your page since b4 the election. That was well written. The sad part is that, no black person will be nominated as a candidate to a major party. Why? Because no one who descends from "property" can or should I say will. Just as voting isn't our right it is our privilege, that theoretically can be revoked. Therefore a "shell" will have to do, but it is a step in the right direction. Lest we also not forget that this is our 8th Mulatto President (though never acknowledged).
 
Posted by Made Fuk'n Man!!! on January 20, 2009 - Tuesday - 09:25 PM
[Reply to this
Pfitz
Pfitz Her

 
"We don't share a past. We don't share an origin. Barack Obama is not Black."......You sir, are one of the most GENUINE BLACK MEN I've come across!!!
 
Posted by Pfitz on February 23, 2009 - Monday - 09:35 AM
[Reply to this
Ali A. Akbar

Ali Akbar


Last Updated: 3/20/2009

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