Skip to main content

Not You Too Dr. West: The Need for a Wider Perspective on Reparations than ADOS



by clairmont chung

As I write, people of African ascent[1] are streaming across borders in the same way as Latin Americans at the US border. They are moving from turmoil and uncertainty to a promise of change. Significant numbers are dying in that effort. The destination countries pronounce on who is eligible to enter and who is not. None take any responsibility for the conditions back in the source countries. Groups within the destination countries are even more explicit about not accepting more immigrants and limiting the rights and entitlements of those already present. This article is not to address the many reasons for desperate people to take dangerous trips. Instead, it is about a specific group: American Descendants of Slaves (ADOS) attempting to deny reparative US resources to persons whose ancestors were never enslaved in the US. This is just another form of anti-immigrant sentiment and part of a global wave of conservatism that promotes racism, a kind of ethnic isolationism and a peculiar nationalism. But more so, it is an attempt to disentangle ADOS from the larger body of trafficked humans and effectively absolve the US of any responsibility for the systems of exploitation that fed and feed the global devaluation of all lives and  Black Lives in particular. 

On occasion these isolationist ideas are expressed in the thought and action of African descendants themselves. We usually dismiss as ignorant those of African descent, Black people, who show contempt for other Black people for no reason except their otherness. So, it was particularly harsh and head-shaking to hear noted scholar, Dr. Cornel West, at a recent Howard University Sunday sermon[2], express support for Yvette Carnell’s position that being ADOS is different from DOS elsewhere because of the level of White supremacist terror experienced in the US. Carnell argues this difference is such that no reparation or support from the USA is owed to any African except those descended from people enslaved on US soil. Yvette Carnell is one of the leading voices in the ADOS movement. We can only infer that Dr. West agrees with that and the rest of Ms. Carnell’s positions; including that Pan-Africanism is dead. 

In that speech Dr. West stated that Africans in the Caribbean and elsewhere did not experience Jim Crow or the KKK and that unlike others, ADOS were enslaved by their own country. The US (unlike other countries) enslaved its own people: meaning after independence. At first blush, the reasoning seems fair. I did the work and felt the pain and I should be paid. Or, my ancestors suffered through slavery and Jim Crow in the US and the US state owes me. That is the truth. The argument falls apart when it seeks to restrict any US reparations in any form to ADOS and claims Jim Crow for their US selves. To expose this false position, one need only look at the role of the US, and what would become the US, in the expansion and maintenance of slavery along with its export and support of apartheid everywhere. Reparations are due to those victims, some of whom never set foot in the US, and to their descendants too.


While Antigua, Barbados, Nevis and other countries in the Americas never ‘enslaved’ Africans, slavery thrived in those colonies. Many of those plantations and their produce belonged to 'Americans'. The ADOS position reveals a lack of understanding of this fact, history, global capitalism, and its companion white supremacy. Instead, that position serves to perpetuate the historical structure and divisions of ethnicity and nationality set up by imperialism, colonialism, neo-colonialism and maintained now as globalization. This is the very thing the otherwise impressive Dr. West has been fighting against and something he addressed in the same speech. This ought to be a major setback for him.  

Islands like Nevis, Antigua and Barbados claimed independence as of 1983, 1981 and 1966 respectively[3]. The British ended slavery in its West Indian colonies in 1838. For the US it is 1776 and 1865. Using these dates as a basis for some material difference in the oppression of Africans is the narrowest possible understanding of that history. Carnell poses the narrowest possible interpretation of that period of trafficking African bodies to the Americas. Narrowly constructed arguments are used to ensure benefits go to the narrowest group and usually the group of the constructors; in this case West and Carnell. But that history irrevocably intertwined Africa, Europe and the Americas in a global enterprise in ways such a narrow argument can not undo. 


