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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
46 w

Bidding Adieu to a Pioneering Poet of Racial Grievance
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spectator.org

Bidding Adieu to a Pioneering Poet of Racial Grievance

I first encountered Nikki Giovanni, who died on Monday at the age of 81, in the pages of the 1973 edition of the Norton Anthology of Modern Poetry. It was the mid-1970s, and I was an undergraduate English major, and that thick blue paperback was the textbook for one of my classes. Arranged in chronological order by the birth date of the poet, it began with works by Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson, and Thomas Hardy (who would become my favorite poet) and moved on through dozens of others, ranging from William Butler Yeats and Robert Frost (both of whom I loved) to William Carlos Williams and Ezra Pound (both of whom left me cold), and ended with two poets born in 1943: Nikki Giovanni and James Tate. Tate, who died in 2015, was just fine. But Giovanni? Well, she was my introduction to the Black Arts Movement, which was then a decade or so old. The anthology — I still have my half-century-old copy, which is lying open on the desk in front of me — contains three of Giovanni’s poems, prefaced by a nearly page-long introduction. “Nikki Giovanni,” it begins, “is very clear about whom she writes for and what she writes about, and she says so with care and intimidating directness. She writes out of the experience of a black American woman, and she is willing to share that experience only with those who recognize it as their own. White readers are warned away.” In short, whites are not welcome. Nowadays we’re used to this kind of thinking — the word for which is racism — on the part of black entertainers and race hustlers. But in the 1970s it was still a relatively new phenomenon. Indeed, Giovanni’s desire to be read only by people in her own demographic was the very opposite of the attitude toward literature and race that had previously been voiced by black writers and thinkers. The Souls of Black Folk, the 1903 book by W.E.B. Du Bois, the author, intellectual, and pioneering black civil-rights advocate, contains a famous passage about the fact that great literature knows no color, and no color line: I sit with Shakespeare, and he winces not. Across the color line I move arm and arm with Balzac and Dumas, where smiling men and welcoming women glide in gilded halls. From out of the caves of evening that swing between the strong-limbed Earth and the tracery of stars, I summon Aristotle and Aurelius and what soul I will, and they come all graciously with no scorn nor condescension. These are stirring sentences, and they express a beautiful sentiment. It was, of course, such thinking on the part of both black and white Americans that helped our country move beyond the era of racial segregation and prejudice. But Nikki Giovanni wasn’t having it. “Nikki-Rosa” (1969), the first Giovanni poem in the Norton Anthology, begins with a flat-out declaration of radical differentness: “childhood remembrances are always a drag / if you’re Black.” Why a drag? Because, she explains, “if you become famous or something / they never talk about how happy you were.” Giovanni goes on to describe, rather affectingly, a childhood lived in poverty – “you got your bath from one of those / big tubs that folk in chicago barbecue in” — but redeemed by love: “everybody is together and you / and your sister have happy birthdays and very good christmasses.” Now, this is a poem, I would submit, to which anyone who grew up poor but happy could relate. It’s not about being black. It’s about being a famous person who grew up poor. But for Giovanni, race is all: “and I really hope no white person ever has cause / to write about me / because they never understand / Black love is Black wealth.” Black, black, black. Got that? Black! How, may I ask, is black love different from white love? Another early poem, “The Great Pax Whitie” (1968),  doesn’t just push white people away, it’s full of raw racial rage: “In the beginning was the word / And the word was / Death / And the word was nigger / And the word was death to all niggers.” But the rage here is directed not just at whites but at capitalism (“Lot’s wife is now a product of the Morton company”) and at America (“Where war became peace / And genocide patriotism”). Giovanni equates the Nazis’ Holocaust with America’s involvement in the  Korean War and attributes both to capitalistic motives: “And they barbecued six million / To raise the price of beef / And crossed the 38th parallel / To control the price of rice.” And just for good measure, she brings in the assassinations of JFK and Martin Luther King, Jr.: “So the great white prince / Was shot like a nigger in texas… / While our nigger in memphis / was shot like their prince in dallas.” It’s an awful poem — a shrill, shallow, sloppy, stupid mishmash of Allen Ginsberg and Amiri Baraka, a grab-bag of stale 1960s slogans, a would-be statement punctuated with words intended to shock. Not all of Giovanni’s poems are so racially charged. Yes, her first two poetry collections, both published in 1968, were entitled Black Feeling, Black Talk and Black Judgement; but over the ensuing decades, her work mellowed — for the most part, anyway. To be sure, she continued to posture occasionally as a rebel, a malcontent, and an ally of thugs, but more often she chose to rejoice in blackness without banging away about whitey. Her 2002 poem “BLK History Month,” which begins as follows, might have been written by Maya Angelou: “If Black History Month is not / viable then wind does not / carry the seeds and drop them / on fertile ground / rain does not / dampen the land / and encourage the seeds / to root.” And her 2009 inaugural poem for Barack Obama might have been written by, well, pretty much any third-rate rapper: “I’m Barack Obama / And I’m here to say: / I’m President / Of the USA.” (No kidding — that’s really the first stanza, and take my word for it, the rest of the poem isn’t any better.) Like many other black writers, artists, and activists of the 1960s and 70s who were part of the Black Power and/or Black Arts Movement and who made their names by depicting themselves as estranged from the white man’s world — and, in some cases, as openly hostile to honkies — Giovanni ended up having a successful career in the academy, spending 35 years as a professor at Virginia Tech. Also like many other blacks who proclaimed their alienation from white people, she was, throughout her career, showered by white people with awards: While still in her twenties, she was named Woman of the Year by both Mademoiselle and Ladies’ Home Journal and her website lists honorary degrees from no fewer than 27 different colleges. Yes, she actually listed them on her website. She was proud of her laurels. Her website also includes a brief autobiographical sketch in which she brags: “I have been awarded an unprecedented 7 NAACP Image Awards which makes me very very proud. I have been nominated for a Grammy; been a finalist for the National Book Award. I am very proud to have authored 3 New York Times and Los Angeles Times Best Sellers, highly unusual for a poet.  I am a University Distinguished Professor at Virginia Tech.” In 2020, she even published a poem, “Biography,” in which she boasts: “There is a plaque / In Lincoln Heights / Where I went / To school / And a Plaque / In Knoxville / Across the street / Where my grandparents lived.” Notice something about this poem? It’s not much of a poem. It’s broken up into lines, and that’s about it. She capitalizes “plaque” in one line but not in another. Does this have any significance? I doubt it. I think such inconsistencies are part and parcel of the offhand manner that characterizes all of her work. Indeed, politics entirely aside, to read through Giovanni’s oeuvre is, most of all, to become increasingly frustrated at the dull, dreary, deadening sameness of it all — the meager intellectual content, the banal assertions of the vital importance of racial identity, the addled doses of generic nostalgia (“I always like summer / best / you can eat fresh corn / from daddy’s garden / and okra / and greens / and cabbage / and lots of / barbecue”). To eschew rhyme and meter is one thing; but, for heaven’s sake, it’s possible for even the freest of free verse to contain striking, memorable lines — familiar sentiments articulated in a fresh and surprising manner that opens one’s eyes and is pleasing to one’s ears. But that wasn’t Giovanni’s bag. It’s almost as if she was determined to avoid expressing anything in a remotely arresting way — as if extreme plainness were some kind of religion or a guarantor of emotional authenticity. Alas, it isn’t. Perusing Nikki Giovanni’s poetry, one can’t help wondering how long it will continue to be read in an era that seems finally, perhaps, to be moving beyond the obsession with identity politics that made her famous. READ MORE from Bruce Bawer: The OxyContin Story A Quarter Century of Entertainment — and Propaganda Sandra Gilbert and Feminism’s Endless Rage The post Bidding Adieu to a Pioneering Poet of Racial Grievance appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
46 w

