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Culled from Democracy Now 
Professor, culture critic, and social justice advocate Cornel West joins us 
in our studio to talk about the presidential race, the war in Iraq, the 
religious right, social change and much more. Author of numerous books on philosophy, 
race and sociology, West's latest book is Democracy Matters: Winning the 
Fight Against Imperialism. 
 
AMY GOODMAN: Well, today, we're going to talk about politics, about race, 
about the election with Professor Cornel West. He has been described as one of 
America's most vital and eloquent public intellectuals; he is a professor of 
religion and African-American studies at Princeton University. He has written and 
co-authored numerous books on philosophy, race and sociology. His latest book 
is Democracy Matters: Winning the Fight Against Imperialism. Welcome to 
Democracy Now! 
CORNEL WEST: I am very blessed to be here. I want to congratulate you on this 
dynamite show and your book, Exception to the Rulers. 
AMY GOODMAN: Thank you very much. And thank you for making this your first 
stop on your tour. Tonight you will be in Harlem and then you're headed to 
Brooklyn and then Cooper Union as well? 
CORNEL WEST: Cooper Union on Thursday. 
AMY GOODMAN: So, you can check out our website. We'll link to professor 
Cornel West's schedule. But, what about your reaction to the two conventions, and 
the message that has come out of this? I last saw you at the Democratic 
National Convention, not inside, but outside when you were giving an address to the 
Tikkun community. 
CORNEL WEST: Well, I'm very glad that you reported on the massive resistance 
because I'm deeply inspired by courageous people's thirst for justice. I think 
it's as important to stay in contact with what happens outside the 
conventions as inside. Both conventions are basically infomercials for a message that's 
already prepackaged for candidates who are for sale. The real question is 
going to be how do we keep track of the raw stuff for a democratic awakening, 
given the pervasive sleepwalking that's now taking place in the country. I think 
one sees signs of that democratic awakening when you see fellow citizens ready 
to put their bodies on the line, as it were, and let fellow citizens know and 
let the world know that people are concerned about deeper issues of justice as 
opposed to the superficial discourses that we saw in both conventions, 
actually. 
AMY GOODMAN: At the mass protests here in New York, last Sunday, maybe half a 
million people marched for four-and-a-half hours; there was a fierce anti-war 
message, but I wouldn't say that I saw many John Kerry signs. 
CORNEL WEST: Absolutely no. First, it was a multiracial group. This is very 
important because the democratic awakening that needs to take place has to be 
one that brings together persons from a variety of different communities, 
concerned with a variety of different issues: dogmas of market fundamentalism, 
dogmas of aggressive militarism, dogmas of escalating authoritarianism, dogmas of 
white supremacy, of male supremacy, trade union movements. There has to be a 
coalescing of these various groups. That was one of the more encouraging things 
about the half million fellow citizens who brought their bodies to bare and 
were willing to protest and put forward their vision. 
AMY GOODMAN: But what about this issue that perhaps the message was as strong 
for John Kerry, that this is what is mobilizing people, as for President 
Bush? 
CORNEL WEST: Well, one hopes that that's the case. I mean, I happen to 
support the anti-Bush united front because I think he's so dangerous. I think we're 
really on the verge of a very substantive authoritarianism if he wins. It's 
just that Kerry, so far, has been so milk toast and mediocre. But perhaps he can 
bounce back. One wonders whether one needs to talk to his handlers as opposed 
to talking to him. Because we're in a situation now where these candidates 
really for the most part are instruments of their handlers. One has to keep 
track of who is handling him at the moment. Right now, it looks as if we're in a 
shift, right? You have one side, the Ex-Clinton people now moving in, and who 
knows who is going to be handling him, but he’s got to come to life? There's no 
doubt about it. I mean, there's no doubt in my mind that there has to be 
truth-tellers like Ralph Nader just to let us know the levels of corruption, the 
degree to which both parties are parasitic on corporate interests and so forth. 
But as much as I respect and love brother Ralph. 
AMY GOODMAN: And supported him. 
