How Both Rev. Al Sharpton and Michael Eric Dyson Tricked the Black Community
by Yvette Carnell
African Americans
“leaders” – or “liars,” in the case of Reverends Sharpton and Dyson –
did a great disservice to their constituencies by failing to pressure
President Obama. “These
men selfishly took advantage of their proximity to power, and
successfully used it as leverage for their personal brands, at the
expense of the black community at large.
How Both Rev. Al Sharpton and Michael Eric Dyson Tricked the Black Community
by Yvette Carnell
“We weren’t smart. We were tribal.”
As a black media consumer
who scans mountains of black media stories every day, I have to tell
you, I get tired of being lied to. And the two biggest liars by far
during President Obama’s first term have been Michael Eric Dyson and
“Rev.” Al Sharpton.
In the lead up to the
election, when Dr. Cornel West and Tavis Smiley both implored the black
electorate to push Obama for a black agenda, both Sharpton and Dyson
circled the wagons, insulating the White House from any criticism from
the black community, ensuring that Obama would not be held to task,
certainly not during his first term.
Presumably, Sharpton and
Dyson safeguarded the president to ensure that he’d win reelection.
Sharpton gave up on any serious assessment of Obama early, saying he
wouldn’t offer any criticism of Obama during his first term. He was
rewarded with an MSNBC show.
Dyson, who initially gave a fiery roundtable lecture on how blacks couldn’t allow racial symbolism to trump accountability, recently demonstrated a complete 180 in his debate with Black Agenda Report’s Glen Ford. His reward is coming, I’m sure.
But now there is good
evidence that, contrary to the wisdom of Dyson and Sharpton, Obama
didn’t need any protecting. He trounced Romney in Tuesday’s election,
becoming one of only a handful of presidents to win 50 percent of the
popular vote, and leaving me with no other choice than to believe that
doing something substantive for black people during his first time
wouldn’t have upended Obama’s election prospects.
The black community
could’ve gotten its pound of flesh, much like the LGBT and Latino
communities had already, if we’d not been snookered, listening to old
“Marble Mouth” Sharpton and “Bee Boppin’” Dyson.
“Being loyal to people who aren’t loyal to you will get you nowhere.”
Now we are all left
hoping and wishing that, for the sake of his legacy, President Obama
doesn’t forget about us during his second term. The smart thing to do
would’ve been to secure something, such as legislation to reduce black
unemployment or mass incarceration, before the election, but we weren’t
smart. We were tribal.
To put it plainly, the
black community got screwed by trusting two men who were never honest
brokers in the political game they were playing. These men selfishly
took advantage of their proximity to power, and successfully used it as
leverage for their personal brands, at the expense of the black
community at large.
Listen black people:
Nobody cares about us. Not even the people who were hired to care about
us care about us. My advice? F*ck ‘em. And I don’t just mean f*ck ‘em
right now, I mean f*ck ‘em forever.
Al Sharpton’s nothing
more than an old guy with a bad perm. And Dyson’s just a smart guy who
talks too fast. Who cares. Ask yourself, for once, what do you want?
What would you like to see President Obama do for black people? Put
yourself and your family first. Then fight for that, no matter what. And
if you find somebody with a platform who shares your view, all the
better.
But being loyal to people who aren’t loyal to you will get you nowhere. You
don’t need Sharpton or Dyson to tell you what to do or think. You only
need courage to stand up for yourself and the people you love. Once your
love for yourself and the people close to you becomes stronger than
your love for Obama, or your respect for Sharpton or Dyson, then you’re
ready to break free.
You don’t need Maybach
money or a black prez to do it. You only need to love yourself more than
you love everybody else. Love yourself, and then go for what you want.
Everything else is just black noise. And it’s about time we drown it
out.
Yvette Carnell
is a former Capitol Hill and campaign staffer turned writer. She is
currently an editor and contributor to Yourblackworld. You can reach
Yvette via Twitter @YvetteDC or on Facebook.
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