President Bush's Kwanzaa message this year skipped the
patently absurd claim of years past that: "African-Americans and
people around the world reflect on African heritage during
Kwanzaa." Instead, he simply said: "I send greetings to those
observing Kwanzaa."
More African-Americans spent this season reflecting on the
birth of Christ than some phony non-Christian holiday invented a
few decades ago by an FBI stooge. Kwanzaa is a holiday for white
liberals, not blacks.
It is a fact that Kwanzaa was invented in 1966 by a black
radical FBI pawn, Ron Karenga, aka Dr. Maulana Karenga. Karenga
was a founder of United Slaves, a violent nationalist rival to
the Black Panthers and a dupe of the FBI.
In what was probably a foolish gamble, during the madness of
the '60s the FBI encouraged the most extreme black nationalist
organizations in order to discredit and split the left. The more
preposterous the organization, the better. Karenga's United
Slaves was perfect. In the annals of the American '60s, Karenga
was the Father Gapon, stooge of the czarist police.
Despite modern perceptions that blend all the black activists
of the '60s, the Black Panthers did not hate whites. They did not
seek armed revolution. Those were the precepts of Karenga's
United Slaves. United Slaves were proto-fascists, walking around
in dashikis, gunning down Black Panthers and adopting invented
"African" names. (That was a big help to the black community: How
many boys named "Jamal" currently sit on death row?)
Whether Karenga was a willing dupe, or just a dupe, remains
unclear. Curiously, in a 1995 interview with Ethnic NewsWatch,
Karenga matter-of-factly explained that the forces out to get
O.J. Simpson for the "framed" murder of two whites included "the
FBI, the CIA, the State Department, Interpol, the Chicago Police
Department" and so on. Karenga should know about FBI
infiltration. (He further noted that the evidence against O.J.
"was not strong enough to prohibit or eliminate unreasonable
doubt" -- an interesting standard of proof.)
In the category of the-gentleman-doth-protest-too-much, back
in the '70s, Karenga was quick to criticize rumors that black
radicals were government-supported. When Nigerian newspapers
claimed that some American black radicals were CIA operatives,
Karenga publicly denounced the idea, saying, "Africans must stop
generalizing about the loyalties and motives of Afro-Americans,
including the widespread suspicion of black Americans being CIA
agents."