CORNEL WEST: And supported him very vigorously and enthusiastically in 2000. 
I will pray for him this time and vote for Kerry only because I think Bush is 
that dangerous. But at the same time, how can one vote for Kerry if he's so 
milk toast at the moment? Well, see, this is what I'm struggling with right now, 
as much as I really believe that we have got to make sure that Bush is not in 
the White House in January. 
AMY GOODMAN: Well, what about Kerry's message, saying, if I knew then what I 
knew now, yes, I would still do the same thing? Feeling probably quite a 
backlash from that. Not only from his own supporters, who might have been shocked, 
but also George Bush being able to use that, saying here he has criticized me, 
yet he says he would have done the same thing. Of course, it wouldn't have 
been exactly the same thing, but that's what he says. 
CORNEL WEST: Well, I think we're in a situation now where in the American 
Empire, we have got two candidates who have histories of being quite supportive 
of invasions. Kerry supported the invasion of Grenada. He supported the 
invasion of Panama and even brags about it. That's why I feel so tortured to have to 
support somebody who I have such deep profound disagreements with, but it's 
much more an anti-Bush vote than it is a pro-Kerry vote. But I think that Kerry 
has to either be honest and say that he is as pro-imperialist as Bush is -- 
he's just better on domestic issues -- or he has to undergo a change and 
conversion and say, I was actually wrong, that I was duped. I was misled. I have 
changed my mind. Now, does he have the capacity to do that? I doubt it. Does any 
American politician have the capacity to do that? It's hard to say; probably 
brother Paul Wellstone, who we deeply miss, would be willing to do something 
like that, or Bill Bradley, someone with some integrity, whether one agrees with 
them or not; but we'll have to see. There's no doubt that Kerry is in deep 
trouble and he needs a bounce-back. 
AMY GOODMAN: Cornel West, you talk about the authoritarianism that you see. 
What do you mean by that? With President Bush. 
CORNEL WEST: Well, we can begin with brother Tariq Ramadan at the University 
of Notre Dame. The story, of course, was he’s already been okayed to teach 
Islamic studies at one of the finest institutions of higher learning in our 
country. The U.S. government denies him a visa three days before he is to come. He’
s already got his children enrolled in school. He’s got his courses in the 
curriculum. The University of Notre Dame is ready to embrace him as an 
interlocutor, not to endorse any views that he has. And he happens to be someone 
critical of U.S. foreign policy when it comes to the Middle East, the 
Israeli-Palestinian situation. They deny his visa. He's now still stuck in Switzerland. Now, 
that's just one peak of the iceberg in terms of the encroaching, creeping 
authoritarianism, in this case in universities, and the possibilities of the new 
McCarthyism. And of course, the USA PATRIOT Act would be the most concrete 
example of it, in which it is very clear that the government is expanding its 
powers of surveillance, its ability to intervene in the lives of citizens for its 
own ends, as it were, its definition of fighting terrorism. 
AMY GOODMAN: We're talking to Professor Cornel West. His book is Democracy 
Matters: Winning the Fight Against Imperialism. We'll be back with him in a 
minute. 
AMY GOODMAN: ”The Journey, Sketches of my Culture.” That's Cornel West and 
Derek ‘D.O.A.’ Allen. I'm Amy Goodman. This is Democracy Now! 
Democracynow.org. Actually, talk about this CD that we're listening to right now. 
CORNEL WEST: Yeah. That CD is from 2001. We have got a double CD that's going 
to drop in a day or two called “Street Knowledge, 2004." But that was a CD we 
put together back in my home, Sacramento, California, in the black 
neighborhood, Glen Alda, with Derek ‘D.O.A.’ Allen, Mike Dailey and my blood brother 
Clifton West. And it's attempt to present a danceable education to a younger 
generation in which music such as hip hop is still central, fundamental way of 
holding pain at arm’s length and expressing creativity but try to remind them 
that this music is rooted in a struggle for freedom. It's rooted in the attempt 
of a dehumanized people to express their human value, and to attempt to insure 
that even though they seemingly at moment were not free, that their music 
could constitute a foretaste of the freedom they were willing to live and die 
for. So it’s the sense that keeps alive the legacy of the Last Poets and Gil 
Scott-Heron, Curtis Mayfield and some of the great -- Max Roach and Abbey Lincoln 
and so forth, the great musicians who connected their art to the struggle for 
freedom. 