Americans Need Brendan Carr as FCC Chair to Rein in Big Tech
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Americans Need Brendan Carr as FCC Chair to Rein in Big Tech

Big Tech has grown accustomed to operating without limitations. The lack of necessary oversight is most evident in their efforts to censor and block users for speech they don’t like. With President Trump’s election victory, Big Tech will soon learn that Americans do not appreciate being muzzled. This lesson will be taught by Trump’s pick for FCC chairman, Brendan Carr. At the helm of the agency, he will bring much-needed reform to the digital space that has been under the boot of Big Tech for too long. In his statement announcing the selection of Carr for the role, President Trump called FCC Commissioner Carr a “warrior for Free Speech.” This title is well earned since, just days before the announcement, he sent a letter to Big Tech CEOs asking for answers relating to their reliance on the “Orwellian-named” company NewsGuard, which advertises itself as an unbiased rater of news organizations. Carr rightly points out that NewsGuard betrays their self-righteousness by “[operating] as part of the broader censorship cartel.” He backed up his rhetoric by pointing to Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act and the protections it affords for good faith actions taken by Big Tech. Since the FCC has jurisdiction over the implementation of those protections, Carr can leverage Section 230 to get Big Tech to respect the free speech of Americans. He posted on X that “Any tech company that continues to rely on NewsGuard is putting its Section 230 protections in serious jeopardy.” Carr is also outspoken about the “messy, delayed rollout” of high-speed internet to Americans provided for in the 2021 infrastructure bill. The bill specifically set aside $42 billion for this purpose — money that has not been used to connect a single home or business. He called out the Biden administration for its focus on rewarding political friends rather than helping tax-paying Americans get online. Additionally, Carr brought up how an $885 million infrastructure award won in the 2020 FCC auction by Starlink to connect rural homes and businesses was revoked by the FCC for seemingly no good reason. A Facebook post calling out the egregious behavior of the Biden administration was censored by the company at the behest of a third-party fact-checker. Carr blasted the decision and called for the platform to stop censoring posts on behalf of the government. Broadcast media is also in Carr’s sights. In the lead-up to the election, NBC gave airtime to Kamala Harris by featuring her on “Saturday Night Live” the weekend before the election. Carr called out the behavior citing the FCC’s Equal Time rule which is intended to stop “a licensed broadcaster using the public airwaves to exert its influence for one candidate on the eve of an election.”  Broadcast media’s privileged use of limited airwaves requires them to respect the public interest. Carr posted on X that he intends to enforce the requirement. Outlined by Carr in the Heritage Foundation’s presidential transition publication, Project 2025, is a whole host of necessary FCC reforms. Some examples include expanding transparency rules to cover Big Tech and updating the “Covered List” of risky communication equipment to better protect national security. Carr is meticulously aware of what needs to be reformed and prioritized if the FCC is going to be successful in achieving its mission. Carr is laser-focused on restoring fairness and free speech to the internet and other communication networks. As chairman of the FCC, he will be in a perfect position to do just that. By stopping the abuses of Big Tech, holding broadcast media to higher standards, ending the political abuse of the FCC, and implementing other necessary changes, Carr will be able to make sure that Americans are free to generate and consume content online without fear of censorship or punishment. Americans needed a free speech champion at the helm of the FCC and President Trump delivered exactly that. Caleb Larson is a cybersecurity researcher, policy analyst with the Internet Accountability Project, Heritage Foundation alum, and contributor at The Federalist where he writes about cybersecurity-related issues facing the United States. READ MORE from Caleb Larson: Close the AI Cloud Loophole Google Controls the Internet … and Us! Amazon Should Be Pro-America, Not Pro-China The post Americans Need Brendan Carr as FCC Chair to Rein in Big Tech appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
46 w

Joe Biden’s COVID Nation
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Joe Biden’s COVID Nation

