Your name or email adress:
Do you already have an account?
Forgot your password?
  • Log in or Sign up


    Results 1 to 4 of 4
    1. #1
      Pragmatic's Avatar
      Pragmatic is offline Moderator

      Join Date
      Nov 2005
      Location
      San Diego
      Posts
      2,735
      Blog Entries
      3
      Thumbs Up/Down
      Received: 16/0
      Given: 6/0
      Rep Power
      281

      NSM-46: U.S. Public Policy to Destory Black leadership, the Black Community & Africa


      0 Not allowed! Not allowed!
      NSM-46: U.S. Public Policy to Destory Black leadership, the Black Community and Africa

      Welcome to The Official site of The Universal Zulu Nation


      Here is National Security Council Memorandum-46, an official policy statement issued in 1978 during the Jimmy Carter administration of U.S. policy on undermining Black leaders, the Black community and Afrika:

      The document reprinted below is Exhibit 10 of U.S. Supreme Court Case No.00-9587 Boyd E. Graves v. The President of the United States of America

      NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL MEMORANDUM-46
      MARCH 17, 1978

      Interdepartmental Review Memorandum NSCM-46
      TO: The Secretary of State
      The Secretary of Defense
      The Director of Central Intelligence
      SUBJECT: Black Africa and the U.S. Black Movement

      The President has directed that a comprehensive review be made of current developments in Black Africa from the point of view of their possible impacts on the black movement in the United States. The review should consider:
      1. Long-term tendencies of social and political developments and the degree to which they are consistent with or contradict the U.S. interests.
      2. Proposals for durable contacts between radical African leaders and leftist leaders of the U.S. black community.
      3. Appropriate steps to be taken inside and outside the country in order to inhibit any pressure by radical African leaders and organizations on the U.S. black community for the latter to exert influence on the policy of the Administration toward Africa.
      The President has directed that the NSC Interdepartmental Group for Africa perform this review. The review should be forwarded to the NSC Political Analysis Committee by April 20.
      (signed)
      Zbigniew Brezinski
      cc: The Secretary of the Treasury
      The Secretary of Commerce
      The Attorney General
      The Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff

      NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL
      INTERDEPARTMENTAL GROUP FOR AFRICA
      STUDY RESPONSE TO PRESIDENTIAL SECURITY
      REVIEW MEMORANDUM 1 NSCM-46
      BLACK AFRICA AND THE U.S. BLACK MOVEMENT
      I. (most text blacked out) . . .and whose importance for the United States is on the increase.

      II. A. U.S. INTERESTS IN BLACK AFRICA A multiplicity of interests influences the U.S. attitude toward black Africa. The most important of these interests can be summarized as follows:

      1. POLITICAL If black African states assume attitudes hostile to the U.S. national interest, our policy toward the white regimes; which is a key element in our relations with the black states, may be subjected by the latter to great pressure for fundamental change. Thus the West may face a real danger of being deprived of access to the enormous raw material resources of southern Africa which are vital for our defense needs as well as losing control over the Cape sea routes by which approximately 65% of Middle Eastern oil is supplied to Western Europe. Moreover, such a development may bring about internal political difficulties by intensifying the activity of the black movement in the United States itself. It should also be borne in mind that black Africa is an integral part of a continent here tribal and regional discord, economic backwardness, inadequate infrastructures, drought, and famine, are constant features of the scene. In conjunction with the artificial borders imposed by the former colonial powers, guerilla warfare in Rhodesia and widespread indignation against apartheid in South Africa, the above factors provide the communist states with ample opportunities for furthering their aims. This must necessarily redound to the detriment of U.S. political interests.

      2. ECONOMIC Black Africa is increasingly becoming an outlet for U.S. exports and investment. The mineral resources of the area continue to be of great value for the normal functioning of industry in the United States and allied countries. In 1977, U.S. direct investment in black Africa totaled about $1.8 billion and exports $2.2 billion. New prospect of substantial profits would continue to develop in the countries concerned.

      IV. BLACK AFRICA AND THE U.S. BLACK MOVEMENT Apart from the above-mentioned factors adverse to U.S. strategic interests, the nationalist liberation movement in black Africa can act as a catalyst with far reaching effects on the American black community by stimulating its organizational consolidation and by inducing radical actions. Such a result would be likely as Zaire went the way of Angola and Mozambique.

      An occurrence of the events of 1967-68 would do grievous harm to U.S. prestige, especially in view of the concern of the present Administration with human rights issues. Moreover, the Administration would have to take specific steps to stabilize the situation. Such steps might be misunderstood both inside and outside the United States.

      In order to prevent such a trend and protect U.S. national security interests, it would appear essential to (text missing) African Nationalist Movement.

