| 
        The tree shakers 
      create opportunity for others because they bring the fruit--the fruit of 
      inclusion, the fruit of prosperity, the fruit of justice--within easy 
      reach of everybody. 
       WOMEN
      AWAKEN! 
      WORDS WE SPEAK 
    
      
        - ENERGY
          & INTIMACY
 
        
        - GIBSON
          AND GLOVER MAKE NEWS
 
        - MOON
          NAMES
 
        - MELANIN
 
        - VISUALIZING
          LIGHT
 
        - BLACK
          THINK TANK RESULTS
 
        - DRIVING
          WHILE BLACK
 
        - THE
          STATE OF OUR SOULS
 
        - DISTRESSED
          BY STRESS?
 
        - MONEY
          AND SPIRIT
 
        - DIVINE
          CONVERSATION
 
        - MANSHARING
 
        - SEX
          AND SKIN
 
        - THINK
          AND ACT
 
        - Gullah-Geechee
          Culture
 
        - BLACKS
          IN NAZI GERMANY
 
        - THE
          GIFT OF JAZZ
 
        - WOMEN
          AWAKEN
 
        - CHILDREN
          AND SEX
 
        - BREATHE,
          MY FRIEND!
 
        - WOMEN
          & MUSIC
 
        - SINGLE
          GRANDMOTHERS
 
        - AIN'T
          I A WOMAN?
 
        - REPARATIONS
 
        - MSG
          KILLS
 
        - MOTHERHOOD
 
        - STAND
          IN THE LIGHT
 
        - FORGIVENESS
 
        - COSBY SPEAKS
 
        - TREE SHAKERS
 
       
        PROBLEM
        IN SUDAN 
        
          
              | 
          
          Life expectancy in Sudan
            is just 58 years. In the United States, the average person can
            expect to live to the age of 77. | 
         
        
        
            | 
        
        Of every 1,000 babies born
          alive in Sudan, 94 will die before their fifth birthdays -- compared
          to only 8 out of 1,000 in the United States. | 
         
        
        
            | 
        
        Safe water is accessible
          to just 75% of the people of Sudan. Almost everyone in the United
          States has access to safe water. | 
         
        
        
            | 
        
        Illiteracy is a major
          problem in Africa, as is the disparity between men's and women's
          education. In Sudan, 72% of the men and just 51% of the women are
          literate. In the United States, nearly all adults -- 97% of both men
          and women -- can read and write. | 
         
        
        
            | 
        
        Annual per capita income
          in Sudan is $1,970 (real GDP per capita, ppp$). It is $34,320 in the
          United States. | 
         
       
       Some
      Solutions 
      
         | 
    
       Cynthia
      McKinney 
      
      NCOBRA Convention 
      June 18, 2004 
       
      I began this day in Turin, Italy. And actually, today for me began
      in your yesterday. I haven't had access to the internet for three
      days. And I haven't been able to research and prepare the way I
      normally would for remarks and an audience of this magnitude. 
       
      So, in advance, I ask you to please pardon me. 
       
      My son just graduated from the International School of Turin; that's what
      took me to Italy. But with his graduation ceremony having been
      accomplished, there was nothing that was going to keep me away from you
      tonight. For in my estimation,  NCOBRA is the preeminent activist
      black organization of our day. 
       
      During the two years that I've been out of Congress, I've had the
      opportunity to travel to places far and near. From Philadelphia, USA
      to Berlin, Germany, a contingent of  NCOBRA members has always been there
      to greet me. Your engagement in every nook and cranny of America,
      and globally, positions you for 21st Century leadership. 
       
      In Philadelphia, I asked the question, "What becomes of a community
      when it has allowed all its tree shakers to be 'neutralized' and all the
      fruit is gone?" 
       
      Just for the record, I cast my lot with the tree shakers, as I know you
      do. Marcus Garvey; Malcolm X; Martin Luther King, Jr.; Fred Hampton;
      all the Black Panthers murdered and incarcerated as a result of the FBI's
      illegal and immoral activities during the  COINTELPRO era were tree
      shakers. This country has only lived up to its ideals when tree
      shakers got busy doing what tree shakers do. John and Bobby Kennedy
      were tree shakers, too. J. Edgar Hoover, George Herbert Walker Bush,
      and George W. show us what our country can become when we don't field a
      steady team of tree shakers. Patrice Lumumba and President Aristide
      are reminders of what can happen to us when we fail to field a full team,
      equipped with fresh replacements. 
       
      
      Our struggle is a relay race, not a marathon. It's not fair for us
      to pass little progress on to the next generation. The tree shakers
      create opportunity for others because they bring the fruit--the fruit of
      inclusion, the fruit of prosperity, the fruit of justice--within easy
      reach of everybody. The  14th and
       15th Amendments are fruit--the
      result of tree-shaking. Reconstruction is fruit--the result of
      tree-shaking. Brown v. Board of
      Education, the  Civil Rights
      Act, the 
      Voting Rights Act, the  Fair Housing
      Act--all the results of massive
      tree-shaking. Even  Dred Scott and
       Plessy v.
      Ferguson--the results of
      tree-shaking--were setbacks that let us know exactly where we stood with
      our beloved America. They are the work of dedicated, activist tree
      shakers like us. They taught us that tree shaking can take
      place in law office suites as well as in ghetto streets. But one
      thing is clear--tree shaking bears fruit. 
       
      But what else should be clear is that tree-shaking can also be dangerous.
      Tree shakers have to agitate. And if they're not protected, they can
      be picked off one by one. 
       
