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Submitted by Pachamama
Bussa
Bussa

When General Bussa, in 1816, declared war on Barbados he was not so much interested in a little bit of freedom. His position at Bayley’s Plantation gave him the space to plot such a revolution. He already had this little bit of freedom. However, he was destined to overthrow the apparatus of the pernicious government of Barbados to achieve the rights all people desire. He wanted a revolution. A revolution not unlike the Haitian revolution as inspired by His Excellency. He knew of the Haitian Revolution of the 1790’s to 1803. General Bussa also knew that by taking on the merchant-planter elites he was also taking on a global apparatus of oppression. That apparatus represented a violent, terrorist structure based on chattel slavery as the global political-economy model. Indeed, the original sins of capitalism and slavery underlie the current rebellion catching the United States on fire. Bussa might have lost his war for independence but the fight for justice continues with Ferguson, Saint Louis, MO, as its epicenter. This global struggle will always find tinder amongst the descendant of Bussa around the world. For His descendant have struggled for another 200 years since and have not managed to shake off the vestiges of institutionalized slavery and racism, a struggle in which he gave his life. Such sacred martyrdom elevates Him beyond petty notions of nationalism.

Closer to ‘ground zero’ we find other Bussas and their major rebellions. Denmark Vessey (1822); Gabrial Prosser (1800), Nat Turner (1831); the New York City Rebellion (1712); Stono Rebellion (1739) Louisiana Revolt (1811); the Black Seminole Rebellion (1835-38)*. In nearly all cases we had the participation of predominately African-Americans, maroons and American-Indians but also a small number of Whites with African-Americans dying in their hundreds, at times, for freedom from chattel slavery.

The dynamics which gave rise to the Rebellion in Ferguson are not much different. At its center we have a claim by a White police officer to the right to kill an African-American, as if chattel, with the expectation that in the exercise of such a right there were to be no consequences as ordained in the Dred Scott, Supreme Court Decision 1857. The counter narrative by the rebellious African-Americans is that such a right is not and can no longer be recognized. This is the juncture at which a protest turns to a riot, a riot turns to a rebellion and a rebellion turns to a revolution. A Bussa Revolution of 2014 at the centre of global arrogance!

A critical analysis of the constellation of forces paraded will find more similarities than differences to previous rebellions. Firstly, we have an African-American leadership more interested in their own position as protectors of the status quo than the liberation theology they often preach. Secondly, we have a mass media committed to that same slavery, post-slavery ‘normalcy’ than providing critical information from the real activists on the ground who are largely unknown but whose selfless efforts sustain the rebellion and continue to demand revolution. Thirdly, we have political leaders, at all levels, whose only real intent is to restore than very ‘normalcy’ at any cost. Especially in the Presidency, where the current placeholder, a slippery character, will betray the forces of resistance with a nod, while infiltration these very progressive forces with all manner of government agents aimed at destroying them from within. Cointelpro redux! Fourthly, we have White people whose very economic survival is contingent on the existence of crypto-racism. To them justice means economic transformation for African-Americans and this will not be allowed to happen, in their minds, any time soon. For the uplift of Blacks may translate to the impoverishment of more Whites. All these forces of oppression are indeed enabled by official systems of oppression. Whether its the court systems, the education systems, the social systems, the economic system, the political systems and yes the police and military industrial systems. They all work to maintain the oppression of the African-American people today.

And yes we went back as far as 200 years but there are more recent rebellions within the United States  aimed at transforming the condition of the African-American. A series of rebellions ending in the so-called civil rights movement of the late 1950’s to the early 1970’s. An accomodationalist devise which maintains the underlying system of racism but with a pretence that African-Americans were to enjoy increased social and political freedoms as consistent with certain earlier amendments to the Constitution. Especially the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments. Not so! This attempt could be no longer be presented as a genuine attempt at equalizing the rights of all people in the USA. The reverse being true situate Africa-Americans in a currently worse position than they have been especially when compared with a short-lived period of Reconstruction, or before the very Civil Rights period. What a sleight of hand. So we have currently 1000’s of Fergusons constituting the powder kegs for rebellion and revolution within the American empire.