George Washington
When in September 1751 George Washington arrived on the island of  Barbados, he integrated into a society carved by 'American' and British born colonists. The USA did not exist and the American Revolution less than two decades away. Instead, there were British colonies with little political difference be it Massachusetts Bay, Virginia, Nevis or Barbados. But already benefits from appropriating African bodies and labor were enjoyed by those that would become American and what would become America. Over the next four months Washington and his brother Lawrence dined nightly with Gedney Clarke a Massachusetts-born slaver and planter and cavorted with others of White British, American, and Barbadian born gentry. Clarke and his family were deep in every aspect of human trafficking across the Atlantic and the lands those captives cultivated including plantations in the Dutch administered Demerara and Essequibo[4]

Those meals the Washingtons enjoyed with the Clarkes were cultivated, prepared and served by captive labor of African ascent. The servers were no more Barbadian than the Washingtons or Clarkes were 'American'[5]. That would come. The relation was of captive and captor. Similarly, Clarke’s estate in Massachusetts (Bay) was maintained on the backs of these Africans. This history had to be ignored by Dr. West and others in finding some separate and peculiar ‘American’ slavery apart from the enslavement system which the USA had a major hand in creating and maintaining; beginning even before there was a USA and continuing thereafter.

Today, the same exploitative relationship continues among the regions, including Africa, of material resources and people except ‘captive’ is no longer used. The people are no longer in demand. Their children are held in cages at borders. The material resources are demanded and/or annexed. This history ought to frustrate any attempt to differentiate the kinds of exploitation suffered by African people in Africa or the Caribbean vis a vis the USA and wherever plantation society evolved. Nevertheless, the ADOS movement makes claims that reflect little appreciation of this history and continuing global exploitation. Perhaps, if you sit at the center of global capitalism, there is no need to teach or know global history. Its easy to draw nationalistic conclusions when thats all you have been taught.

It is as if ADOS is an attempt to create a new ethnicity. Given the universal contempt shown all people of obvious African ascent, there is little more painful than a segment of the group identifying itself as separate from the larger body. This ideological secession, like most secessions, is intended to secure more resources for that group at the exclusion of the rest of the larger body. We ought to know the danger of secessionist ideas seen in examples of the American Civil War, the so-called Biafra War in Nigeria and more recently ethnic cleansing in Rwanda. An attempt by some descendants of those enslaved in the USA to restrict access to resources could lead to very awkward results or worse. Former Attorney General, Eric Holder, would be denied since his parents are Barbadian. President Obama would be denied as well as Former Secretary of State Colin Powell. They are not ADOS. The movement would argue President Obama is not descended from any slave, anywhere, and not entitled to reparations anywhere. If Malcolm X was alive he would receive a half share on account of his Grenadian mother and his children would receive some part thereof.  Marcus Garvey was jailed and deported because of how much he devoted  to African Unity and uplift. What is the end game of ADOS: A mass deportation, saliva swabs, a new kind of segregation? 

The idea of the US experience being peculiarly unique is not new as we will see later. It’s instructive, I argue, that President Donald Trump is the most prominent proponent of US peculiarity sometimes described as American exceptionalism and the foundation from which ADOS grows. President Trump is not talking about all of America when he bleats "MAGA" but only the US Americans. Of course, he means White. He, like ADOS, would deny all benefits to President Obama, since he was born 'elsewhere' and probably in one of those S'hole countries. Incidentally, all the non-ADOS seem to be from Trump's S'hole list.


To help clarify the point, this group rejects ‘African’ as part of their name. They have reverted to the historical and moral equivalent of Negro. Instead of African American, they self identify as American Descendants of Slaves (ADOS), and the sole beneficiaries of any resources handed out by the US and at the exclusion of any other African descendants; enslaved or not. 
In one naming ceremony ADOS erased important African history and simultaneously absolved the US of all its debts and sins incurred against Africa and its people everywhere except maybe those enslaved in the the USA. As Walter Rodney painfully explained about our mis-education on identity and oppression in his San Francisco speech that “Africans who had been raped from the continent mysteriously disappear and become Negro”.[6] They are now ADOS.

