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Subject:
From:
Bamba Laye Jallow <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sun, 29 Apr 2001 06:35:06 -0700
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CINCINNATI FIRES
____________________________________________________________________

by Mumia Abu-Jamal
Col. Writ. 4/17/01
Source: Marpessa Kupendua, [log in to unmask]
- Friday, 20 April 2001 -

"The government is only as lasting as your understanding of administration.
The Army is nothing without people, the Air Force is grounded without your
endorsement, the ships of the Navy could never have sailed if your leaders
didn't have you sail 'em, and the brutal depravity of police would be
non-existent if you didn't wear the uniform." -- John Africa, On the Move,
(1975)

Black youthful rage explodes in Cincinnati, Ohio, and several nights of
fire, rebellion and pain reminds us that the much-maligned and heralded
'60s, were really not so very long ago.

For like the riots that rocked the nation in the 1960s, the precipitating
event was an act of brutality and violence by police against black folks.

Police violence against blacks has sparked rampages of rebellion from coast
to coast, costing hundreds of millions of dollars in destroyed property, and
hundreds of lost lives.

Over 30 years have passed, and in the intervening years we have seen the
emergence of the black political class, and the entrenchment of the black
poor in inner cities, projects, and ghettoes more desolate, more isolated
and more hopeless than the 1960s.

We have seen the explosion of the Prison Industrial Complex, at rates that
would've been unthinkable in the 1970s, with upwards of 2,000,000 men,
women, and juveniles in American jails.

The U.S., with only 5% of the world's population, has 25% of the world's
prison population!

And for black young men and women, the horror of prison has become a
perverse rite of passage, marking one's transition from youth to adulthood.

So, while things have gotten better for some African-Americans since the
1960s, things have gotten demonstrably worse for millions of other, poorer
blacks.

Public schools, never quite outstanding in the first place, have gone into
decline. City services have declined. Industries have fled cities for the
South and the suburbs, leaving cities with less employment, and with
remaining jobs paying for less money, while costs have gone up.

Cincinnati, sparked by the police shootings of a black man, could have
happened anywhere in America.  The social ingredients are all there, in
every major city in America.

In every major city is economic and social despair, mixed with a
militaristic police force that targets black life and liberty.

In every such city are black politicians who function in the role of
keeping the restless natives in check; keem them suffering in silence.

Cincinnati represented the eruption of youth who see their position in grim,
hopeless situations.

Cincinnati is a harbinger of things to come.

Cincinnati is the fire next time.

Copyright 2001 Mumia Abu-Jamal. All rights reserved.

Please Contact: International Concerned Family & Friends of MAJ; P.O. Box
19709, Philadelphia, PA 19143; Tel: 215-476-8812; Fax: 215-476-6180/
E-mail: [log in to unmask]; Web: http://www.mumia.org. Send our brotha some
LOVE and LIGHT at:

Mumia Abu-Jamal
AM 8335
SCI-Greene
175 Progress Drive
Waynesburg, PA 15370

** NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, material
appearing in Antifa Info-Bulletin is distributed without charge or profit to
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research and educational purposes. For more info see:
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