NYC Councilman Charles Barron being Dissed by Fellow Democrats who Denied him Chairmanship

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When I read this story about Charles Barron the first thing I thought of was the irony of this happening on the watch of a majority minority city council line up and not seeing any outrage…I guess one shouldn’t be surprised, we are in a day and time where folks feel the best way to play the game is to be safe and be corporate… So a guy who is as outspoken as Barron finds himself at odds with those who feel that if ‘he’d only keep quiet’ things would be better..

I personally like and admire Barron for his brashness and fearlessness especially in the areas of police brutality. He was absolutely right in accussing the NYPD of allowing terrorism within the department. With all the madness that has gone on from outlandish killings of Amadou Diallo to Sean Bell… what else do you call it?

As far as him calling for the naming of a street after Sonny Carson why not? lets just say for aminute you actually believe the reduction of Carson to being a thug… Shouldn’t it be up to the community to decide? In addition, we have all sorts of streets, airports and buildings etc named after former domestic terrorists and slave owners.

Below is a speech Barron gave at the first Hip Hop convention in 2004 in Newark, New Jersey… He came in and talked about the importance of voting and how to hold people accountable.. 

http://bit.ly/dxDAFd 

Former Black Panther & NY City Councilman Charles Barron has always made himself accessible to the people in the community.. Boo to the City Council for denying him a chairmanship..

City Council slaps down Charles Barron, the only Dem without committee seat
BY Frank Lombardi
DAILY NEWS CITY HALL BUREAU
Monday, February 8th 2010, 4:00 AM
 
Hermann for News

Charles Barron got a stinging slapdown from the City Council; he’s the only Dem without a committee chairmanship or a lucrative annual “lulu” stipend. 

In a City Council that for the first time has a nonwhite majority, black empowerment activist Charles Barron now finds himself a minority of one.

After eight years of boat-rocking incumbency as councilman for Brooklyn’s 42nd District (East New York, Brownsville), Barron is the only Democratic member without a committee chairmanship or a lucrative annual “lulu” stipend.

That took some doing, given the Council now consists of 45 Democrats and five Republicans. (A vacancy in the Borough Park district will be filled in a March 23 special election.)

Barron, 59, was bounced as chairman of the Higher Education Committee last month and stripped of his $10,000 lulu in a 47-to-1 vote engineered by Speaker Christine Quinn (D-Manhattan). His was the only “no” vote.

Barron was not named chairman of any other committee, though all 11 Democratic newcomers were. The only other members without a committee or lulu are three of the Republicans.

As Council slapdowns go, it was a stinging one. But Quinn and his colleagues can cite a litany of offenses for Barron’s penalty-box punishment, including:

Organizing a City Hall reception in 2002 for Zimbabwean despot Robert Mugabe; a failed attempt to give the same honor to vilified Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavez in 2008, and saying at a 2002 rally in Washington that he was so angry at resistance to reparations he wanted to slap “the closest white person.”

There are more, his critics say: fueling a raucous Council session in 2007 by championing a failed push to co-name a Brooklyn street after the late Sonny Carson, a self-professed “anti-white” black activist; accusing Quinn of “a form of ethnic cleansing” for firing his chief of staff, Viola Plummer, in the aftermath of the Carson street-naming clash, and accusing Police Commissioner Ray Kelly at a 2007 hearing of allowing “terrorism of the Police Department to take place in our community.”

More recently, Barron engaged in an angry public confrontation with CUNY trustee Jeffrey Weisenfeld, who denounced him as “a disgrace.” Barron called Weisenfeld a “sickening racist.”
Punishment or not, Barron has no intention of being a silent minority of one.

“I have a right to dissent,” he said last week. “I have a right to be black, to be bold, to be radical, to speak my mind, to be a revolutionary, to be socialist – whatever I call myself, I have a right to be that. …I have a right to be all that and speak my mind in a body without being punished. That is my First Amendment right.”

flombardi@nydailynews.com

Should New York’s Proposed Hip Hop Museum Include Gangsta Rap?

I wonder if New York’s esteemed city council will also exclude artists like Just-Ice, Schoolly D, Kool G Rap and the late Notorious BIG? Is gangsta rap based strictly on your music or your actions? After all, there are quite a few pioneering rappers who were straight up thugs when they got off the mic.

Also will the council move to ban rappers who had sexist lyrics? Personally, I think the violence, disdain and pimping of women is much more problematic then gangsta rap. See what happens when you let others control, define and redine your culture?

Should New York’s Proposed Hip Hop Museum Include Gangsta Rap?

www.eurweb.com/story/eur27861.cfm

Aug 04 2006: If the New York City Council has its way, the worlds first hip hop museum will not include the presence of such important rap acts as NWA, Tupac Shakur or Snoop Dogg.

According to NME.com, council members and organizers are arguing over whether a section on gangsta rap should be included in the overall retrospective of hip hop and its roots in the Bronx.

Scheduled to open in late 2008 or early 2009, the facility has received $1.5 million from the New York City Council. The legislative body, therefore, feels it should have a say in what types of artists should be on exhibit.

“We’re not talking about gangsta rap,” said Bronx council member Larry Seabrook according to the BBC. “We’re talking about hip hop. Anybody can be a thug.”

Adam Matthews, senior music editor of The Source, offers a different opinion on the inclusion of gangsta rap. He tells NME: “You have to consider the statistics. As hip hop has become progressively violent, the streets have become safer.”

Seabrook, meanwhile, hopes that the museum will eventually expand into a larger hip hop complex that will include a studio and a theatre.

Return to Davey D’s Hip Hop Corner