Martin Luther King, Jr. and Jeremiah Wright: Clergymen Speaking Truth to Power

15 05 2008

The recent controversy surrounding the comments made seven years ago, during a church sermon by Presidential candidate Barack Obama’s former pastor Jeremiah Wright, has caused polarization and heated debate among American citizens. Although the U.S. has a long history of revolutionary vigor tempered by its founding fathers, has shown great disdain for tyranny at home and abroad, and has zealously advocated the individual’s constitutional rights to speak out boldly against oppression and immoral actions, this does not seem to apply to the Reverend Jeremiah Wright.

Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. (a well-loved American hero, a person that has his own national holiday in the United States, and whose name adorns public schools, libraries and street corners across the United States of America) spoke directly to America’s moral conscience in his Vietnam war speech of 1967.

Following the September 11, 2001 bombing of New York City’s World Trade Center by Islamic Al-Queda extremists Rev. Jeremiah Wright spoke, some have said, in the same long-held prophetic manner of liberation theology ministers Rev. Henry McNeal Turner, Rev. Henry Highland Garnet, Rev. Richard Allen, Rev. Alexander Crummell and Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.





Ball of Confusion: The Temptations

9 05 2008

The lyrics of Motown R&B singing groups such as the Temptations epitomized the consciousness of young people growing up in the mid 1960s that were a part of the anti-Vietnam war era. Youth in previous generations have always defied parental controls that sought to define their world view and patterns of behavior. The Temptations 1970 hit single “Ball of Confusion” can almost be seen as a type of whole earth, conservationist, anti-imperialist, anti-poverty anthem for the current batch of disaffected American youth seeking to regain their parents drive to make change in the world they inhabit. Today’s youth should not seek to fight the battles of old or mimic the actions of young people forty years ago. It is a new world they inhabit but there is a need for them to continue the work of CHANGE. Many of these young people recognizing that something is amiss in American society and the world have begun to cut their political/social consciousness by participating in the Barack Obama presidential campaign or expressing themselves via library 2.0 platforms like blogs, wikis and the like.

Ball of Confusion

1, 2… 1, 2, 3, 4, Ow!
Eddie: People moving out, people moving in. Why, because of the color of their skin.
Run, run, run but you sure can’t hide. An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth.
Vote for me and I’ll set you free. Rap on, brother, rap on.
Dennis: Well, the only person talking about love thy brother is the…(preacher.)
And it seems nobody’s interested in learning but the…(teacher.)
Segregation, determination, demonstration, integration, Aggravation, humiliation, obligation to our nation.
Ball of confusion. Oh yeah, that’s what the world is today. Woo, hey, hey.
Paul:
The sale of pills are at an all time high.
Young folks walking round with their heads in the sky.
The cities ablaze in the summer time.
And oh, the beat goes on.
Dennis:
Evolution, revolution, gun control, sound of soul.
Shooting rockets to the moon, kids growing up too soon.
Politicians say more taxes will solve everything.
Melvin:
And the band played on.
So, round and around and around we go.
Where the world’s headed, nobody knows.
[Instrumental]
Oh, great GoogaMooga, can’t you hear me talking to you.
Just a ball of confusion.
Oh yeah, that’s what the world is today.
Woo, hey, hey.
Eddie:
Fear in the air, tension everywhere.
Unemployment rising fast, the Beatles new record’s a gas.
Dennis:
And the only safe place to live is on an Indian reservation.
Melvin:
And the band played on.
Eve of destruction, tax deduction, city inspectors, bill collectors,
Mod clothes in demand, population out of hand, suicide, too many bills,
Hippies moving to the hills. People all over the world are shouting, ‘End the war.’
Melvin:
And the band played on.
[Instrumental]
Great GoogaMooga, can’t you hear me talking to you.
Sayin’… ball of confusion.
That’s what the world is today, hey, hey.
Let me hear ya, let me hear ya, let me hear ya.
Sayin’… ball of confusion.
That’s what the world is today, hey, hey.
Let me hear ya, let me hear ya, let me hear ya, let me hear ya, let me hear ya.
Sayin’… ball of confusion.