Organizational Failure To Thrive
by
Gail Jarvis
by
Gail Jarvis
"Failure
to thrive" is a clinical diagnosis that has always intrigued
me. The term is used when physicians are unable to determine why
an individual is not growing at a normal healthy rate; why its development
is at a standstill. But I believe the phrase accurately describes
many non-medical conditions. We all know people whose intellectual
development seems to have been arrested at some point in their lives;
folks that are failing to thrive. And I’ve experienced many a Monday
morning when my condition could best be described as a failure to
thrive.
Organizations
also suffer from this malady. They get stuck at some point in their
development and continue policies that are no longer productive.
Eventually they become complacent and begin to atrophy. One such
organization is the NAACP; especially the South Carolina chapter.
This organization has had a rendezvous with insignificance for some
years and it recently lost a sterling opportunity to reverse its
downward spiral.
I’m
referring to the election of a new NAACP president at the recent
meeting in Charlotte, North Carolina. The winning candidate, Dr.
Lonnie Randolph, representing the old entrenched policies, was chosen
out of a field of five candidates. But Randolph received only 16
more votes than the runner up, Ms. Madie Robinson, who advocates
the pursuit of practical rather than symbolic issues. Although Ms.
Robinson expressed serious concerns about the election process,
she has not officially challenged the results.
One
of the major differences between Dr. Randolph and Ms. Robinson is
their opposing stance on the economic boycott against the state
because of the Confederate flag’s presence on statehouse grounds.
Randolph supports the boycott as well as other dramatic measures
to eliminate Southern heritage. On the other hand, Ms. Robinson,
and her supporters, believe that the Confederate flag issue is not
a pressing one. They maintain that improving educational opportunities
for black youths is far more crucial.
Ms.
Robinson is one of four opposition candidates who recently campaigned
before a group of about 100 members of the state organization. Interestingly,
the candidates’ remarks contained no references to the boycott or
the Confederate flag. When the subject was raised in the question
and answer period, these candidates continued to give it a low priority.
They also took issue with the state organization’s decision to hold
the NAACP meeting outside of South Carolina in order to comply with
the boycott. In fact, one candidate argued: "The people that
need to be here, the underprivileged, can’t get here because they
can’t afford to get to Charlotte."
In
expressing concern over the threat gangs pose to black communities,
another candidate stated: "There are more important issues
than the flag. We need a new strategy. It’s something we need to
do something about before it gets out of hand." And yet another
candidate maintained that health care is the top problem facing
blacks in South Carolina, stating: "AIDS is still rampant in
our community, they just don’t talk about in the media anymore.
I believe in being on the front lines, addressing the issues where
they occur, … For too long we (the NAACP) have been almost like
a social club."
Madie
Robinson summarized the positions of all four candidates by advocating
a new set of priorities for the state NAACP: "There are issues
that need addressing and they aren’t being addressed. And if we
bury our heads in the sand and act as if they are, then we have
more serious problems than I thought."
But
tackling the endemic problems facing black communities does not
attract media attention nor does it produce photo-ops. On the other
hand, protestations over the Confederate flag and the organization’s
other anti-Southern "show business" ploys always get media
coverage and that helps fill coffers during fund raising drives.
This is because many of the organization’s donors live in other
parts of the country and their knowledge of things Southern comes
primarily from versions of the South fashioned by the mainstream
media. Mainstream journalists usually defend all NAACP attacks on
Southern heritage regardless of merit. They also write unflatteringly
about Southerners who seek to preserve the region’s distinctiveness
rather than allow it to be morphed into a clone of the Northeast.
Worst of all, these journalists appear to be blissfully unaware
of the growing discontent black Southerners are expressing over
the NAACP’s priorities.
President-elect
Randolph embraces the views of outgoing President James Gallman
as well as another very vocal NAACP member, State Sen. Darrell Jackson.