Not all ADOS’ support the ADOS movement: as fewer Americans support Trump than not. Not all USDOS share the view of ADOS. It is unknown as to how many do. What is known is that Pan-Africanism, despite the protestations of the ADOS leadership, continues to dominate the landscape wherever people of African ascent reside including the USA. For proof one need only see Omali Yeshitela’s recent presentation at Oxford University and the number of its shares on social media. I attended the June 8th 2019 People of the Sun 30th Annual Tribute to the Ancestors of the Middle Passage at Coney Island in New York. It is solely to commemorate and honor those of the middle passage, their children and parents. The African Diaspora Ancestral Commemoration Institute held the same honor on the same day in Washington DC. This year, I and thousands plan to attend the 48th annual 4-day International African Arts Festival in Brooklyn, New York beginning on July 4th with the theme “We Are All As One”. I can list another dozen such events in June alone. These are Pan African organizations. Whatever ADOS is attempting, it does not honor that truth. However, nascent and weak ADOS may be, it is a sufficiently dangerous concept that needs to be refuted at its infancy.

We are all allowed to create alternative histories to fit and support whatever positions we hold. But we should also expect critique. African enslavement was not the only force in shaping the US and the Americas. Indigenous Peoples and others played a role. And this is not to pronounce that all of Africa had the same history or that there is nothing peculiar about individual nations, such as they are, in the Americas and elsewhere. It is undisputed that Africans captive in the US helped build the US into the empire it has become. Moreover, without that unpaid labor it is unlikely the US would be the empire it is today. It is also undisputed that African enslavement was made possible by a collective of Europeans with white-supremacist ideas, and their descendants; and that those descendants control the wealth and institutions that is the US empire today and the larger ‘developed’ world. Their socio- politico- economic position is universally intertwined as is that of African descendants. 

It would require some intellectual magic to separate relationships so intertwined for Europeans and Africans and of which despite Dr. West’s considerable gifts he is not yet capable. After Clarke’s unexpected death in 1764[7] his son Gedney, Jr. sold the Demerara and Essequibo holdings to offset crippling debt, and with the remaining proceeds bought lands in Tobago and Grenada. The Jamaica branch of the family thrived. Like the other human trafficking families they sold and bequeathed captives among each other. We address each other as brother and sister because we might be just that. It is untrue that those practices used to enslave Africans in the US were and are peculiar to the US. It is untrue that US planters and slaveholders operated one way in the US and another way elsewhere. Moreover, much of the suffering of Africans outside the US including of those Descendants of Captive Africans (DOCA) was made possible through US might and assistance. Whatever may be the goal of ADOS, the historic record must be based on facts.

Isaac Royall, Jr.
African enslavement in every location across the planet accrued to the  benefit of the US Treasury and by extension the quality of life on offer in the US. It still does. Gedney Clarke repatriated his money to Salem, Massachusetts. His ships were built in New England. They took his rum and molasses to Europe and to Africa. They brought captive Africans and salt goods to the rest of the Americas. They sold the bodies, the surplus, to whomever and wherever. It was and is as a result of a global enterprise.

White supremacy has been a companion to all of those –isms and all maintained by US might. The US was not alone. Hopefully, I show the inseparability of Europeans in the enterprise and the inseparability of Africans as its victims but also the primary role of the British Colonies and the British Colonies that became the US in that period of genocide and exploitation. Victimhood is not a pathology. It is a fact. Gedney Clarke practiced the same type of White supremacy in Barbados as he did in Massachusetts. These families funded the American Revolution from the profits made in Barbados and elsewhere[8]. The tax burden attached to these profits were sufficient to consider revolution. These families moved freely among different colonies including the Thirteen Colonies on the US mainland. Often they brought their captives. These ‘business’ men and women did not benefit solely from slavery on British West Indian possessions but off Dutch and other European possessions and from wherever they found the exploitation of unpaid labor. The price of a human being was  influenced by world events and major players as it is today with coffee, soybeans and  corn. Humans could be dumped too; to save on subsidy and insurance claims. These enslavers would fund wars even when not directly involved. They not only supported the American Revolution with money earned on Africans everywhere, but made further profits from supplying those armies as well as foreign armies. 

