Look, if Stephen A. Smith, Karen Hunter, Crystal Wright and Van Jones to name a few of the Republican-Fifth Column collaborators are good intended in their political critique of Black America. The analysis would instead comprehensively identify that.
- Political power is an activity of economic stability and expression.
- Deterministic political expression is a local, state then lastly a national activity
But the afore-mentioned Republican-Fifth Column collaborators of Stephen A. Smith, Karen Hunter, Crystal Wright and Van Jones are not giving us this analysis. They are instead demanding that if Black people have been stupid, voting Democrat then they should lose their mind and vote Republican.
The Black community isn't being told that without economic stability and it's expression whatever exercises in political activity are merely speculative indulgencies. Because there isn't rhyme or reason to the political activity. The meaning of economic stability and it's expression is : The Black community must be able to create jobs to support a viable critical mass of itself for itself.
The Political-Economy space occupied by Black America is specifically that of realizing money and wealth for the National Political-Economy. Black America performs a retail consuming function in the National Political-Economy. What this means is: The Black American labor mass are employees at the mercy and biases of it's employers. Also a sizable mass of the Black American labor mass realizes money in the underground activity of the National Political-Economy. Therefore subject to the criminalizing dynamic of the larger society and this isn't a foundation upon which practical political expression for itself can be built on.
So when Stephen A. Smith, Karen Hunter, Crystal Wright and Van Jones to name a few of the Republican-Fifth Column collaborators clamor that Black people vote for Republican "Angel" you don't know at the expense of the Democrat "Devil" you do know-conveniently omitting that the impotence of Black American political activity is first and foremost, the question of economic stability and it's expression.
We have to ridicule and expose their effort and work as having the pathos and historical lackey-collaborator duty of Samuel L. Jackson's character in Quentin Tarantino's: Django Unchained.
By Apropos