This American empire has long lost its way, at home and abroad. Having lost its way we can expect a similar trajectory of decline which we have seen before. Indeed, the Ferguson Rebellion may ignite the fires of revolution shouldering within empire at a time when Washington is less and less able to respond with a state apparatus to subvert growing demands for justice. When leaderless movements are not as easily decapitated like happened many times before. When large swaths of people are unwilling to follow the official narratives and distrust officialdom more and more. When it is clear that the centre cannot hold and that racist systems can no longer guide human behaviors. When African-Americans, poor Whites, White from the former middle classes, Indian-Americans, Hispanics and others are loosing confidence in the establishment. The Ferguson Rebellion may indeed be that straw which breaks the back of empire, at home, and leads to the better world we seek. That better world may be given birth in protest but must end with a real revolution.


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118 responses to “The Ferguson Rebellion – When a Protest Turns to a Riot, a Riot to a Rebellion and a Rebellion to a Revolution”

  1. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    Sorry not inseminated I meant conceived, that is a Freudian slip of an ole man that live in Bulbados,

    Forgive me, instead uh going en get de insulin stick from de madam I heah writing alot uh foolishness


  2. pieceuhderockyeahright | August 22, 2014 at 6:12 PM |

    @ Dompey

    “before Abraham was, I AM…”

    In your submission at August 22, 2014 at 3:42 AM you said, and I quote “because it was Marcus Garvey a West Indian, who was the FIRST BLACK MAN in the America’s to aroused the collective conscience of the Black masses.”

    This is erroneous for a number of reasons because it denies the existence of men like W.E. Du Bois and Booker T Washington to name a few who whom history records, even though their views might have been opposed to or at variance with those of Garvey, they operated in the sphere of “arousing black consciousness” as well.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Garvey used the term Negro, not Black as in the UNIA not UBIA.

    He used Black in the “Black Star Line” referring to a thing, not a person

    Black as we use it now is of a more recent vintage.

    Some of the older heads who considered themselves Negroes were not amused when the change was made.

    Today Black is used without really thinking.

    http://www.virginia.edu/woodson/courses/aas102%20(spring%2001)/articles/names/bennett.htm

  3. Easy Squeeze (Make No Riot) Avatar
    Easy Squeeze (Make No Riot)

    Freedom Fighter

    http://youtu.be/PxoAFqXnV0g


  4. A Missouri police officer who gained notoriety after shoving CNN host Don Lemon during live coverage Monday from Ferguson, Mo., has been suspended over a YouTube video in which he rails against “our undocumented president” and the “black-robed perverts” of the U.S. Supreme Court and at one point says: “I’m into diversity. I kill everybody, I don’t care”…Officer Dan Page, who was among regional police officers deployed during protests that erupted after Officer Darren Wilson fatally shot 18-year-old Michael Brown on Aug. 9, has been placed on administrative leave, said St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar…Belmar said he was not aware of the video until CNN phoned Friday to say it had obtained a tape of Page speaking in 2012 to an organization called the Oath Keepers, which describes itself as a group of law enforcement and military personnel compelled to disobey rules that they believe violate the U.S. Constitution.
    Among Page’s remarks in his rant: “I personally believe in Jesus Christ as my lord saviour but I’m also a killer. I’ve killed a lot. And, if I need to, I’ll kill a whole bunch more. If you don’t want to get killed, don’t show up in front of me, it’s that simple.”
    More here: http://www.thestar.com/news/world/2014/08/22/grand_jury_in_missouri_police_shooting_is_mostly_white.html



  5. Here is what can happen to a policeman …. an outcome we and our families are unlikely to face and can’t understand.

    As fate would have it, like Officer Wilson in Ferguson, he too was a highly commended 6 year veteran.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    http://news.msn.com/crime-justice/officer-critical-in-coma-after-california-gunfight

    SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (AP) — A veteran, second-generation police officer was in critical condition in a medically induced coma after being wounded in a shootout where the rookie officer he was training shot and killed a gunman, authorities said.