Without being too semantic, the ‘American’ in ADOS is a misguided attempt to claim a name assigned by Europeans to the entire of two continents and some: North, South and everything in between. What is meant, of course, is US descendants of Slaves (USDOS). We know this because African ascendants from the Organization of American States (OAS), Latin America, the Caribbean and Canada are excluded from the ADOS group. Quite apart from ‘America’ dismissing the existence of native populations, and other African descendants  in ‘America’, more worrisome is the use of slave as a description of yourself. I wrote earlier about the equivalence of ADOS to ‘Negro’. Africa was not raped of slaves or Negroes. Humans were stolen and trafficked. Human traffickers referred to the Ewe, Yoruba and other captives as slaves and worse. To claim that name for yourself is to set the struggle to full freedom back into the 15th century. I am channelling Malcolm X’s arguments about the importance of the ‘X’. Some  have travelled so far backward that they now claim not only the individual plantation names assigned by the traffickers, but the collective name: slave.

But in addition to the reactionary acceptance of imposed names, the use of ‘American’ reflects a kind of entitlement we have come to associate with the US itself in that they would claim the name America(n) for themselves. They ignore the fact that two and one half continents carry that imposed name. No one is marching in protest against the US co-opting a colonial name for itself. But i is an indication of the sense of its entitled-self in the region. And it seems ADOS operates as a function of that entitlement. 

Dr. West and Ms. Carnell are wrong on the absence of Jim Crow and White terror outside the US. They seem unaware of the US involvement, then, and continuing, in similar practices in the Caribbean. It is inconceivable that these patriarchal patriots who a century before burned independent thinking White women, and their friends, as witches in Salem, MA would treat Africans in Barbados or anywhere any better. Clarke. Snr. was born in Salem as was his estate. 

As a consequence of that global racism, even today, residents are barred on some of the islands of the Caribbean, including Jamaica, from beaches except the insufficient few specifically designated as public. This remains a constant struggle in Barbados where all the beaches are supposedly public. Europeans, many from the US, are the patrons of these exclusive beaches. But this right to the best of the land did not begin with Caribbean independence. It existed before the US when still a British colony. 

George Washington’s stay in Barbados changed him in profound ways and led to profound change in America. The changes did nothing for the enslaved. Through Washington's diary and archived letters, we know 
that the relationship between he and Clarke continued until the latter’s death in 1764. Clarke was also the uncle to Sarah Washington: George’s brother Lawrence’s wife. She was the daughter of William Fairfax of the Virginia Fairfaxs and his mulatto wife Sarah. Fairfax had served in the Caribbean as did many of those Virginia ‘gentlemen’ enslavers. From all accounts the Barbados trip, being the sheltered Washington’s first outside of Fairfax County, Virginia, presented a first glimpse of the wider world and the might of the British Empire. Impressed by British fortifications on the island to protect its golden egg[9], Washington began to seriously study military matters on hs return.

