The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

As Malcolm X warned us, beware the helpful liberal

- Walter E. Williams He writes for Creators Syndicate.

Malcolm X was a Muslim minister and human rights activist. Born in 1925, he met his death at the hands of an assassin in 1965. Malcolm X was a courageous advocate for black civil rights, but unlike Martin Luther King, he was not that forgiving of whites for their crimes against black Americans. He did not eschew violence as a tool to achieve civil and human rights. His black and white detractors accused him of preaching racism and violence. Despite the controvers­y, he has been called one of the greatest and most influentia­l black Americans.

Many black Americans have great respect for Malcolm X. Many schools bear his name, and many streets have been renamed in honor of him, both at home and abroad. But while black Americans honor Malcolm X, one of his basic teachings goes largely ignored. I think it’s an important lesson, so I will quote a large part of it.

Malcolm X said: “The worst enemy that the Negro have is this white man that runs around here drooling at the mouth professing to love Negros and calling himself a liberal, and it is following these white liberals that has perpetuate­d problems that Negros have. If the Negro wasn’t taken, tricked or deceived by the white liberal, then Negros would get together and solve our own problems. I only cite these things to show you that in America, the history of the white liberal has been nothing but a series of trickery designed to make Negros think that the white liberal was going to solve our problems. Our problems will never be solved by the white man.”

There’s a historical tidbit that those much younger than I (almost 83 years old) are ignorant of. In black history, we have been called — and called ourselves — several different names. Among the more respectabl­e have been “colored,” “Negro,” “black,” “Afro-American” and “African-American.” I recall when Mrs. Viola Meekins, when I was a student at Stoddart-Fleisher Junior High School in the late 1940s, had our class go page by page through a textbook and correct each instance in which Negro was printed with a lowercase “n.” In Malcolm X’s day, and mine, Negro was a proud name and not used derisively by blacks as it is today.

Malcolm X was absolutely right about our finding solutions to our own problems. The most devastatin­g problems that black people face today have absolutely nothing to do with our history of slavery and discrimina­tion. Chief among them is the breakdown of the black family, wherein 75 percent of blacks are born to single, often young, mothers. Actually, “breakdown” is the wrong term; the black family doesn’t form in the first place. This is entirely new among blacks.

According to the 1938 Encyclopae­dia of the Social Sciences, that year only 11 percent of black children were born to unwed mothers. As late as 1950, female-headed households constitute­d only 18 percent of the black population. Today it’s close to 70 percent.

The high crime rates in so many black communitie­s impose huge personal costs and have turned once-thriving communitie­s into economic wastelands. The Ku Klux Klan couldn’t sabotage chances for black academic excellence more effectivel­y than the public school system. Politics and white liberals will not solve these problems. As Malcolm X said, “our problems will never be solved by the white man.”

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