AMY GOODMAN: When we last spoke, we were talking about the rumor that this 
had something to do with why you left Harvard University after your infamous 
meeting with the president, Lawrence Summers, who used to be the treasury 
secretary with the World Bank, not happy with a Harvard professor doing hip hop CDs. 
CORNEL WEST: Oh, yes, not a rumor at all. I think it's true. He had a number 
of charges against me, but one was that having any involvement with hip hop, 
let alone producing a CD, was an embarrassment to the institution based on his 
definition of what the institution ought to do. And of course, my view is that 
his orientation is not my point of reference, that I'm trying to awaken the 
sleep-walking democratic fellow citizens across the board, be they old, middle 
aged or young. You speak their idioms and speak their language. You bring the 
Socratic energy and the critical orientation to what you are doing, but you 
speak their language and respect them enough to acknowledge that you need to be 
able to relate to them in their own way. That was one reason among others that 
we had the big clash, and I ended up at Princeton in New Jersey. 
AMY GOODMAN: How do you feel about having left there? 
CORNEL WEST: Oh, it’s magnificent. Shirley Tilghman, the president of 
Princeton, is just a visionary leader. There's no doubt about that. I'm very blessed 
to be at Princeton. Don't get me wrong, Harvard still has some magnificent 
people. It's a grand tradition, they just have a problematic president, that's 
all. 
AMY GOODMAN: I wondered if it had anything to do with your politics at the 
time. I mean, here was Larry Summers, who was very much a Clinton man. You had 
supported Ralph Nader, talking about radical democracy. 
CORNEL WEST: Well, I think that it was -- it began with Bradley, because of 
course, Bradley and Gore had clashed. Gore had really mistreated Bradley. That 
story is yet to be told, just how ugly the treatment was. 
AMY GOODMAN: This is when Bill Bradley, the New Jersey senator was running 
for president in 2000? 
CORNEL WEST: Precisely. Then the move to Nader. 
AMY GOODMAN: What happened between Bradley and Gore? 
CORNEL WEST: Oh, it was just the lies and the vicious attacks, and so forth 
on Bradley. I mean, we tend to forget these things. People say politics is 
politics. Well, I believe that you ought to be able to criticize and engage in 
interrogation and scrutiny, but it ought not to ad hominem, especially in 
relation to people’s parents and so forth, and Bradley is a very close friend of 
mine, a brother of mine. And so there are certain things that were said we'll 
never forget. People in wheelchairs, Bradley's father, of course, grew up in 
wheelchair. There was a wheelchair in the commercial was denigrating in some 
vicious ways. I’ll never forget those kind of things. But it was my support of 
Bradley and the Clintonites going to Gore, then my support of Nader, and then 
probably even worse in the eyes of president Lawrence Summers was my support of 
brother Al Sharpton. I think in some ways that was one of the tipping points, 
that when I appeared with brother Al Sharpton at the National Press Club, saying 
that I was going to be a member of and even head of the exploratory committee, 
and he said, how can you support a candidate that other people are 
embarrassed by and no one respects. I said, it depends who your friends are. I happen to 
have great respect for Al Sharpton. I think he's not perfect. He has done 
things that I'm highly critical of, but I think he's a courageous fighter against 
police brutality. He's a truth-teller when it comes to homophobia, corporate 
domination, and a host of other things. And so that was another point of 
contention, let’s put it that way. 
AMY GOODMAN: We're talking to Princeton University Professor Cornel West. He 
has written a new book. It’s called Democracy Matters: Winning the Fight 
Against Imperialism. You talk about the long list of imperial corruptions. What do 
you mean by that? 
