Ain't Nothing Like Freedom (BOOK REVIEW)
Ain't Nothing Like Freedom
by Cynthia McKinney
Clarity Press
Paperback, $19.95
290 pages, Illustrated
ISBN: 978-0-9853353-1
Book
Review by Kam Williams
“Elected
six times to the House from the state of Georgia, Cynthia McKinney cut a trail
through Congressional deceit like a hot ember through ash. She discovered
legislators who passed laws without reading them… [and] black-skinned
individuals shilling for the white status quo.
She
excoriated government lassitude over Hurricane Katrina… [and] held the only
critical Congressional briefing on 9/11… She read truth into the Congressional
Record, held town hall and hearings, led protests, showed up while others
played along to get along…
This
is the Cynthia McKinney saga as it stands to date—what she saw, what she
learned, and how she fought for change.”
--Excerpted from the
book jacket
Former
Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney is a fearless firebrand who always seemed to be
sitting in the middle of controversy, both during her tenure in the House of
Representatives, and since. Whether it’s questioning the legitimacy of the 2000
Presidential Election, suggesting that the U.S. had advance knowledge of the
9/11 terror attack, punching a Capitol police officer who asked to see her I.D.,
blaming a failed reelection bid on the Israel lobby, insinuating that there
might be more to the murder of gangsta’ rapper Tupac Shakur than an East-Coast-West
Coast turf battle, running for the Presidency against Barack Obama in 2008 as
the Green Party candidate, being aboard a boat torpedoed by Israel as it tried
to run a blockade of Gaza or, most recently, intimating that the Boston
Marathon bombings might have been an inside job on the part of the local
police, she’s never been one afraid to speak her mind.
Dismissed
by some, present company included, as simply too nutty to take seriously,
Cynthia has languished lately at the lunatic fringe of American politics.
Frankly, I’d long since written her off as a hopelessly-paranoid conspiracy
theorist in the wake of her staff’s treatment of an innocuous journalist like
me as suspicious when I innocently asked for an interview.
Here, the
marginalized iconoclast makes a decent attempt at resurrecting her
terribly-tarnished image with this self-serving autobiography, Ain’t Nothing Like
Freedom. The book doesn’t touch much on her personal life beyond several sincere
expressions of affection for her parents and son, Coy.
Instead, the
author focuses squarely on her checkered career, conveniently putting a
positive spin on many of its dubious and debatable highlights. For example, in
a 20-page chapter on her presidential campaign, not once does she mention the
fact that she rubbed a lot of people the wrong way by potentially spoiling Obama’s
historic bid, the same way that 3rd party candidate Ralph Nader had
done to Gore in 2000.
Basically, McKinney paints herself
as a woman of the people and a tireless advocate of such causes as Hurricane
Katrina victims, reparations for African-Americans, and the preservation of the
planet. Along the way, she repeatedly indicts her fellow black politicians as
sellouts, including the President, predicting that folks will tire of his
speeches and symbolic gestures if they remain “unattached to real gains and
material change in the community’s conditions.”
Among her
advocates is anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan, who asserts that Cynthia was more
deserving of the Nobel Peace Prize than just-elected President Obama. McKinney, wacky or wise?
You be the judge.
A classic
case of revisionist history walking a fine line between inspired and insanity.
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