When in early 1763 Cuffy led a revolution of captive Africans to end enslavement in the Dutch administered colony of Berbice, Clarke sent 5 ships and 300 mercenaries to help turn back the revolutionaries. He did not want revolution spreading to neighboring colonies Demerara  and Essequibo where he held captives on 11 plantations. Cuffy and his revolutionaries defeated the Dutch at Fort Nassau and seized the seat of government. They destroyed the infrastructure of a profitable operation and presented an example of successful revolution that had to be stopped. With decisive naval help from Clarke, the Dutch were able to hang on for a year and gather sufficient resources to turn back the revolution. But Berbice never recovered from that revolutionary war and the Dutch eventually ceded it to the British. Clarke died before the end of that war and the trials that followed, but money he expropriated from the backs of captive Africans was used to turn back African freedom in Berbice and elsewhere. He was running slaves to the 
The salutations of Gedney Clarke, Jr in a letter to the Dutch Count Bentinck praising Laurens Storm Van 
Gravesande, Director General of Demerara and Essequibo, October 1764 for his work in suppressing the Berbice Revolution.
Dutch colonies without the required permission from the Dutch West India Company: a thief and a smuggler. Just before his death he acquired 100 female captives with a plan to acquire 100 males. Reparations are due to the descendants of Cuffy, his revolutionary army, and those whose freedoms Clarke and others stole. The US Department of Treasury needs to satisfy that bill, help erase that sin and cleanse the collective souls of its citizens. 

The Clarkes demanded repayment of £8000 from the Dutch West India Company for their expense in defeating the Berbice Revolution.  

None of this would have been lost on George Washington and his now growing understanding of world and military affairs. He practiced his skills against the Indigenous populations. He immersed himself deeper in military matters and would lead his own revolution a decade after Cuffy

This close association with the Caribbean and major American born or based traffickers did not begin or end with the Clarkes and Washingtons. It had begun long before as men in service of the British Crown and continued into the new federation of the USA up to the present. Here is where Dr. West attempts a sleight-of-mind with the claim that no other captives were held by their own country. By inference he means captives were citizens nowhere else except the US; its Constitution of the United States of America though it made all men equal would not apply to African USDOS’. Later, its Emancipation Proclamation did not protect ADOS from Jim Crow and the Klan. We know those same US born or based planters, some resident some absentee, continued their enterprise in the Caribbean through all of it. To add salt to the wound, in 1838 the British crown compensated them, paid reparations, to slaveholders with holdings in the British West Indies including the Clarkes. Clarke’s heirs held about 100 captives then and received over £1200 the modern equivalent of about £1m[10]

Neither the American Revolution nor its civil war ended the exploitation of Africans anywhere, in Africa, its lands, Africans in the British West Indies and those lands under the new federations. It intensified the exploitation. The writing was already on the wall. The number of revolutions and rebellions and with pressure from sympathetic Europeans signaled a coming end to the enterprise of human trafficking. The traffic intensfied to maximize profits before the end. So, it is with great trepidation that I listen to arguments about the special nature of  US slavery and the separate claim for the ADOS at the exclusion of other African ascendants born in the Caribbean and elsewhere. 

Gedney Clarke was not alone in repatriating his wealth to the US. The children of Caribbean based planters returned to attend newly chartered schools like Harvard. Only they could afford it. Their parents paid towards the endowments of those schools. In 1817, Harvard Law School was founded on a gift from Isaac Royall, Jr., a wealthy planter and human trader with plantations in Antigua. This storied law school recalled its crest in 2016 after protest from students against the school's use of motifs taken from the crest of the Royall family on its own crest. Isaac Royall, Snr., had sold some of his Antigua holdings in 1737 after the African Uprising[11] of 1736  and retired to Medford, MA with 27 of their trusted captives to enjoy the benefits of the local aristocracy. Descendants of the Royalls also received reparations from the British parliament.

William Havemeyer
Sugar refiner based in NYC
From “Columbia University and Slavery”, that school's project to find its true history, disclosed that even after 1865, US civil war and emancipation, the USA benefitted from economic ties to Cuba and Brazil where slavery continued until 1886 and 1888, respectively. Its buildings still carry the names of profiteers from trafficking in humans. Havemeyer is the family that owned the Domino sugar factories that exploited slave labor in Cuba and Brazil long after abolition in the US. West and Carnell may claim that Jim Crow was peculiar to the US after emancipation. They are wrong. US based business exploited sharecropping and other unpaid labor practices within the USA while doing even better in Cuba and Brazil. Behind the Havemeyer Building on campus is Chandler Hall named after chemistry professor Charles Chandler an avid supporter of the Havemeyers’ sugar project. Hamilton Hall of course is named after the school's most prominent alumnus Alexander Hamilton: from the Caribbean Island of Nevis. Given his current popularity, there is no need here to elaborate on the seminal role of Alexander Hamilton in US history as advisor to George Washington and founder of the US treasury from which any reparation would emanate. But we need to contemplate who paid for his privileged life in the US and the source of that money. 