CORNEL WEST: What I mean by that is that we're at a point now where the 
system is so corrupt, it has become normalized, and when we reached a moment in 
which might is conceived to define right. It's like Thrasymachus in Plato's 
Republic, where you make a mockery of truth and integrity and moral consistency, 
and it's fundamentally about raw power, unregulated coercion. By hook or crook, 
you are going to impose a certain vision or set of policies that’s 
fundamentally about power. Then democracy in terms of its questioning function, democracy 
in terms of its concern with working people and poor people, democracy in 
terms of sustaining some hope as opposed to allowing a cynicism and apathy to 
become rampant, is called into question. I think we're at a crossroads right now 
in terms of the imperial America devouring American democracy. We can talk not 
just about policies, but we're talking much more broadly about certain 
patterns of behavior and perception. And I think this is resulting in, of course, 
unbelievable levels and very sad levels of disaffection, disillusionment, 
disengagement with the system. The vast majority of Americans don't vote at all, in 
part because they see the thick levels of corruption. Those of us who are 
trying to convince them to vote and become participants, we have to be honest with 
them. These people are not stupid. The corruption that they see is very real. 
They may be short-sighted, myopic, because it's going to make a difference 
who is the head of state, Bush, Kerry -- I wish Nader, but he's not going to 
win, therefore we have to wrestle with these very limited possibilities. But I 
think that more than anything else, we need some serious, courageous 
truth-telling, and witness-bearing. And that's what encouraged me and inspired me 
regarding the mass protests that you started the show with. 
AMY GOODMAN: What is your assessment of Iraq right now? Last 24 hours, 
perhaps the bloodiest for U.S. military since the beginning. 
CORNEL WEST: Well, one, I think we need to acknowledge the degree to which 
this was a imperial invasion on behalf of new imperialists in Washington, who 
had it on the papers and planned prior to 9/11. The 9/11 became an occasion upon 
which to launch this imperial vision of the United States dominating the 
world, in part for the oil, but also for image that we are the colossus. We are 
the leviathan. And like most colossuses and leviathans in human history, they 
want to shape the world in its own interests and image. And that's precisely 
what Kristol and Fife and the others had in mind in terms of their own imperial 
vision of the United States. I'm quite explicit and open about it. So we have 
to say, it was wrong. Look at the mess we're getting into. You see? And who is 
bearing the cost? Disproportionately working class women and men, sisters and 
brothers of all colors. I think that brother Michael Moore, who was such a 
good citizen in terms of his willingness to tell the truth, to see how many young 
people or how many daughters and sons of the Congress are in the army. Was it 
one out of 435. When I go to black churches, I raise the question, how many 
have relatives in the army? 80%. 80%. Fighting disproportionately working 
class, brown, black. Those truths need to be told and then subsequent policy has to 
be some kind of withdrawals, significant withdrawal, and allow for 
transitional, put U.N. troops or some international force so that the brothers and 
sisters in Iraq, who are bearing so much of the cost -- they have already bore the 
cost under the gangster, Saddam Hussein, installed by the C.I.A., supported by 
the United States, Donald Rumsfeld shakes his hand in 1983 and doesn't say a 
mumbling word about the suffering of Iraqi people under Reagan. Now all of a 
sudden, those people are so concerned about the Iraqi people? No, that doesn't 
follow. It doesn't follow. Well, the American people need to know this, you 
see? And so part of it is expanding conversation, and part of it is a change in 
policy. Sorry to go on so long. 
AMY GOODMAN: You write -- please do, Professor West -- you write about the 
forging of new Jewish and Islamic democratic identities. Can you elaborate on 
that? 
