Raynard Jackson
BlakPAC Blogger
Once again the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People (NAACP) has proven why it is the Hillary Clinton of the Civil
Rights Movement.
The NAACP used to be a storied organization, that was a major player
in the historic fight for full equality for Blacks in America; that was
before they got bought out by the Democratic Party in the early 1970s;
before they bowed downed to the alter of the homosexual community; and
before they sold themselves to the likes of radical liberal, George
Soros and his open borders crowd who believe everyone has a right to be
in the U.S., whether legally or illegally.
The equality that the NAACP once sought was not predicated on some
“special” rights or entitlements that some groups wanted the courts to
create out of thin air (gay rights). The NAACP and Blacks wanted the
rights that the U.S. Constitution already said we were entitled to. In
other words, the NAACP simply wanted the government to enforce the laws
on the books, not create new ones.
Like Clinton, the NAACP can never seem to bring itself to accept
responsibility for any of their own actions; and the plight of the Black
community can always be blamed on others.
This Clinton tick led them last Friday to fire their latest president and CEO, Cornell William Brooks.
Brooks should have never been hired for this post; the national board
selected him three years ago, because they wanted someone that was easy
to control.
Brooks was a horrible speaker and wasn’t as charismatic as some of their past leaders, but he was easily controlled.
Since the 1970s, the NAACP has only had two heads, who made any
difference in America and the organization; those two people were
Benjamin Hooks and Bruce Gordon.
Hooks was an icon of the Civil Rights Movement and a staunch
Republican. Richard Nixon appointed him to serve on the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) in the early seventies. He was the first
Black to ever serve on this commission and is singularly responsible
for the diversity in media ownership that we see today. Without Hooks,
networks like BET and TV One never would have existed.
But somehow, the NAACP rarely mentions Hooks’ Republican ties in any of the group’s written literature, but I digress. They do, however, seem very proud of Ben Chavis, the NAACP President that paid a settlement with NAACP funds to settle his sexual harassment suit and laid the last bit of dirt on a dead organization.
Maybe Hook’s speech at the NAACP’s 1990 convention is why they sanitized his Republican linage.
During the speech, Hooks said that, “It’s time today… to bring it out
of the closet: No longer can we proffer polite, explicable, reasons why
Black America cannot do more for itself…I’m calling for a moratorium on
excuses. I challenge black America today—all of us—to set aside our
alibis.”
Ouch!
Bruce Gordon came from a family with deeps roots in the Civil Rights
Movement, but he chose to make his mark on America by working his way up
the ladder in corporate America. He became a high-ranking executive
with telecom giant Verizon.
So, his appointment to lead the NAACP in 2005 shocked everyone,
because they typically hired preachers or politicians. President George
W. Bush had rightfully ignored the group and refused to attend their
national convention until Gordon came on board. Gordon’s business
background helped him to navigate the political battlefield and he was
able to build a personal relationship with President Bush, to the dismay
of his group’s board.
This friction led to his abrupt resignation in 2007. Gordon stated:
“I did not step into the role to be a caretaker, to be dictated to…I
stepped into the role to understand as best I could the needs of the
African American community and then to propose strategies and policies
and programs and practices that could improve conditions for African
Americans…The things I had in mind were not consistent with what
some—unfortunately, too many—on the board had in mind.”
The national board of the NAACP demands undying fealty and they love
to micromanage their presidents; any attemps to cut their puppet strings
and you become useless to them. God forbid a president makes a decision
on his own or attempts to make the group more relevant to the 21st
century.
I know many of their leaders from across the country and the tragedy
is that most of them don’t even believe in the issues the national board
has made a priority. Publically, many state NAACP leaders say one thing
and privately they believe another.
How can the NAACP claim to represent the Black community when they
are out of sync with what the Black community believes and wants?
Black community is very conservative. Blacks don’t support amnesty
for illegals. Blacks are the largest voting block that supports school
choice and vouchers! This, despite the NAACP passing a resolution last
year at their national convention opposing school choice. And they
wonder why they are no longer relevant to the Black community?
I dare the NAACP national board to choose someone like Condoleezza
Rice, Shannon Reeves, or Jennifer Carroll as their next leader; if they
are truly interested in regaining relevancy, that’s exactly what they’ll
do.
Unfortunately, the NAACP national board is totally incapable of
thinking outside the box or giving up control. The NAACP has become the
retirement village for the Black bourgeoisie and and since the last Colored person died in 1974, the NAACP died very soon after. It is an organization without constituents that exist by extorting Corporate America for guilt money while failing to seek diversity in employment and welfare pimping the poverty of poor blacks, The future belongs to BlakPAC. A strong organization that offers solutions that encourage upward mobility for all, regardless of race.
www.BlakPAC.com
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