      In elaborating U.S. policy toward black Africa, due weight must be given to the fact that there are 25 millions American blacks whose roots are African and who consciously or subconsciously sympathies with African nationalism.

      The living conditions of the black population should also be taken into account.

      Immense advances in the field are accompanied by a long-lasting high rate of unemployment, especially among the youth and by poverty and dissatisfaction with government social welfare standards.

      These factors taken together may provide a basis for joint actions of a concrete nature by the African nationalist movement and the U.S. black community.

      Basically, actions would take the form of demonstrations and public protests, but the likelihood of violence cannot be excluded.There would also be attempts to coordinate their political activity both locally and in international organizations.

      • Inside the United States these actions could include protest demonstrations against our policy toward South Africa accompanied by demand for boycotting corporations and banks which maintain links with that country;

      • attempts to establish a permanent black lobby in Congress including activist leftist radical groups and black legislators;

      • the reemergence of Pan-African ideals;

      • resumption of protest marches recalling the days of Martin Luther King;

      • renewal of the extremist idea national idea of establishing an "African Republic" on American soil.
      Question: Is it surprising?


      Finally, leftist radical elements of the black community could resume extremist actions in the style of the defunct Black Panther Party.



      Internationally, damage could be done to the United States by coordinated activity of African states designed to condemn U.S. policy toward South Africa, and initiate discussions on the U.S. racial issue at the United Nations where the African representation constitutes a powerful bloc with about one third of all the votes.

      A menace to U.S. economic interests, though not a critical one, could be posed by a boycott by Black African states against American companies which maintain contact with South Africa and Rhodesia.

      If the idea of economic assistance to black Americans shared by some African regimes could be realized by their placing orders in the United States mainly with companies owned by blacks, they could gain a limited influence on the U.S. black community.

      In the above context, we must envisage the possibility, however remote, that black Americans interested in African affairs may refocus their attention on the Arab-Israeli conflict.

      Taking into account; the African descent of American blacks it is reasonable to anticipate that their sympathies would lie with the Arabs who are closer to them in spirit and in some case related to them by blood.

      Black involvement in lobbying to support the Arabs may lead to serious dissention between American black and Jews. The likelihood of extremist actions by either side is negligible, but . . . .(Text cut)

      3. Political Options In the context of long-term strategy, the United States can not afford a radical change in the fundamentals of its African policy, which is designed for maximum protection of national security. In the present case, emphasis is laid on the importance of Black Africa for U.S. political, economic and military interests.
      RECOMMENDATIONS

      In weighing the range of U.S. interests in Black Africa, basic recommendations arranged without intent to imply priority are:
      1. Specific steps should be taken with the help of appropriate government agencies to inhibit coordinated activity of the Black Movement in the United States.
      2. Special clandestine operations should be launched by the CIA to generate mistrust and hostility in American and world opinion against joint activity of the two forces (insert: blacks and Arabs) , and (foster?) division among Black African radical national groups and their leaders.
      3. U.S. embassies to Black African countries specially interested in southern Africa must be highly circumspect in view of the activity of certain political circles and influential individuals opposing the objectives and methods of U.S. policy toward South Africa. It must be kept in mind that the failure of U.S. strategy in South Africa would adversely affect American standing throughout the world. In addition, this would mean a significant diminution of U.S. influence in Africa and the emergence of new difficulties in our internal situation due to worsening economic prospects.
      4. The FBI should mount surveillance operations against Black African representatives and collect sensitive information on those, especially at the U.N., who oppose U.S. policy toward South Africa. The information should include facts on their links with the leaders of the Black movement in the United States, thus making possible at least partial neutralization of the adverse effects of their activity.
      V. TRENDS IN THE AMERICAN BLACK MOVEMENT

      In connection with our African policy, it is highly important to evaluate correctly the present state of the Black movement in the Untied States and basing ourselves on all available information, to try to devise a course for its future development.

      Such an approach is strongly suggested by our perception of the fact that American Blacks form a single ethnic group potentially capable of causing extreme instability in our strategy toward South Africa.

      This may lead to critical differences between the United States and Black Africa in particular. It would also encourage the Soviet Union to step up its interference in the region. Finally, it would pose a serious threat to the delicate structure of race relations within the United States. All the above considerations give rise to concern for the future security of the United States.

      Since the mid-1960s, when legislation on the human rights was passed and Martin Luther King murdered, federal and local measures to improve black welfare have been taken, as a result of which the U.S. black movement has undergone considerable changes.

      The principle changes are as follows:

      -Social and economic issues have supplanted political aims as the main preoccupations of the movement.

      ( ) actions formerly planned on a nationwide scale are now being organized locally.

