Stormy
extradinaire d'auteur
Jesse Jackson?s Comments : The Great Divide
A while ago, I was pondering Jesse Jackson?s comments about Barack Obama and the broad picture of the connotation that it entails. This whole situation reminds me of ?Guess Who?s Coming to Dinner?( 1967). In that movie Tillie (Isabel Sanford) said to John Wade Prentice (Sidney Poitier): ?Tillie: I don't care to see a member of my own race getting above himself.? This was in reference to Sidney?s character marrying a white woman. Later in that movie John Wade Prentice had a conversation with his father that summed up this rift between my generation and my grandfather?s generation. In that scene the younger man, Poitier, told his father that his generation was a dead weight on our people. Later explaining; John Wade Prentice: ?You think of yourself as a colored man. I think of myself as a man.?
As much as I have sucked at the teat of the freedom provided to our people by the civil rights generation I find myself feeling that they are becoming a dead weight on us. They can?t let go enough to see that the revelation is being televised, daily. Frankly, I think they resent us for going further than they were able to??.which is odd because they are the very ones that built the bridge with their own bodies and told us to walk across. From Rev. Wright to Jesse Jackson Sr., we have a generation of past their prime leader?s holding on to racial divides that (thanks to hip-hop) no longer exist on the same scale. I always thought Sidney Poitier?s comments were harsh. Now I fully appreciate the writing. Our generation has to fight the racist crackers and the crabs. Dayum!
Just a few thoughts on generational politics??????discuss among yourselves.
A while ago, I was pondering Jesse Jackson?s comments about Barack Obama and the broad picture of the connotation that it entails. This whole situation reminds me of ?Guess Who?s Coming to Dinner?( 1967). In that movie Tillie (Isabel Sanford) said to John Wade Prentice (Sidney Poitier): ?Tillie: I don't care to see a member of my own race getting above himself.? This was in reference to Sidney?s character marrying a white woman. Later in that movie John Wade Prentice had a conversation with his father that summed up this rift between my generation and my grandfather?s generation. In that scene the younger man, Poitier, told his father that his generation was a dead weight on our people. Later explaining; John Wade Prentice: ?You think of yourself as a colored man. I think of myself as a man.?
As much as I have sucked at the teat of the freedom provided to our people by the civil rights generation I find myself feeling that they are becoming a dead weight on us. They can?t let go enough to see that the revelation is being televised, daily. Frankly, I think they resent us for going further than they were able to??.which is odd because they are the very ones that built the bridge with their own bodies and told us to walk across. From Rev. Wright to Jesse Jackson Sr., we have a generation of past their prime leader?s holding on to racial divides that (thanks to hip-hop) no longer exist on the same scale. I always thought Sidney Poitier?s comments were harsh. Now I fully appreciate the writing. Our generation has to fight the racist crackers and the crabs. Dayum!
Just a few thoughts on generational politics??????discuss among yourselves.