Tracy Kronzak
Does Your Vote Count?
This Fourth of July holiday, one month after Senator Obama clinched the Democratic presidential candidacy and on the cusp of what will likely be an historic election season, the simple act of voting and freedom weighs on my mind.
Democracy is only equal when everyone has a voice in its implementation, a vote that is all too easily usurped by legal voter disenfranchisement. I’ve never considered more the privilege of voting as I have this year - and let’s be honest: even though voting is coined as a right, it is a privilege, as the 2000 and 2004 presidential elections made abundantly clear in Florida and Ohio. Despite my misgivings about the Electoral College and the general state of two-party politics, that I have a ballot in my hands at all is something for which I am grateful. With all the talk of election reform in the air, to me the only real election reform is one that absolutely ensures voting rights, instead of voting barriers and apologies long after the polls are closed.
Posted at 10:56 AM, Jul 03, 2008 in Obama | Permalink | View Comments
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For the Black Buddhist perspective on CNN's series on Black America check out my blog:
CNN Special Reports - Black in America
As African American Buddhists gear up for what promises to be another pounding of "Black America as Christian Nation," I again ponder a historical issue I raised my book Black Buddha.
Both slaveholders and abolitionists argued their positions based on the bible. Whether a slave remained in bondage or was "freed" their only faith choice was Christianity. The dominant religion in the black community has no origin other than this.
From then until today a black person who choses any faith practice or lifestyle not sanctioned by the black Church is considered to have "strayed" not only from the church but the interests and survivability of the black community itself.
To be black and Buddhist is to be seen by some as one who shows contempt for the African American covenant with Christianity, the legacy of Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and the Civil Rights movement. In black America every Sunday from 10am to 2pm being Buddhist and Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender, or polyamorous is to be considered misguided at the very least and in extreme cases a navel-watching race traitor.
There are some exceptions such as when spending money in black businesses or being courted for the vote. But where does the child of a black Buddhist family fit into the Christian solution for Black America? How does the Buddhist parent explain the chant, "One nation under God," to their child in a so called secular non-denominational school?
How can the potential of a black Christian president provide so much hope for America yet a duly elected black Buddhist Congressman remain relatively unnoticed?
Can CNN handle the responsibility of inclusion and objectivity around issues important to the black Buddhist community?
I'll be blogging daily on each installment of this series.
Posted by: Original Black Buddha | July 8, 2008 11:48 AM