NC NAACP Email On Orlando: White People, Racism, Bigotry To Blame. Not Islamic Terror.

Ultimate InsultNC NAACP, the purveyor of hate in the State of North Carolina, tell us about the Orlando Islamic Terrorist attack:

Do not generalize from a deranged man consumed by hatred, to an ancient religion based on love.

You literally cannot make this crap up.

No horror is beyond the NC NAACP to exploit.

“Hate fuels hate.”
The self-awareness is staggering. This is the same group labeling HB 2 as “HATE BILL 2” and anyone opposing them are racists, bigots and haters. Seriously. That’s their ‘Moral Monday’ mantra.

Here’s the email, but be prepared it is one really, really long diatribe:

North Carolina NAACP
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 14, 2016
Contact: Tyler Swanson, tyler.swanson@naacpnc.org, 336-317-3586

We Cannot Let Hate Have the First, Last or Loudest Word
President of the Repairers of the Breach
By Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II

The New Testament teaches:

Whoever hates his brother is in the darkness and walks in the darkness. He does not know where he is going, because the darkness has blinded his eyes. – John 2:11

Tears are the order of the day. We mourn the loss of life. We grieve the destruction and the hurt and pain of so many in Orlando and across the nation. Many of our slaughtered and maimed brothers and sisters were members of the LGBTQ community. But, in a larger sense, in a better sense, we must say from our hearts, they were from our community. They remain members of our human family of love; in death, as they were in life, children of God, and we weep as one family.

But while we cry, we must also gain our composure and not allow hate or cynicism to have the first, the loudest, or the last word.

We cannot use hate as the path through our pain into our tomorrow. Hate fuels hate.

Racial hate, homophobic hate, religious hate, class hate, and the rhetoric of hate that drives the terrorist and the mob. The culture of hate creates the actions of hate. It is and always has been a recipe for murder.

The murderous forces of hate have watched people coming together against colonial oppression and systemic exploitation. They have witnessed people coming together and challenging racism, sexism, classicism, and the oppression against LGBT people. The forces of hate have looked on helplessly as millions of white and straight and males reject the old forms of domination. People of faith are awakening to unity against ancient lines of race and gender identity.

As late as last Friday, on the falls of the Ohio River where the enslaved once fled toward freedom, the forces of hate were the only group unwelcome as we mourned the most beloved Muslim in today’s world with the songs and poems and laughter of love. The full breadth of humanitylifted Muhammad Ali homeward on clouds of love. The forces of hate surely detested this outpouring for an Islamic Messenger of Love. Hate yearns for division and degradation among the people of the world rather than the beloved community.

On Saturday night, hate slouched into Orlando and tried to seize the moral low ground again. This was not the first time hate lashed out at the rise of love. During the two and a half centuries of slavery, the oppressors could hear freedom’s call among our enslaved ancestors, and reacted with violence and an insistence on obedience to hate among black and white alike; the blood of both black slaves and white abolitionists stained the banks of the Ohio where Ali would grow up under segregation.

In the 1890s, black and white citizens in North Carolina had forged an interracial “Fusion” alliance that won the governorship, both U.S. Senate seats, and the legislature. Together they moved to build public schools and expand political democracy. But hate armed itself and seized ballot boxes across the state. In Wilmington, the largest city at the time and the stronghold of the “Fusion” spirit, hate-filled mobs murdered scores of blacks and banished many of their white allies. Hate installed a white supremacist government both in Wilmington and in the state capital in a violent coup.

Hate spread mob violence across the nation. In New York City in 1900; Atlanta in 1906; Springfield, Illinois in 1908; and East St. Louis in 1917, white mobs assailed black communities, killing scores of people. In 1919,Charleston, South Carolina, Washington, D.C., Longview, Texas, Washington D.C. and many other cities, hate-fueled mobs killed black citizens at random and burned black homes. Hate dispatched the mobs into Tulsa in 1921 to kill many dozens of black citizens (some say over 300), burn 191 black businesses and 1,256 black homes, and leave 10,000 African Americans homeless.

World War II gave hate endless opportunities. In 1942, three hundred white people in Sikeston, Missouri took a black man named Cleo Wright from the jail, dragged him through town behind a car, doused him with gasoline and burned him alive. In 1943 alone, America saw 242 major racial clashes in 47 cities, with full-blown race riots in Detroit, Los Angeles, and Mobile.

In Beaumont, Texas, several hundred whites burned and looted the black section and killed two men. In Detroit, white mobs roamed the city attacking black people, leaving 34 dead—25 black and 9 white—as white police joined the mobs. Pauli Murray wrote: “Is this the brand of democracy we are asked to die for?”

On Christmas night of 1951, hate nestled a bundle of dynamite under the home of Harry T. Moore, founder of the Broward County NAACP, and his wife Harriet Simms Moore. It was their 25th wedding anniversary when the bomb killed both of them. In 1955, one year after the Brown decision, hate killed 14-year- old Emmett Till, a black boy from Chicago, after he allegedly flirted with a white woman at a store counter in the Mississippi Delta, where he was visiting his relatives.

On June 12, 1963, just hours after President John F. Kennedy had declared civil rights to be a moral issue, hate crept into a thicket near the house of Medgar Evers, field secretary of the Mississippi NAACP, and assassinated him with a high-powered rifle.