    Garcia and his partner — a trainee on the job for just two months — stopped to talk to a group of people standing outside a home on a cul de sac when one of them pulled a gun and immediately opened fire, Burguan said.

    He was shot, but his partner managed to shoot the gunman in the long gun fight that followed, the chief said.

    The officer in training was not hit during the gunfire. Given his level of experience, his response was exceptional, Burguan said.

    “He did a pretty remarkable job,” the chief said.

    The shooter, identified by police as Alex Alvarado, 38, died at a hospital.

    Garcia was initially said to be in grave condition, but after he made it through surgery police expressed new hope for his survival, and officers, family and friends gathered at the hospital for a vigil Friday night.

    “The next three to five days are absolutely critical in terms of Gabe’s long-term prognosis,” Burguan said.

    Garcia is a highly commended, six-year veteran of the department who has spent much of his career on patrol duty and some time on a graffiti task force, Burguan said.

    “He is exemplary in every sense of the word,” the chief said.

    Five people were detained and questioned by detectives. It was unclear why the officers made contact with the group.

    Jonathan Contreras, 20, of San Bernardino was arrested on suspicion of possession of an assault rifle and possession of a sawed-off rifle, officials said. While Alvarado fired the weapons, they were in the possession of Contreras, the chief said.

    Another man, 24-year-old Orlando Cruz, was arrested in connection with outstanding traffic warrants. Two women, 18 and 19, and a 30-year-old man were also questioned.

    “We don’t know what their level of involvement is,” Burguan said.


  6. @Dear John

    Keeping it real:

    http://youtu.be/s-TfPzN0FVY


  7. Anoter policeman shot and killed when seeking to arrest a suspect, this time the Chief.http://news.msn.com/crime-justice/police-chief-in-small-texas-town-killed


  8. @Vincent

    What the article confirms is issues of race is a complex and moving issue. The “yellow” conversation exist in Barbados as well. The only way to confront and change is to discuss it in the open to expose the ignorance where it exist.

    On Sunday, 24 August 2014, Barbados Underground wrote:

    >


  9. David

    Totally agree,I await the melanin/class discussion….


  10. @Vincent

    Issues like race, religion and the geopolitics of the ME will go around and around with end because they are driven by how one was educated (brain washed). Talk to a Syrian, talk to an American and what is the predictable outcome?

    On Sunday, 24 August 2014, Barbados Underground wrote:

    >


  11. Peice

    I am well aware of W.E. Du Bois Contribution to the Black American History. But he hadn’t arousing the Black consciousness in the same light as Marcus Garvey has done, and as a matter of fact, Du Bois and Garvey held a pathological hatred for each other. Garvey, felt that Du Bois was too White to refer to himself as a Black man. And Du Bois even when as far as to say that the UNIA, the organization Garvey founded, stands for the Uglest Negroes in America; referring to the majority of West Indians and their descendants who constituted the core of UNIA.


  12. A very important actor in the formation of the America Constitution, Sir Alexander Hamilton was born in Nevis British West Indies. The Late Stokely Carmichael, the Black Pather and civil rights activist was born in Port of Spain Trinidad. These two men have impacted the course of the American way of life.

    Yes, Malcolm X mother and both of Louis Farrakhan parents were West Indian, amongst many other prominent African Americans.

    West Indian descendants such as Loius Farrakhan, Malcolm X, and Harry Belafonte etc, parents were members of UNIA.


  13. David

    The Geopolitics of the ME has to do with only one thing…….OIL


  14. ….. and crude OIL is black, ………. until it has been refined!!

    From it we get gasoline, diesel to name but two important byproducts.


  15. John | August 25, 2014 at 8:42 AM |
    ….. and crude OIL is black, ………. until it has been refined!!
    ……………………………………………………………………………………….
    And by the same token , my hair was black and refined when I was young and dashing, now it is white and crude.


  16. Mine too …… except it has gotten finer with age

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