      -Fragmentation and a lack of organizational unity within movement.
      -Sharp social stratification of the Black population and lack of policy options which could reunite them.

      -Want of a national leader of standing comparable to Martin Luther King.

      B. THE RANGE OF POLICY OPTIONS The concern for the future security of the United States makes necessary the range of policy options. Arranged without intent imply priority they are:

      (a) to enlarge programs, within the framework of the present budget, for the improvement of the social and economic welfare of American Blacks in order to ensure continuing development of present trends in the Black movement;

      (b) to elaborate and bring into effect a special program designed to perpetuate division in the Black movement and neutralize the most active groups of leftist radical organizations representing different social strata of the Black community: to encourage division in Black circles;

      (c) to preserve the present climate which inhibits the emergence from within the Black leadership of a person capable of exerting nationwide appeal;

      (d) to work out and realize preventive operations in order to impede durable ties between U.S Black organizations and radical groups in African states;

      (e) to support actions designed to sharpen social stratification in the Black community which would lead to the widening and perpetuation of the gap between successful educated Blacks and the poor, giving rise to growing antagonism between different Black groups and a weakening of the movement as a whole;
      (f) to facilitate the greatest possible expansion of Black business by granting government contracts and loans with favorable terms to Black businessmen;

      (g) to take every possible means through the AFL-CIO leaders to counteract the increasing influence of Black labor organizations which function in all major unions and in particular, the National Coalition of Black Trade Union and its leadership including the creation of real preference for adverse and hostile reaction among White trade unionists to demands for improvement of social and economic welfare of the Blacks;

      (h) to support the nomination at federal and local levels of loyal Black public figures to elective offices, to government agencies and the Court. This would promote the achievement of a twofold purpose: first, it would be easier to control the activity of loyal black representatives within existing institution; second, the idea of an independent black political party now under dicussion within black leadership circles would soon lose all support


      Peace be upon you

    2. #2
      Mordecai_7's Avatar
      Mordecai_7 is offline Warrior

      Join Date
      Jan 2009
      Location
      Louisiana
      Posts
      660
      Blog Entries
      47
      Thumbs Up/Down
      Received: 3/0
      Given: 0/0
      Rep Power
      85

      0 Not allowed! Not allowed!
      The book, "Behold a Pale Horse" goes into specific detail about this, and it was written by an insider. The author was killed in 2001, I think, or thereabout.

    3. #3
      Pragmatic's Avatar
      Pragmatic is offline Moderator

      Join Date
      Nov 2005
      Location
      San Diego
      Posts
      2,735
      Blog Entries
      3
      Thumbs Up/Down
      Received: 16/0
      Given: 6/0
      Rep Power
      281

      0 Not allowed! Not allowed!
      A Look At Hiphop As A Messiah


      CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE
      By DX 21 Dasun Allah
      dasun7@hotmail.com

      A LOOK AT HIPHOP AS A MESSIAH

      He who pulls the purse strings pulls the strings of the puppet -I X 3

      It is naive to think that Hiphop culture within the United States in its present mainstream incarnations is a viable candidate for an empowerment movement. Firstly, consumer power doesn't equate to political power. It is true that economics directs politics and that consumer power can be read as economic strength, but this is merely potential energy, not kinetic. It is meaningless if it isn't utilized in orchestrated actions for specific empowerment objectives. Otherwise, all of this spending is just lining the coffers of the prison and military industrial complexes.

      More importantly Hiphops creators are not directing Hiphop as a culture. This is decided by corporate brain trusts and in the pages of governmental urban policy studies. Consultants informed by these processes advise Hiphops greatest minds and guide the careers and business decisions of Hiphop’s influential personalities and executives. Basically, the same power elite fat off the capital produced by chattel slavery and maintained through institutionalized racism, controls corporate Hiphop. It is in this power elites vested interests to steer Hiphops political course in a direction favorable to their own objectives. It would be foolish to think that if power is a chess game and a master thinks many moves ahead, that there is no such doctrine as pre-emptive counterinsurgency.

      Is it rational to think that a force controlled, funded and profitable to a power elite can be used by a powerless underclass to challenge that very same power elite? We created the ultimate tool of liberation only to have it co-opted into the very mechanisms of our own oppression. Hiphop must be brought entirely under our own control before it can be used for political empowerment. It cannot challenge the status quo when it is the puppet of the same said status quo. And even if Hiphop is or becomes the status quo, and that is the path to empowerment, if we do not control Hiphop, it will just be Jim Crow standing in a B-Boy stance.


