Axis of Logic
Finding Clarity in the 21st Century Mediaplex

United States
Cynthia McKinney: Democracy, Self-Determination and Liberation of Peoples
By Cynthia McKinney. Dissident Voice and Axis of Logic
Dissident Voice. Axis of Logic
Monday, Sep 30, 2013

"This woman has no place in our national politics; she's too honest."

Cynthia Ann McKinney served six terms in the United States House of Representatives and was the first black woman to represent the State of Georgia in the House. In 2008, the Green Party of the United States nominated McKinney for President of the United States.  She is an outspoken critic of the US government's sellout to corporate interests and US militarism. She is also a powerful critic of Israel's occupation of Palestine and was on the humanitarian Freedom Flotilla to Gaza before being arrested and imprisoned in Israel where she was released after going on a hunger strike. She lost her campaign for re-election to congress in 2006 when she refused to sign a pledge required of all US senators and congresspersons to give unqualified US support for Israel. After refusing to sign the pledge, AIPAC eliminated funds it had raised for her campaign under a false name and then financed a smear campaign against her as an incumbent candidate and she lost her seat in congress in 2006. Since then, she has been an effective voice for African-Americans and oppressed people everywhere in many international venues like this one at the IBON Conference.

- Les Blough, Editor
Axis of Logic



IBON Conference on Democracy, Self-Determination and Liberation of Peoples by Cynthia McKinney / September 28th, 2013


Ibon Foundation just concluded a conference to which I was invited to speak. I learned the history of the Philippine movement for independence from people who have paid the price because of their commitment to Philippine dignity, like Luis Jalandoni and Satur Ocampo For Senator (Philippines). Did you know that the Philippines was the first Republic in Asia just like Haiti was the first Republic in the Americas? Both now under occupation; both punished for their commitment to liberty.

Also discussed at the Conference, held at the European Parliament, were the situations of the Kurds, Basques, Tamils, and Catalans.

Here are my remarks:


Thank you for the invitation to be with you today.

This Conference is about Democracy, Self-Determination, and popular liberation.

As a representative of the United States people’s movement for justice and peace, I want to start by acknowledging some facts about the practice, as I know it, of one form of “democracy.”

How can any country that refuses to accept responsibility for its past of Continental or global expansion obtained through genocide of indigenous people be democratic?

How can any country that reaches the zenith of economic might by stealing Africans and transporting them around the world in a network of human trafficking that constitutes to this day an unrepaired crime against humanity be considered democratic?

How can any country that continues the global pillage and theft of human and mineral resources for the benefit of a few people–even at the expense of its own people–ever be considered democratic?

It is right and fitting that we are here in the seat of European power, where the crimes against the people of Congo and the murder of their first elected leader were sanctioned. And its continued grandeur is obtained through the outright theft by a few in the name of the many of that country’s and that Continent’s diamonds, gold, gems, coltan, timber, fauna, and its best and brightest brain power. Private and national fortunes continue to be made from this legacy where, in practice, nothing precious on this planet is exempt from full exploitation.

The life and murder of Patrice Lumumba should be a ringing example—a symbol–of the kind of democracy that is meant when people who have no history of respecting democracy for others mouth even the very word. While Lumumba’s life was snuffed short, those complicit in his murder lived long ignominious lives, never called to justice.

And instead of atoning for the past by adopting a new way of living, a new way of being that respects human and earth dignity and improves the lot of others, the national splendor, that we see around us, right here in Europe and extending to their cousins across the Pond, built on crimes against humanity, genocide, murder, and theft become temples of worship for all of humankind.

But we must not forget. We must never forget. And we must not allow them to forget.

So, when they come to us with their platitudes about democracy—even when they do not practice it at home–yet want to export it to the rest of the world through the barrel of a gun, why should we believe them?

By their very actions, they do not provide models of leadership for us that instill confidence in them.

We must question everything we are told by them.

In September 2001, we were on the verge of winning a huge cultural struggle: to change the global culture from exploitation by a few to respect for the dignity of the many peoples of the world. I was there. I saw people from all over the world come together in celebration of each other and our common struggle for dignity and justice and freedom. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights was but merely a set of words until we tasted the right of self-determination established therein. And that’s what Durban was all about: extending the right of self-determination to everyone on the planet.

On September 8, 2001 we celebrated a milestone. Despite all of the odds against us, we succeeded in having a successful Conference. The world of people of color was there—and I was there, too. I was a Member of Congress then and had fought the pro-Israel Lobby in the United States to have U.S. representation in Durban, so that we could talk about us with us. I presented facts about U.S. repression of the Black struggle for self-determination and liberation to Mary Robinson, then United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. And despite the boycott threat, everyone in attendance was happy to see the United States there and accounted for.

On September 10, 2001 while we celebrated a fantastic result in Durban, over 100,000 shares of American Airlines stock was bought and earlier in the month, United Airlines stock had been traded. Now, we all saw what happened on September 11, 2001. The new social and cultural order that was about to take off in celebration of humanity came crashing down with New York City’s Twin Towers. And a world of war, death, and destruction has been unleashed against the very people who celebrated victory at Durban.

The war machine of the United States, Israel, and NATO will continue to roll until we stop it. The Bolivarian Alliance countries of Latin America are showing us the way. That we can achieve democracy and self-determination and liberation with ballots instead of bullets. Just this week, Bolivia’s President Evo Morales announced that Bolivia was going to file a lawsuit against the United States for its aggressions against Bolivia and Venezuela. Brazil’s President postponed a state visit after learning that her phones have been wiretapped by the United States.

In Latin America, freedom and justice and dignity are rising; and we, especially those of us in the United States, must support them.

And Asia is rising. 84% of the world’s population are saying no more domination in our own lands. Asians increasingly recognize that they no longer need to be subservient to “the West” which seeks to dominate by its use of weapons of war. The “pivot to Asia” masks the geopolitical strategy of continued world domination by the 16% who now rule at the expense of our rights—including our most precious right of life without wars of aggression against us.

Finally, as an African American who is a child of the Civil Rights Movement, let me say categorically that the U.S. President betrays the legacy of the leaders of slave rebellions and of the Black struggle to be free with every U.S. bomb dropped, every veteran maimed, every child killed that he authorizes around the world. The time for peace is now.

And I will close with this, the words of our late assassinated President, John F. Kennedy, who just months before he was murdered said:

What kind of peace do we seek? Not a Pax Americana enforced on the world by American weapons of war. Not the peace of the grave or the security of the slave. I am talking about genuine peace, the kind of peace that makes life on earth worth living, the kind that enables men and nations to grow and to hope and to build a better life for their children—not merely peace for Americans, but peace for all men and women—not merely peace in our time, but peace for all time.

Yes, it is true. We in the United States once had a President who spoke of peace and mutuality and respect. He was killed by snipers’ bullets just months later.

Let me add here that I just returned from Syria, going there with a U.S. delegation led by former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark. The effort is real to turn Syria into a Libya. And then, after Syria, the drums of war will beat against Iran; and then after Iran?

They won’t stop until we stop them.

We know the path that we must take. For if a President who wanted to take the path of peace could be killed in public like that, just imagine what they will do to us.

I am pleased to be a part of this important Conference.

Stay strong, my brothers and sisters and know that there is a community of Americans who are with you!

Thank you!

Cynthia McKinney

Source: Dissident Voice