I do not claim men like Clarke, Hamilton and Royall as Caribbean. Their presence in the Caribbean had more to do with the profits from slavery than the region's beaches and good climate. They either held Africans captive, traded in African bodies, or showed their willingness to advocate for the plantocracy and to keep Africans in captivity. However it is now, and it is bad; it was worse then. The point is solely to show the interconnectedness of the ruling elites and the empire they built on the backs of Africans irrespective of where their chains were tethered. 

Jim Crowism was always difficult in the Caribbean given the relative low numbers of Europeans in relation to non-Europeans. They were not in the majority, as in important parts of the US mainland and could not mount a sustained attack with the Ku Klux Klan type outfits, but that earned insecurity made Jim Crow necessary for them. Cuba before the revolution, was that not Jim Crow? In Demerara, as recent as the 1950s, pictures of the membership in social clubs like the Georgetown Club, no less, show no one of obvious African ascent. The golf courses and tennis lawns reflected the same as golf courses and tennis lawns everywhere else in Europe and the Americas: White only. 

The banks and insurance companies picked up where the traffickers left-off. These were the children of former slave owners flush with reparation money from Britain in the 1830s, and money from the ongoing enslavement in the US, Cuba, and Brazil. Are we to believe that former human traffickers now in charge of the money treated former enslaved equitably. Even today interest rates in the Caribbean are double that available in the US and to the ADOS community as well. Slavery is over, but the system remains. The AIG scandals and Wall Street's subprime meltdown was global and still to be fully assessed for Africans outside the USA. Compound interest compounds problems. All proceeds were repatriated back to the US or its offshore havens. There was no bailout for either ADOS or the larger diaspora.

Nevertheless, dating back to the Roman Empire Africans fought in European wars. 'Caribbean' men and women, enslaved and descendants of the enslaved, served in the segregated armies of the imperial wars Europeans fought among themselves including America's war for independence. My own father lied about his age to enlist and serve in the segregated navy protecting allied convoys bringing the essential supplies for the war effort in America and Europe during the 2nd World War. Those veterans could not get a job at the local branch of Barclays or Colonial or any banks anywhere in the region. They suffered under a class and color code set in place by imperialism colonialism, neo-colonialism and, even now, globalization.

Noted African American author and actor, the late Julian Mayfield, tells a story in his unpublished book “Burnham of Guyana” of an obviously African woman meeting an obviously African, Forbes Burnham, the then Prime Minister of independent Guyana. The meeting took place outside the Watooka Club in Linden also in Demerara in the early 1970s. Seeing the woman walking by the entrance staring in awe at the buildings and grounds, Prime Minister Burnham invited her in as his guest. Momentarily stunned by such a suggestion, she asked whether he was sure. He assured her that he was sure and that he was the de facto[12] head of state. She was not convinced and declined his invitation. Years of Jim Crow had so conditioned her, that she could not conceive of entering such a place except as the help. This is part of Ms. Carnell's lament that ADOS has not had the perceived benefit of Africans in powerful positions and suffer from some psycho-social deficit relative to Africans from outside the US. If she only knew how effective neo colonialism has been in channeling any self identification through the usual white supremacist institutions.

