By Heru Ammen
Please don't take my criticism of what I term “The Cosby Generation” as an indictment against those that fought, bled and paid with their lives during the civil rights struggle. I will always give props to people such as Dr. King, A. Phillip Randolph, Malcolm, Huey, Stokely, Dubois and all of those that made it possible for me to be sitting here today at this time writing this blog. Without the sacrifice of the aforementioned individuals, I may have never had the opportunity to communicate to my readers as free person in America.
I was born in '58 and although I was born and raised in California, I was intimately aware of the civil rights struggle because my father played an integral role in securing rights for his co-worker's in the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters founded by A. Phillip Randolph. My perspective on the civil rights struggle was shaped by that struggle. My Father fought for the collective rights of all of his co-workers to achieve the best and his sacrifice afforded all of them equal rights so that they could work in conditions that allowed them to achieve excellence in their profession. My father helped to build a platform and an infrastructure that promoted excellence, good pay, and respect for a job well done.
There are a great number of individual success stories in Afrikan American history. However my contention is that when the greater Afrikan American community was finally allowed the freedom to choose either to live in and build up our traditional communities (like our Asian and other ethnic brothers and sisters) or embrace the de-facto rugged individualism found in the suburbs, most of us choose the latter. We did nothing to collectively ensure the health and well being of our traditional urban communities. Once we achieved equal rights, the vast majority of attorneys, doctors, nurses, educators, griots, and entrepreneurs left urban America for the suburbs and all of the resources they provided went with them. What was left was essentially nothing; and nothing from nothing leaves nothing. Or in the case of urban America, nothing from nothing equaled a void that was filled with overt poverty, ignorance, and government mandated dysfunction called welfare and aid to dependent children.
The African American exodus exacerbated what was already (due to slavery, segregation and discrimination) a fragile cultural ecosystem and it eventually collapsed upon its own weight. If the greater Afrikan American community had taken the approach that my Father had taken in ensuring that his "community" of porters, cooks, and dining car waiters had the infrastructural support mechanism to achieve success, we would not have totally dysfunctional urban communities today.
So when Bill Cosby or any other Afrikan American gets upon the proverbial high horse and lambasts those that their generation socially and culturally abandoned, I take issue with that. All of us (including myself) need to look in the mirror of blame for the reasons why urban America is failing - and we also need to sit down at the table of reasonable dialog and develop solutions that will allow those that want and desire to succeed the opportunity to do so.
Any culture and/or socio-economic system that does not materially support the fundamental right of all of its people to at least have an equal opportunity to pursue excellence through education, employment, and entrepreneurship within their community disenfranchises the vast majority of those that could have possibly achieved at a high level and disproportionately handicaps (both mentally and socially) those that achieve despite the lack of support.
What Bill Cosby and the Cosby Generation is complaining about is akin to parents raising a male child from a baby to be a female and then when that male child becomes an adult, they blame him for acting like a woman. Urban America did not happen in a vacuum and the problems in Urban America will not be solved until Afrikan Americans look in the mirror and recognize the culprits of its demise.