At the end of that summer, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. unfurled his dream of a nation cured of race hate before a crowd of a quarter million blacks and whites and millions more on television. Two weeks later, hate retaliated by setting off a bomb at the 16 th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, killing three little African American girls.

When hundreds of students, black, white, straight, gay, Jewish, Northern and Southern, came to Mississippi in 1964 to expose the disfranchisement of black citizens, hate murdered three young men, a native black Mississippian and two young white men from New York. In the 1965 march from Selma to Montgomery that won the Voting Rights Act, hate killed a white Unitarian minister from Washington, D.C., a black Baptist deacon from Alabama, and a white union woman from Detroit.

In 1968, hate stole Dr. King from us, though he lives for the ages. Just 21 years ago, a hate-crazed anti-government militia member detonated a bomb that killed 168 people, including children and infants, in Oklahoma City. Hate went into a classic rage just a year ago this week. A young white man, eaten up with race hate, took his pistol and attended a Bible study at an African American church in Charleston. After sitting with them for a time, he pulled his weapon and murdered nine people who had welcomed him with love.

Hate always reacts. But, hate is not the answer.

Down through the years, many who have experienced hate-driven suffering have still refused to respond with hate; they have held to the faith that love was still greater.

Hate always reacts when love is taking hold, when it begins to conquer the fearful heart.

Hate wants us to respond and react with hate. Hate seeks an unending circle of hate. But we cannot fall into hate’s trap. Not in our hearts. Not in our actions. Not in our politics. The people always lose in the politics of hate.

The cynical and the sinister among us will try to use this moment of pain to widen divisions among us. History has shown this to be true. There have always been those who want to aggravate the divisions between blacks and poor whites, between immigrant and American- born citizens, between gay and straight. Now they will try to promote divisions between

Muslims, non-Muslims and the LGBTQ community. We cannot allow our hearts in this moment of hurt — born of hate — to succumb to the politics of cynicism. In the shadow of Lincoln, and the relentless suffering and death caused by slavery ended 98 years earlier, Dr. King at the March on Washington said:

The marvelous new militancy which has engulfed the Negro community must not lead us to a distrust of all white people. For many of our white brothers, as evidenced by their presence here today, have come to realize that their destiny is tied up with our destiny. And they have come to realize that their freedom is inextricably bound to our freedom.

Today, even as we abhor violence by anyone, hate by anyone, terror by anyone, we cannot allow those who would prostitute our pain to cause us to distrust all Muslims. Do not generalize from a deranged man consumed by hatred, to an ancient religion based on love.

My friends, despite what you see on television, this is not a mere political moment. This is a moral moment. Those who know the power of love need to speak up. We cannot allow those who have stirred up hate to now offer themselves as the saviors from hate. Yes. I refer to a man who is running for President, and I refer to his deceitful statement, which points out the wrong way with the venomous self-regard of a fool.

“Last night, our nation was attacked by a radical Islamic terrorist. It was the worst terrorist attack on our soil since 9/11, and the second of its kind in 6 months. My deepest sympathy and support goes out to the victims, the wounded, and their families. “If we do not get tough and smart real fast, we are not going to have a country anymore.”

Mr. Trump closed with his message of hate. “Because our leaders are weak, I said this was going to happen – and it is only going to get worse. I am trying to save lives and prevent the next terrorist attack. We can’t afford to be politically correct anymore.”

Mr. Trump cynically plays with the pain of people to promote his hate-filled rhetoric and policies. Those who have in their history the commonality of suffering fromhate, know that those who have ultimately won the day are those who chose love. They are those who chose not to let hate define their lives. They are those who rose from the crucifixion of hate to the resurrection of love, truth, and justice.

So now, my sisters and brothers, we must choose whether we will lash out with the fear, division, and petulance that hate hands us or embrace love more boldly and walk with truth and justice.

Let us choose to join those who lived before us, who in the face of hate chose community, who chose love, who chose nonviolence, who chose the way of justice. Three weeks after Dr. King was murdered, Coretta Scott King his widow, marched in the street and spoke these words in the face of hate: My dear friends of peace and freedom: I come to New York today with a strong feeling that my dearly beloved husband, who was snatched suddenly from our midst slightly more than three weeks ago now, would have wanted me to be present today. Though my heart is heavy with grief from having suffered an irreparable personal loss, my faith in the redemptive will of God is stronger today than ever before.

This is the time for us to believe in the redemptive will of God. The Love of God even stronger than before. This is the time for us to stand for love even more. To believe even more. To hold, help, and honor the humanity and Imagp Dei in all of us even the more.

So as we cry today, let our tears be a fresh baptism for a commitment to walk together, children, and not get weary, for the promise of love still holds, and love will have the last word.

North Carolina NAACP · PO Box 335, Durham, NC 27702, United States

About A.P. Dillon

A.P. Dillon is a reporter currently writing at The North State Journal. She resides in the Triangle area of North Carolina. Find her on Twitter: @APDillon_ Tips: APDillon@Protonmail.com
This entry was posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), LGBTQ Issues, Moral Monday, NC NAACP, Reverend Barber and tagged . Bookmark the permalink.

1 Response to NC NAACP Email On Orlando: White People, Racism, Bigotry To Blame. Not Islamic Terror.

  1. Pinto says:

    “We Cannot Let Hate Have the First, Last or Loudest Word”
    Well, I guess all hate groups like La Raza, the NAACP, and the ACLU (to name three) had better shut up, then.

    Like

Comments are closed.