Insight into their philosophy, as well as their reading of American
history, can be gained from recent pronouncements on the Confederate
flag, the boycott, and the proposed burial ceremony for the bodies
of eight Confederate sailors found when the submarine, CSS Hunley,
was raised in Charleston harbor.
Responding
to media questions about the necessity of continuing the boycott,
Dr. Randolph stated: "You have to understand the dynamics and
the politics of South Carolina’s leadership historically. Remember,
this is the state that declared war on America. And that stubbornness
that existed then still exists today." Randolph also stated
that the Confederate flag "represent(s) white supremacy, which
affects all issues for African-Americans in the state." And
then Dr. Randolph made this remarkable statement. "Symbolism
is realism in South Carolina."
The
importance of the economic boycott was also defended by Mr. Gallman
who stated: "Unfortunately, you’ve got legislators who would
rather see our state plummet down in terms of lost revenue rather
than do the right thing." As to its effectiveness, Gallman
offered this curious assessment: "I think the mere fact that
we (South Carolina NAACP) are in Charlotte says it’s working and
working very well."
Senator
Darrell Jackson vehemently objected to proposals put forth to honor
the Hunley crew with a formal "lying in state" in the
Capitol building; an honor that was allowed for a Civil War soldier
whose remains were discovered a few years ago. The plans for a lying
in state at the Capitol were eventually abandoned, possibly because
of rumors of threatened public demonstrations against such a tribute.
However, a burial ceremony for the Confederate sailors will be held
in Charleston in April.
Regarding
the consecration ceremony for the Hunley crew proposed for Charleston,
Mr. Gallman stated: "However they choose to bury them, our
concern is the number of dollars they are spending to bury traitors."
Senator Jackson added: "Can you imagine how we would be perceived
by the rest of the world honoring these men who fought for slavery?"
The
H.L. Hunley submarine has produced worldwide media attention as
well as a lengthy article in the National Geographic. This media
coverage has generated immense curiosity in Europe as well as the
United States. Those who have taken the time to inform themselves
on the unique historical significance of the Hunley submarine believe
that it deserves a museum of its own in Charleston.
But
talk of a proposed museum for the CSS Hunley produced another angry
response from Senator Jackson who objected to spending taxpayers'
money on such a project. Unable to quell the enthusiasm for the
museum, Jackson demanded that "Visitors should be told the
reasons for the Union blockade and be given the slaves’ point of
view: that the 250,000 S.C. whites stood to lose their 400,000 slaves
if they lost the war. The last thing the rest of the world needs
is to regard South Carolina as the state where the Confederacy lives
forever. We don’t need a shrine to the Confederacy."
We
can safely assume that the unfortunate comments of these gentlemen
offer a preview of coming attractions for the South Carolina chapter
of the NAACP. These men don’t seem to understand that the slavery
ruse has been squeezed dry. Not only does it fail to produce "white
guilt syndrome" but even the black community has grown weary
of the subject. Still we can expect the organization to continue
alienating South Carolina whites with its harsh, but ineffectual,
adversarial rhetoric. Symbolism rather than substance will continue
to be the order of the day. And maligning Southern heritage will
take precedence over the confrontation of crucial problems that
Ms. Robinson and others claim are not being addressed.
It
is imperative that Madie Robinson and other opposition candidates,
who are pushing for a dramatic "new direction" for the
state NAACP, continue their struggle. They must be encouraged by
the vote in the recent election when they came so close to dethroning
the impotent leadership still stuck in the 1960s. This opposition
group is well aware that Confederate memorabilia; flags, songs and
monuments, are not preventing blacks from achieving. They know that
its time for their organization to end its failed economic boycott,
ignore the Confederate flag and other Southern heritage symbols,
and begin addressing the real problems plaguing black communities.
October
24, 2003
Gail
Jarvis [send
him mail], a CPA living in
Beaufort, SC, is an advocate of the voluntary union of states established
by the founders.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
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