The AC Phoenix December 2002 Page 45 Time For Us To Redefine Us By: Min. Paul Scott ^=-Guest Columnist— Sometimes, when i wake up in the morning, I don’t know who I am. Not that i bump my head in the middie of the night and wake up with amnesia, but I am at a ioss to come up with a working definition of what it means to be a Black Man/Afrikan/Brotha in 2002. If I go by the headline story in the newspaper, I am a potentiai sniper, if i go by the images on cable music channeis, I am a THUG or by the other 100 channeis on my digitai box, I am nonexistent. So, i waik around aii day, confused. I am a sociai chameieon adapting to whatever background i find myseif. I am the victim of a continuous, unstabie metamorphosis with no soiid form other than which White America wouid like me to have at any given moment. Now more than ever, we must begin a process where by we, as Afrikan people, begin to redefine what we are (not in our worst state, but at our best). There must be a careful analysis of where we are and where we are going. As the hip Brothas from the 1970 blaxploitation movies would say, “What it is, what it was and what it shall be. Ya dig?” Historically, the image of Black people popularized in the media has been whatever serves the purpose of White folks at any given time. Whether it was the image of short Africans with bones in their noses circling around “innocent” European explorers chanting “yum yum eat ‘em up,” or a brotha named O’Dog blasting away at a convenience store owner and stealing the surveillance video to show his boyz over popcorn and malt liquor, the manipulation of the Black image has a strong precedent. What is disturbing is that these images are "Always followed by some sort of action from the White power structure. For instance the image of African people as soulless cannibals was used to try to justify America’s legacy of slavery and many politicians have gotten elected by pushing “get tough on crime” laws based on the 0-Dog character. We see these backward characterizations so frequently, that many in the Black community have become desensitized to the far-reaching ramifications of these images both in the news media and the entertainment industry. We have forgotten the way that the media/entertainment industry has a way of making fantasy into reality and vice versa. The images have also served as membership boosters for the Ku Klux Klan and other organizations who feel it is their god-given duty to protect the virtues of White womanhood from rowdy colored folks and other blood thirsty Negroes. I remember when the news that the suspected snipers were Black broke, I got such a cold look from an old White dude in the grocery store that I thought that he was going to roll up on me like the rapper NORE. “What ya gonna do...nothin’! What ya tryin’ fo do...nothin’!” The reason for this shift in attitude is because White folks know that at this time in history they have the full backing and support of the entire police force and military and all they have to do is yell “Help!” to have a Brotha locked down for 5 to 10, whether guilty or innocent. White paranoia runs deep. I can see it now. Upset that the price of coffee has gone up to 35 cents, Junior Executive Tyrone Jefferson protests loudly at a staff meeting and walks outside, only to find his car surrounded by FBI agents. We are approaching a time that any Black man who is not bowin’ and scrapin’ will be considered a sniper or terrorist. This should be of special concern for the Hip Hop Community, especially rappers who have a strong, socially conscious message. According to the rules and regulations of a paranoid, post 9/11 White America there is a thin line between kickin’ tha TRUTH and inciting a riot or some other sort of Historically, the image of Black people popularized in the media has been whatever serves the purpose of White folks at any given time. illegal anti-establishment activity. It is no wonder in this era that White America has so readily accepted rappers like Nelly, even putting his music in car commercials. As long as the subject matter surrounds taking your clothes off instead of fightin’ the power, Hip;Hop will have no problem getting mass exposure. Economically, the warped image of Black people has been good for many industries, including the gun industry, the prison industrial complex and door-to-door security alarm salesmen. I am sure that the young high school kid who comes on the intercom when I’m trying to find a new shirt shouting “Security, aisle Four!!!” has been fully briefed on what a potential shoplifter looks like—if not by management by the media images that bombard her every day. Call me paranoid, but I still get a little nervous when I walk through those electronic theft detectors at the mall. Even though 1 am not a thief, I know one of those sucka’s is gonna go off one day and a Brotha is gonna have a lot of explainin’ to do. We cannot even begin to start thinking politically, unless we change the way the media portrays us as a nation of thieves, robbers and cutthroats. Even if we do get people elected into office, most of their time will be spent passing new laws to protect them from us. There seems to be a need in the White community to have a Black boogey man hiding behind every bush. Every generation seems to need a Willie Horton or an O.J. Simpson. I cannot count the times when I have heard a Brotha on a White talk show begin to run down the long list of atrocities that the European has commit ted against the non-White people of the planet in chronological and alphabetical order, only to have the host use a comeback, “Yeah, but OJ did it!!!” So, our goal today must be to come up with a consensus of what it means to be Black/Afrikan. We must establish a code in our community that must not be violated under any circumstances, such as Black on Black violence, the degradation of women, selling drugs to children, etc. Once this is done, we must challenge, as a collective, the forces ^hat continue to put anti-Black propaganda before the world. Every instance of anti-Afrikanism must be met with resistance, even if it comes from the hands of other Black folks. To ' define and redefine ones self is not an easy task and takes a lot of soul searching and inner thought. This is especially hard for a people who have been taught by an educational system not to think, but to go along with the flow. As the old saying goes, “I think, so I am.” We, as Afrikan people must begin to think again, so we can be again. (Min. Paul Scott is founder of Durham, N.C. based New Righteous Movement. He has also started the National Hip Hop Reformation Campaign. For more information contact operationmedia@yahoo.com.) Join us this Holiday Season and' Enjoy Delicious Home Cooking with Made-from-Scratch Breads and Desserts.