WASHINGTON — “Washington is still operating as if it’s March 2020. The headquarters of most agencies remain largely abandoned,” Sen. Joni Ernst wrote in a report released Thursday that paints a dystopian picture of the federal workforce inside the vaunted beltway. It’s been nearly five years since COVID knocked on America’s door. Most schools and businesses opened up years ago. But federal government operations in Washington, D.C. are behind the flyover states. Because of COVID, President Joe Biden campaigned from home in 2020. But after American classrooms and businesses reopened, Biden has been a frequently absent executive since he took the oath of office. Ernst figured Biden “was out of office 532 days over the last three-and-a-half years, about 40 percent of the time he was expected to be in the Oval Office.” The no-show mentality has filtered from the top down. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin didn’t bother to inform Biden when he was hospitalized for days. Defense Deputy Secretary Kathleen Hicks ran the Pentagon while on a beach vacation in Puerto Rico. Moscow and Beijing must be gleeful. In the past, when partial shutdowns shuttered agencies and curtailed services because Congress was dithering, instead of passing funding measures, the press went into overdrive with warnings of dire consequences. But when agencies that are supposed to serve the public — inspecting baby formula, screening calls from veterans who desperately need mental health services, processing student aid applications — don’t have enough working staff, Americans don’t get time off from paying taxes. Ernst is a founder and member of the DOGE (Department of Government Efficiency) caucus that is preparing to go after the worst abuses in the federal workforce. According to Ernst, “the nation’s capital is a ghost town, with government buildings averaging an occupancy rate of 12 percent.” The Biden administration has been in no hurry to get federal workers back to the office — to the displeasure of D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, as well as area eateries and businesses. An updated contract between the Social Security Administration and the American Federation of Government Employees extends work-from-home policies — reporting to the office between two and five days a week — into 2029. TrumpLand has a better take. In a piece that ran in the Wall Street Journal last month, DOGE czars Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy wrote of commonsense reforms that should send a thrill up voters’ legs — most notably, a requirement that federal workers in the D.C. area come to the office five days a week. The DOGE duo expects that the policy “would result in a wave of voluntary terminations that we welcome.” Federal employees who show up for work and do their jobs diligently must be enraged at these abuses. According to Ernst, 3 percent of the federal workforce teleworked daily before COVID; now 6 percent report in-person on a full-time basis, while nearly a third work entirely remotely. The arrogance of those who abused COVID measures can be breathtaking. A Veterans Administration manager dialed into a meeting from his bathtub. He took a selfie of himself in the tub with the headline, “My office for the next hour.” “Instead of pulling the plug on these ‘bubble bath bureaucrats,’ taxpayer dollars keep going down the drain paying their salaries and maintaining their empty offices,” Ernst wrote. I’ve been in this business for so long that I remember when partial government shutdowns generated horror stories about the disasters about to fall upon a vulnerable public. Now we learn that nearly a third of the government workforce is entirely remote. Sort of like Joe Biden. Contact Review-Journal Washington columnist Debra J. Saunders at dsaunders@reviewjournal.com. Follow @debrajsaunders on X. COPYRIGHT 2024 CREATORS.COM READ MORE from Debra J. Saunders: Smear the Conservative: Episode 2761, Pete Hegseth Don’t Be a Turkey on Thanksgiving Sabotaging Trump: Abolishing Migrant Restrictions The post Joe Biden’s COVID Nation appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
46 w

The Real Scandal of Hunter‘s Pardon
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The Real Scandal of Hunter‘s Pardon

by Ron Paul, Ron Paul Institute: Politicians and pundits spent much of last week commenting on President Biden’s pardon of his son Hunter for lying on a federal gun purchase form, failing to pay taxes, and any other offenses he may have committed over the past decade. Much of the controversy is because President Biden […]
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
46 w

Understanding the Implications of the CME’s New 1 oz Gold Futures
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Understanding the Implications of the CME’s New 1 oz Gold Futures

by Jesse Colombo, The Bubble Bubble Report: The CME is launching a gold futures contract to meet surging demand from retail traders, but it will only flood the market with more ‘paper’ gold. CME Group Inc., the parent company of COMEX, the leading U.S. exchange for gold and silver futures, will introduce a one-ounce gold futures contract […]
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Country Roundup
Country Roundup
46 w ·Youtube Music

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Duck Dynasty Family Reacts to Phil Robertson's Heartbreaking Diagnosis
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Country Roundup
Country Roundup
46 w ·Youtube Music

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Garth Brooks’ Surprising Marriage Advice Amid Explosive Lawsuit
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
46 w ·Youtube Politics

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Daniel Penny is a Hero But the Left Wants to Smear and Slander Him, with Heather Mac Donald
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
46 w ·Youtube Politics

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House Oversight Chair Gives Update on Jan. 6th Investigation
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
46 w ·Youtube Politics

YouTube
Mark Levin Audio Rewind - 12/10/24
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