      Peace be upon you

      A Look At Hiphop As A Messiah

      http://www.rapstation.com/on_the_real/

    4. #4
      Pragmatic's Avatar
      Pragmatic is offline Moderator

      Join Date
      Nov 2005
      Location
      San Diego
      Posts
      2,735
      Blog Entries
      3
      Thumbs Up/Down
      Received: 16/0
      Given: 6/0
      Rep Power
      281

      re:They're trying to ban the Talking Drum Again


      0 Not allowed! Not allowed!
      "They're trying to ban the Talking Drum Again"


      Because of the perceived potential of talking drums to "speak" in a tongue unknown to slave traders and thus to incite rebellion, in 1838 these and other drums were banned from use by African Americans in the United States.


      By the same token


      Because of the perceived potential of the conscious hip-hop/rap music movement to "speak" in a tongue unknown to our current corporate slave traders and masters and thus to incite rebellion, resistance, revolt and revolution this potentially liberating musical art form and Black sub-culture has been poisoned (banned from it original use and purpose) by studio prankster African Americans in the United States.

      I think we need to be careful and know this, mainstream white amerikkka has a hidden agenda--they really are afraid of the potential power of conscious rap to galvenize the people--it's really a modern day talking drum. And once again, they wanna ban it under the guise of the very problem they propagate.
      Here's a classic example of what i'm saying. Read this post in RBG's Rap Music Portal Black America Web: Many in Rap Circles Dismiss Imu..., then check out my response for more insight...they're coming out the woodwork.



      Also listen to how Mumia explains it: Rap Resonances Abroad

      Mos Def - There is a Way
      [nomedia]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ikFYdoPJRt8&feature=related[/nomedia]


      RBG Street Sholars Think Tank is intended to be a Talking Drum Preserver
      It is my hope that at some point someone will see all the work that i have done online over the past three years as it has been intentionally designed, namely not as seperate data and documents, images, audio and videos, but as a fully integrated progressively advancing college--more sophisticated than anything traditional colleges can ever concieve of.
      What i layed out in this piece is from his first book, it been out for about 3 years now. The book that he is holding is Lyrical Sword 2- in the portal the images are hot to his site.

      Basicly i'm just pulling stuff from RBG's offline program and putting it online---but it still can't compare to the offline package. Actually its designed for one to work both online and offline at one time and seamlessly.

      What i'm doing is very simple to learn but extremely advance---the more one plays with it the deeper it gets/ from GED to Phd. It is an educational program that prepares, trains and creates Afrientricly conscious, committed and conducting school teachers, alcohol and drug counselors, computer/IT experts, physicians and health care providers. The scholarship is in the reading-the 3 portals flow together and lets you see every single thing i have done online integrated--once one knows how to work it. People won't really get it til i do live trainings.For example, the 12 points Adisa Banjoko lays out and i have extracted are acutally hot-linked to other parts of the curriculum that manifest, demonstrate and expand on said points.

      i go from image> audio>video>text and then integrate them using all microsoft office appplications + the web. Everybody is doing what they do best to tell our story--past, present and future.I made a college of us, by us, for us and about us--that goes from education to liberation/self employment. But,as it is a program/curriculum based in collectivity---it will only work and be see as designed when i acquire a collective overstanding and a cooperative interest. But i am clear that everyone is doing their own individual thing--so i will continue to await the right opportunity

      Online Classes:
      http://www.assatashakur.org/forum/rb...rs-think-tank/





      Peace be upon you

      post by RBG Street Scholar


    Thread Information

    Users Browsing this Thread

    There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

    Similar Threads

    1. Replies: 0
      Last Post: 11-21-2009, 11:42 AM
    2. Replies: 1
      Last Post: 02-03-2008, 02:27 AM
    3. Black Youth Leadership Conference May 24
      By Nesayem in forum Bay Area, Ca
      Replies: 0
      Last Post: 05-20-2006, 04:26 PM
    4. Policy for public housing raises concerns
      By XXPANTHAXX in forum Afrikan World News
      Replies: 0
      Last Post: 06-28-2005, 06:39 PM
    5. U.S. policy on undermining Black leaders, the Black community and Afrika
      By Im The Truth in forum Breaking Down and Understanding Our Enemies
      Replies: 1
      Last Post: 04-16-2005, 06:12 PM

    Thread Participants: 1

    Posting Permissions

    • You may not post new threads
    • You may not post replies
    • You may not post attachments
    • You may not edit your posts
    •  


    About

      Assata Shakur Speaks is an Forum Devoted To Assata Shakur And All Political Prisoners Around The World.
      Assata Shakur Speaks Is An Oasis Of Pan African Information Geared Towards The Liberation Of Afrikan People.

    Follow Us On

    Twitter Facebook youtube Flickr DavianArt Dribbble RSS Feed



    BACK TO TOP