I understand some African descendants wanting to identify with power. It comes with some privileges. It's a kind of ‘passing’ -American is American- entitling the passer to global privilege, sole access to any crumbs and maybe some protection from state violence. That American power can promise loans to Ecuador and coerce its leadership to give-up Julian Assange. Assange is believed to have helped expose US complicity and war crimes in ongoing war zones like Syria, Yemen and Iraq that have felt the might of that power. Regime change is real. It could announce a new president of Venezuela without holding the elections its venerates as democracy. It can move capitals, draw borders anywhere, build walls, anything.  

It is the strangest thing listening to people of African descent explain why we are not all similarly situated. They have rehashed and presented some of the same racist ideas offered by enslavers and the Klan, including the coded language. And like some White folks, seem unaware of the meaning and impact. Don't expect anything from us they say. Get your own. This is the other side of the coin of respectability politics: respectability politics for the 'othered' Black people. How different is ADOS claims  from the birther claims of Donald Trump and company.

US-centricity is a troubling aspect of the current commission discussing Rep. Sheila Lee’s sponsored bill (H.R.40) for a commission on reparations. Hopefully, Puerto Rico and The US Virgin Islands will not be ignored. But this is global. Historical maps of Africa or the Caribbean will list the various European colonizers of each country, but never show US business and political interest involved in everything including enslavement, and everything that followed as it did in the mainland. The US attended the Berlin Conference in 1884-85 that divided Africa among European nations. The Americas was left to the Americans and surely after the Spanish American War. Missing from the discussion is the US role in Africa, Panama and the Panama Canal, interventions in Haiti, in Grenada, Jamaica, Domincan Republic, Chile and Guyana to name a few. Africans everywhere, in the whole of the Americas and Africa, have had to contend with racism and exploitation similar to Africans in America and as a consequence of US action. Could we seriously think of compensating a child for kidnapping and exploiting that child and with no thought to her siblings and her mother. 

Today, the one percent are the biological and ideological children of the one percent that was Clarke, Washington, Hamilton and Royall. Inequality forces the 99 percent into a conflict among each other.  Aggression is directed at the politically and economically weakened. The weakened fight among themselves. Recent immigrants fight intended immigrants. Crips fight the Bloods. ADOS fight the rest. The pain is that we use something created to oppress us against us. Constraints placed on all of us are, by a sleight-of-mind, shifted and placed against non-USDOS and to deny them any loose-change handed down by the ones who benefitted and continue to benefit most from that creation. Imperialism loves to exploit differences. Know your real enemy. It is one of the reasons we find ourselves in this condition. We ought to know the real reason. I believe Dr. West knows better. If not, we are in more trouble than I thought.

Notes and Things

[1] I use ascent and descent interchangeably as a positive spin on the lives of the children of the survivors of captivity. Additionally, Africans and Latinos are not the only people forced from their homes. Asians, Middle Easterners and Europeans too are being displaced and seeking new homes away from their home countries but do not attract the same level of media coverage.  
[3]  Despite celebrating a kind of independence, these and most Caribbean countries are still today constitutional monarchies with the British Crown as their head and the British Privy Council as the highest and final court.
[4] The Dutch colonies of Demerara, Essequibo and Berbice were formally ceded to the British in 1814 and combined as British Guiana in 1831.  The country was renamed Guyana at independence in 1966. 
[5] The Indigenous Nations apart, there were no Americans until 1776. But North American born or based slaveholders operated with their own state militias whether in Massachusetts or Barbados. I use American interchangeably to describe what and who would become American in 1776.
[6] Excerpted from a speech made by Walter Rodney at a rally commemorating African Liberation Day, 1974, San Francisco, CA. Rodney Speech.
[7] The New England Quarterly, Vol. 76, No. 4 (Dec., 2003), pp. 499-549 (51 pages)
Published by: The New England Quarterly, Inc. Clarke, Snr. is reported to have died painfully racked with fever and abdominal problems.
[8] Profits from the colonies in the Caribbean surpassed that of the mainland colonies and the substantial tax burden to the British monarchy precipitated the American Revolution.
[9] Profits and the levels of production in Barbados alone dwarfed that of its British North American colonies before the rise of cotton. 
[10] Britain paid $26.2 million to 46,000 slaveholders including many in the USA. The payments almost bankrupted the Crown.
[11] Of the 132 Africans executed for conspiring in the Antigua revolt, 77 were burned at the stake. Another 130 men and women were executed at Berbice for daring to be free of European domination
[12]Guyana constitution at the time allowed for a ceremonial president, like a constitutional monarch, but the real power was the Prime Minister. That would change in 1980 and the President became the real power.