      
      Marcus Garvey shook the tree, the Garvey family paid the price. 
      Geronimo Pratt Ji Jaga shook the tree, Geronimo Ji Jaga paid the price.
      But from the sacrifice of them all, I picked up the fruit, you picked up
      the fruit. But also,  Ward
      Connerly,  Condoleeza
      Rice,  Colin Powell, 
      Clarence Thomas picked up the fruit, too. 
       
      And that's the remarkable thing that's happening before our very eyes.
      When you and I pick up the fruit, we make ourselves and our children
      strong for the next round of tree-shaking, agitating, progress. But
      when they pick up the fruit, the agitation ends and self-satisfaction
      begins. The relay--the handoff to the next generation--gets weaker
      rather than stronger. And now it seems there's more of them than
      there are of us--unless we make our voices louder. 
       
      It seems that the court priests have proliferated on our watch. The
      court priests are the COINTELPRO leaders who cry peace, peace when there
      is no peace. The media tell us we should look up to the court
      priests: they include many of our politicians and our organizations.
      The court priests are the ones  National Security Council Memorandum #46
      referred to when it said that they would get "their" blacks
      elected and appointed to office because they would be more loyal to the
      system than to our community. And once we understand what has been
      done to our leadership, then we can begin to understand why  Martin Luther
      King, Jr. Drive looks the same in almost any city in America.
      Despite the ascent of thousands of blacks to public office, for far too
      many the conditions remain abject: abject poverty, or abject abuse,
      or abject injustice. 
       
      How else could  Hull House in Chicago produce a report last year saying
      that it would take black Chicagoans 200 years to close the black-white
      quality-of-life gap? Or 
      United for a Fair Economy in its  State of
      the Dream 2004 Report informs us that the racial disparities on some
      indices are worse now than when Dr. King was murdered. Or the  2004
      National Urban League State of Black America report that reminds us that
      at this country's inception we were counted as three-fifths of a white
      person, but that over 200 years later, our "net equality" has
      only grown by 13 percentage points. Or the Harvard University
      symposium that found that even with money and insurance, black patients
      receive a lower standard of health care. The recommendation?
      Go to black doctors! 
       
      
      United for a Fair Economy  tells us that it will take us a decade to close
      the high school graduation gap; seven decades to close the college
      graduation gap; 581 years to close the per capita income gap; and 1,664
      years to close the homeownership gap. Our children sing "I
      wanna lick you all over" and network television is the balm that
      encourages us to laugh at ourselves rather than to change these
      statistics. 
       
      While the black body politic is becoming comatose, the court priests tell
      us all is well. In fewer than ten years after the glorious successes
      of the 1960s, our body politic received its first blow: the  Bakke
      Decision that gave rise to the whole "quota" debate.
      Subsequent Supreme Court decisions took turns delivering sustained and
      effective blows: economic affirmative action in  Croson and
       Adarand;
      political affirmative action in  Shaw v. Reno
      and my redistricting case,
      the  Johnson v. Miller case. 
       
      The end of the Second Reconstruction is nearly complete. 
       
      The black body politic has been invaded by COINTELPRO agents, rendering us
      impotent and near dead. Our community didn't organize a defense when
      the tree-shakers were targeted. Now the trees bear strange fruit. 
       
      A strange fruit, indeed with at least three 21st Century lynchings. 
       
      And so, with defenses down, you could say that the black body politic has
      been invaded by a foreign, hostile agent. Thus, my question in
      Philadelphia: What happens to a community when all the fruit is
      gone? 
       
      The reason I've braved 15 hours in various airports today is because I
      believe you are the doctor, the prescription, and the pharmacist.
      You are the organization to bring the black community back to good health. 
       
      When a body gets cancer, nothing short of irradiation or extreme
      chemotherapy is called for. Radical action is required to get at the
      root of the problem. Sometimes even, the body is shocked by the
      treatment. But the treatment heals the body and completely excises
      the cancerous cells from it. You are here in Washington, DC to begin
      the irradiation. 
       
      But the treatment cannot be local. This cancer has spread and
      treatment must be administered to every extremity. In addition, in
      order to be effective, the medication must be able to discern the healthy
      cells from the cancerous ones. The medication has to call the bad
      cells out! The medication, though severe, eliminates the problem and
      the physician keeps watch over the patient to prevent any return of the
      disease. 
       
      The answer to my question, then, is clear. Either the community that
      loses all its tree shakers and its fruit dies or it is revived. 
       
      COINTELPRO was about the black body politic dying. Ever since J.
      Edgar Hoover wrote, in 1919, that Marcus Garvey "excited the
      Negroes," all it has taken to get targeted has been the ability to
      "excite the Negroes." Let's get excited ya'll! Cause
      that's when we're healthiest. 
       
      But, when a community's leadership is targeted by government action to
      "neutralize" it; such that the community is unable to defend
      itself against its intentional destruction; and when that destruction
      comes at the hands of a government, then I call that genocide. 
       
      I ask that this conference not be considered an event, but a process.
      Please include me as a part of your process. For I believe that you
      are our last great hope before complete collapse. 
       
      Be bold, be brave, but be prepared. 
       
      Literally the whole world is watching and wishing us success. 
       
      Thank you.
       
      Cynthia
      McKinney 
      
      NCOBRA Convention 
      June 18, 2004 
      
       
     | 
    
        
       Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney 
      "I'm a hip hop Mom!"
      
      
 
      Be sure to  click her photo and view her video about Hip
      Hop and Freedom of Speech!
       
      Created 3 Hip Hop Power Shops featuring Tupac's Mom 
      Participated in Russell Simmons' Hip Hop Summit 
      First Congress Member to reveal a full-fledged Hip Hop
      Platform 
      Georgia has a disproportionate rate of blacks in prison.
      The State and the United States are practicing vote dilution and vote
      denial. 
      WORDS
      WE SPEAK 
        
        
        
        
        
        
     |