https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/opini...gMo?li=BBnb7Kz
One  of the sad consequences of how our national media depicts Black people  in America is how it flattens Black life. More often than not, when you  see Black people in the media, they are either millionaire athletes and  entertainers or poor dysfunctional people inclined to criminality or  other underclass pathologies. That this class polarity is an illusion  that erases the vast majority of Black Americans is lost on many  Americans, whose concept of Black America comes from rap music or their  favorite sports figures.
 But  this social flattening of Black life into millionaires and criminals  not only simplifies the perception of Black life; it erases the fact  that Black people are diverse not just economically but in many ways,  including in their political world views and ideas. Sadly, it's not only  the white media that is committed to the fallacy of Black class  stratification.
 There  exists a university-pedigreed cadre of race leaders—the Black Political  Class—who work as a "race management" elite that metaphorically corrals  Black electoral choices into a politically contained vessel. The Black  Political Class directs Black voter participation into a specific  faction of the political party in exchange for corporate patronage,  contractual set asides, and racial nepotism.
 And  because Black politics is mediated through an elite, highly-educated  class, it has swapped out a material politics that would help lift  African Americans out of poverty for a symbolic politics that allows the  members of an elite to charge for their services.
 "Black  politics... is a petit-bourgeois class politics that projects demands  for group recognition as equivalent to demands for popular  redistribution," writes political scientist Adolph Reed, Jr. in his  piece, "
The Three Tremes," where he argues that "recognition has increasingly displaced redistribution as the foundation of the political agenda."
 The  result of this shift has been that though the political needs of the  Black population are material, what we are served up are merely symbolic  benefits, while the material benefits go to the Black political class  alone—"specific individuals who organize, administer, and enact the  recognition," as Reed puts it.
  The  Black Political Class projects the illusion that it makes group demands  for recognition of so called "Black issues," while requesting little  redistribution of resources to most Black people. The Black political  class then uses that demand for recognition to promote a class agenda  that rewards their interests simply for seeming to advocate for the  "amorphous constituency known as the Black community."
 This  is not a new phenomenon. There is a long history in America of this  sort of thing. Race management as a means of Black political and social  control goes back to the nineteenth century, when the American political  establishment would select members of Black society who could be  elevated as brokers for the affairs of the overall Black population,  while acting as unelected racial ventriloquists for the political  aspirations and needs of Black citizens.
 The  sad reality of this race management paradigm is that these leaders were  elevated undemocratically, and they were chosen because their political  demands and social agenda fit most in line with the desires of the  American political establishment. Naturally, these race managers often  ensured that more radical forms of activism within the Black community  were neutralized or even crushed.
 In  the post-civil rights era, after the government's neutralization of  radical political activity of the late 1960s, the race management elite  gained more access to corporate largesse and finance capital  sponsorship. In return, the Black Political Class directed Black America  into a politics of containment that did not challenge the status quo,  and assured that no movement to confront the economic immiseration of  working-class and poor Black people stood a chance.
 In  other words, Black politics has been an establishment class politics  since the rise of the race management paradigm. With the death of  movement politics in the late 1960s, Black politics has ever since  served the aspirations of the Black Political Class and their class  acolytes. Most recently, this class has found itself serving at the  behest of the corporate forces whose interests are at odds with the poor  and working class, large numbers of whom are Black.
 It's  important to recognize that the Black Political Class is not restricted  to elected officials. There is an entire institutional superstructure  undergirding it, including civil rights organizations, Black membership  organizations, fraternities and sororities, segments of the Black  Church, Historically Black College and University administrations, and  Black professional organizations.
 Whenever  major election season begins, these institutions, together with Black  media personalities connected to Black elected political officials  benefiting from corporate patronage, shape a political narrative of  racial unity needed to herd Black voters into the most pro-corporate,  anti-working-class factions of their political party.
 In  other words, the Black Political Class is able to leverage the fallacy  of racial kinship politics to ensure their corporate patronage enriches  them and their class acolytes, while the majority of Black people suffer  the policy agenda of the American political establishment that has  become increasingly subservient to the forces of finance capital and big  business.
 And as  the quality of life for all working class and poor Americans has become  more precarious, the Black political class uses the charade of serving  the noble cause of the civil rights movement to function as pawns to the  forces that not only disadvantage most of Black people, but poor and  working-class Americans overall.
 The  race management establishment must be demoted from its position  brokering the affairs of the majority of Black people who are the  victims of the corporate friendly politics which the Black Political  Class has been supporting for several decades. The only way this Black  politics of containment can be remedied is for working class and poor  Black people to join in multi-racial coalitions with those in a similar  class position who are not blinded by racism. Such multi-racial  working-class coalitions must root politics in their economic conditions  and challenge the elites of both political parties dedicated to status  quo politics that only serve the interests of corporate power.
Comment - although written by a marxist DPST - the point is clear - the DPST party keeps its Black Peoples on the DPST Plantation
Confirmed by One of their Own. 
The Conclusion - however - is wrong.   There is another path for Black Peoples 
Renounce the marxist, racist DPST party - Black Peoples of America - and go to teh 'RIGHT"!
Embrace Truth, FACTs, and Reality - and renounce marxist racism. 
Buck fiden and teh Plantation
From my cold dead hands!