Comments

sweetchile said…
Cornel and Carnell should have a round tabke with Hilary Beckles.
clairmont Mali chung said…
Dr. Beckles has not directed his demands to the US. This is a similar oversight that must be corrected. Beyond that, ideologically I dont see much difference. Beckles publicly expressed his love for Britain and the years he spent there. I dont think he was talking about its people. I believe he meant all it stood for and what it did for him. Problems.problems.
Anonymous said…
A tangible end-game for Survival people.
Anonymous said…
Hi to all, the contents existing at this weeb page are in fact awessome forr people experience, well,
keep up the good work fellows.

Popular posts from this blog

Across A Bridge in Linden: To El Dorado or a Symbol of our Historical Dilemma.

Wismar-Mackenzie Bridge, Linden The Guyana Police Force. Improperly Dressed for Peace (C) Norvell Fredericks Demerara Bauxite Company was Canadian owned before nationalization in 1970.Things have changed ((C) N. Fredericks) The People United ((c) N. Fredericks) By: Clairmont Chung On July 18, 2012 residents in Linden, Guyana, blocked a bridge in protest against a plan to increase electricity rates. The State responded by firing on the unarmed crowd. Three people died and several more were wounded. Residents responded by seizing and occupying that, and a second, bridge. A state of siege, undeclared martial law, descended on the community and continues as I write. Here I attempt to show the history of our dependence on fuels, energy, and violence and why the bridge at Linden is such an important symbol. Linden is not alone, it’s happening to people everywhere. It is not a romantic lament about the good old days. They were not. It’s the same strategy of old...

The Beckles’, The Gayles, The Dons, Caribbean Cricket, and Slavery: A Rudie Awakening

By Clairmont Chung All of the three people, who read my blog, counting my siblings, know I have written about the strange decisions of the West Indies Cricket Board and proposed reasons. Now, one of the WICB’s directors, Sir Hilary Beckles dramatically clarified these strange decisions and the WICB’s intentions. The WICB has dropped, fired and maligned some of the best players in the world. Prof. Hilary Beckles, also the Principal at University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus, Barbados, recently addressed an audience in St. Kitts, at the annual Frank Worrell Memorial lecture entitled  “Frank Worrell: The Rise & Fall of West Indies Cricket” [i] . In that address, Dr. Beckles described the attitude some players, namely Chris Gayle and Marlon Samuels, exhibit as ‘donmanship’. He said, "Those who follow him (Gayle) and his cohort in the team do relate to him as their don and it is said that he has brought the donmanship into how things operate in the (West Indies) team....

The Real Gangsters: Spreading Silence by Violence

by clairmont chung While reasoning with a youth-man-friend from Kitty, it struck me: we are approaching our lowest levels of depravation. We are being robbed and killed by the police and without reprimand from their superiors. It is not new. Some live in fear and silence. This youth left The Edge, a Main Street nightclub, early one morning. He decided to walk home to Kitty, because it was one of those special early mornings: dewy but fresh, wet but dry. He made it all the way from South Cummingsburg, through Albertown and almost Queenstown, next was Kitty, before being stopped. The police, Black Clothes -it’s really a darkish blue, faded-, pulled up. They took his cell phone and returned to their vehicle. He was told not to move. They returned to say his was a stolen phone. He needed his Blackberry. It was a birthday gift from his family. He offered $6000.00 for its return. The police took the $6000.00 relieved him of his remaining cash and drove off. But not before a few ...