Greens
Turning the Green Party Black
By Donna J. Warren with Jonathan
David Farley, D.Phil.
My name is Donna, and I
once had an addiction problem. I was
addicted to the Democratic Party. But then, in 1999, while attending a meeting
in South Central Los Angeles, I met a young man who handed me some dog-eared
sheets of paper, describing the "Green Party" and its platform.
"My God," I
spurted out after I had read what he had given me: "I'm a Green!"
This has also been the
reaction of other black Greens that I have met as I toured the country. Dr. Jonathan Farley, a Green Party activist
from
On National Public
Radio's "The Tavis Smiley Show," Dr. Farley and I were asked if
Greens weren't just a bunch of chardonnay-swilling tree-hugging white
liberals. Yes, it is true: trees get
more than their fair share of love from Greens.
But the Green Party is about more than the environment. It's also about social justice.
You see, the
The Green Party says No: no to
weapons and yes to people. The Greens
believe that our criminal justice system is criminal, that it is ineffective,
that it is prohibitively expensive, and that it mainly locks up the poor, the
undereducated, the black and the brown.
Greens believe that the so-called
"war on drugs" is actually a war on the poor, a war on urban ghettos,
a war on civil liberties, a war on peasants in faraway places like
Greens oppose racial profiling.
Only the Greens stand between Bush
and a potential rain of hell on
But why should blacks flee the
Democratic Party plantation? Isn't
In
"That's all good," someone
asks in the back row, "but isn't the Green Party white?" Sure it
is-just like the Democratic Party. The
difference is, our party articulates our interests.
It is true, however, that the
party's outreach to communities of color has been awful. When 2000 presidential candidate Ralph Nader
visited
But the Greens are getting it a
little more each day. Ralph Nader made sure to schedule a speech at
Besides, there's talk of a new
sheriff in town. A powerful "
In the wake of the Democratic
disaster of November 2002, political commentators agree on one thing: Today's
Democrats are too spineless to stand up for us.
They all-too-easily surrendered our civil rights, our economy, and our
children to the molochs of Republican rule (whom Democrats, and not Greens,
placed in office).
Greens will rescue the money going
towards jails and send it back to colleges and schools. We'll end the public financing of sports
stadiums and use that money to pay for universal health insurance. Free trade agreements like NAFTA will no
longer undercut American workers' wages and foreign workers' rights. And corporations will have to pay their fair
share in taxes, just like the rest of us.
The Greens are the new
opposition. We're fighting the prison-industrial
complex and Three Strikes-alone.
We're fighting for people over
profits, for peace instead of war-alone.
We are fighting for social justice and reparations.
Yes, the Green Party is now white,
but when we all join it, it will become the Black Party that Marcus Garvey
longed for. (And, white or not, a party
that supports reparations for slavery and segregation is the party I want.)
In the past, African-Americans had
two parties to choose from. Now, there
is only one choice, the Green Party.
From now on, Green is the new black.
________________________________________________________________________
Donna Jo
Warren is a native of South Central Los Angeles and a former Green Party
candidate for Lt. Governor of