It's Time to Step Up

Rev. Stephen Andrew Tillett

Guest Editorial Archives
Friday, December 17, 2004; Page 16

In the world of sports, whenever there is a big game or a critical situation in the game, the players and coaches will often say that, "it's time to step up."  The more there is on the line, the more imperative it is that the team and its coaches "step up and bring their A Game." 

It is such a time for the African American community in the "United" States of America.  If what is past is truly prologue, then the election results from November 2 should inform us that we can no longer have any reasonable expectation of assistance or even a sympathetic ear from the federal government.  History has also taught us that the less sympathetic the feds are, the less support we will find at the state level, either.

So here we are, on the cusp of reaping the whirlwind from George W. Bush's first actual election to the White House, in 2004.  Armed with a self-proclaimed "mandate," the courts are going to be damaged by the appointments and rulings by ideological jurists for the next generation.  The government, designed to provide a Balance of Powers, won't be balancing anything.  Even if the Democrats reclaim their progressive voice in 2008, it will take decades to undo the damage wreaked by these judges with lifetime appointments.

In the face of all this bad news, what are African Americans to do?  I would suggest, hold ourselves accountable, set some standards and expectations in our own communities, and stop looking to government to "deliver" us.  No matter who is in office, until we learn how to be producers rather than consumers, and become financially self sufficient by harnessing the power of our collective one-half trillion-dollar buying power each year, we will continue to be beggars.  In a nation built on the backs of the enslaved labor of our foreparents, we continue to look for help that's not going to come from outside our own communities.

Are you unhappy with the schools?  Support them with your time, presence and expectations.  Better yet, open your own!  But even our own schools will fail unless we have our children turn off the TV, the radio and the video games, open a book and insist upon respectful performance from our children.  Expectations begin in the home and are enforced in the home.  Parents shouldn't look to "the schools" to do our job!  Even if you are a parent who feels ill equipped, there are community programs, churches and mosques that will provide parenting assistance.

Are you tired of banks and insurance companies and their prejudicial loan and policy practices?  Open and support honest and efficient Black banks and insurance companies.  Weary of disinterested, businesses profiting on the African American community?  Support honest and respectful African American businesses and stop asking for a special discount price.  When "the man" comes to your house and quotes a price, you don't bargain, you pull out your checkbook.  Do our own businesses deserve to be treated differently?

Perhaps you feel like the inner city and your neighborhoods have been abandoned?  Start by cleaning up your own yard and your own block and hold your neighbors accountable to do likewise.  We have seen the power of negative peer pressure in the decline of our communities.  Positive peer pressure can also galvanize change.  It's time to step up!

At this point, we have no reasonable expectation for help from those in power, who demonize us for campaign advantage and stand guard at the polls to try to keep us from voting.  By managing our own schools, neighborhoods and families, African Americans can begin to take some baby steps toward self-sufficiency.  No matter who is in the White House, the Congress or the courts, our destiny largely resides with us, where it belongs.  It is time to stop looking for help from others when we won't help ourselves.  It's time to step up!

Rev. Stephen Andrew Tillett is senior pastor of Asbury Broadneck United Methodist Church in Annapolis, MD. He can be reached at AsburyBroadneck1@aol.com

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