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In the nearly 20 years since “The” Million Man March (MMM), we have seen many events that continue to let us know our lives are less valued than the lives of others. We have seen murders, abuse, beat-downs, abandonment, injustice, and intimidation by the authorities and by regular citizens of this country against Black people.
We have been put on notice by the courts and the penal system that we count for nothing more than another occupant for an $80,000 prison cell and $30,000 annual upkeep. We have been given a reality check, and the point has been made, repeatedly and with emphasis, that we do not count. Even when we returned from the MMM, the media said we were only 425,000 strong. Obviously, they were still counting each of us as three-fifths of a man.
A few years ago, the newest and latest weapon of choice for zealous police officers, which was also a huge money-maker for Rudy Giuliani’s boy, Bernard Kerik, was the infamous 50,000-volt “portable electric chair” known as the Taser. It killed Black folks across the country, but we failed to come out by the millions to protest this cash cow, this so-called less-than-deadly weapon, and now there are actually laws on the books that allow it to be used on 7-year-old children.
Tasers are passé; guns and chokeholds are in vogue. Now, in light of all of the dreadful statistics about Black people, if we ever needed a million strong Black men (and women), we definitely need them now. Where are they?
If you attended the MMM, if you supported the MMM, if you wanted to go but could not, if you participated in some of the post-MMM initiatives, if you were too young and could not go because of school, I want you to do something now. You are 20 years older and, I trust, 20 years wiser, 20 years more experienced, 20 years more committed, and tired of the 20-year-old rhetoric about “what we need to do.” Whether you know it, or even believe it, you are part of the group that will take Black people to a higher level of responsibility, respect, and commensurate action vis-à-vis those alarming statistics found in all the reports and most recently in the Urban League’s State of Black America report.
I want you to go www.iamoneofthemillion.com and add your name to the list if you are conscious and committed. Let’s begin the process of recapturing the strength and resolve of 1 million Black men who were so intimidating that the federal government virtually shut down the day we came to town. This time, however, I want us to demonstrate that same strength by turning it into real power. How? Sign up, and then follow through on the simple but vital criteria for membership in this growing and august body of Black people.
Please recommit, not only to the spirit of what we did in D.C. 20 years ago, but also to the charge given us that day: to leave that place and do something to help our people. We must reconnect, stay connected, and aggregate our resources in support of one another. We must share information, work cooperatively, take control of our destiny, stand against unrighteousness, and not only say “enough is enough,” but do the work that will give substance and real meaning to our words. Where are the one million strong? Where are you?
Jim Clingman, founder of the Greater Cincinnati African American Chamber of Commerce, writes on economic empowerment for Black people. He can be reached through his website, Blackonomics.com. His column was distributed by the NNPA Newswire.