CORNEL WEST: Well, I think it's very important because you really cannot talk 
about Islamic terrorism, you cannot talk about instability in the Middle 
East, without talking about the Israeli-Palestinian issue. When you talk about 
democracy matters, beginning in the United States, you have to also talk about 
democratic identities that need to be forged more deeply in the Jewish world, 
for example, among American Jews. Where is the robust uninhibited debate about 
Israeli-Palestinian issues? We talk about Tikkun community, we talk about 
American Jews for peace in America. We talk about the efforts in the past to expand 
the debate so that the connection between security for Israel and justice for 
the Palestinians goes hand in hand rather than the very uneven and unfair and 
biased policy right now of the United States that acts as if a Palestinian 
life has less value than an Israeli life. Let's have the debate about that. Very 
difficult to pull that off, given A.P.A.C., given various other lobbying 
groups in D.C. Let's have a debate about that. And the same is true in the Islamic 
world. I don’t care. You’ve got gangsters who attack us. You got autocratic 
states. You got ugly forms of anti-Semitism within the autocratic states, but 
they also have oil. And how do you talk about democratizing in the Islamic 
world, what I call even socratizing Islam? I think Islam has tremendous prophetic 
possibilities, as does Judaism, as does Christianity. But the prophetic 
elements of Islam are suppressed, especially under clerical Islam. I got the 
chapter on both democratic possibilities in the Jewish world, which is a fusing of 
the security for Israel and justice for Palestinians, which is an end to the 
occupation. That's the first and most important step, you see. Right now Sharon 
is doing what? Tightening the occupation with a symbolic pullout of Gaza, but 
a tightening of the occupation in the West Bank. We have to end the 
occupation, but there has to be democratic possibilities, democratic movements and 
democratic debates in the Jewish world and similarly so in Islamic world. I try to 
highlight some of the towering Islamic intellectuals who are very critical of 
all forms of authoritarianism in the Islamic world, but in the name of 
prophetic Islam, call for democracy. That's, I think, one of the signs of hope. 
AMY GOODMAN: You also write, Professor West, about the crisis of Christian 
identity in America. 
CORNEL WEST: Absolutely, because you see, I think we have to recognize 80% of 
Americans are Christian, 96% believe in God. 72% believe Jesus Christ is the 
son of God. 49% say they spoke with God at least three times on intimate terms 
in the last four days. These are fellow citizens. Which means what? Which 
means that the battle for the soul of American democracy is in part a battle for 
the soul of American Christianity. Therefore, the call for prophetic 
Christians as opposed to Constantinian Christians, by Constantinian Christians, of 
course, I mean those who defer to the empire, very much like Constantine who was 
converted in 312, decriminalized Christianity in 313, and Christianity became 
the official religion of the Roman Empire under Theodotius the First, his 
successor. And of course, this is the same Roman Empire that put Jesus to death. So 
one of the real ironies is here you have the cross, the bloody cross which is 
the symbol of the night side of the Roman Empire. That's where political 
prisoners were murdered, right? That same empire makes the movement that comes out 
of the death of Christ, which is Christianity, the official religion. So, you 
get diffusion of this religion with the state and what we have today in the 
Christian right are Constantinian Christians. They are imperial Christians. 
They have lost the prophetic fervor of the very Jesus Christ that they proclaim 
as their savior. In fact, they're willing to sell their souls for a mess of 
imperial pottage in the name of the very Jesus who was put to death by the Roman 
Empire, the empire of its day. So, I'm calling for prophetic Christians, like 
James Forbes and Jim Wallace and Sujay Johnson Cook and others to be more 
visible, and I tell a story about how in fact the corporate America has 
manipulated Constantinian Christians to insure that prophetic Christians do not surface 
with power. So that our William Sloan Coffins and Dorothy Days and Daniel 
Berrigans, that rich history and legacy is more and more lost, and I'm calling for 
it. 
AMY GOODMAN: Now we just have about a minute to go. President Bush very much 
appealing to evangelicals, millions who did not vote, many on the floor of the 
convention as I went around, wearing the faith voter button. The significance 
of this. 
CORNEL WEST: They recognize that right now never in the history of America 
has organized Christianity had such power and clout, and especially an organized 
Christianity, which is in the back pocket of corporate America. So, we're 
seeing explicit appeals as well as manipulation and a lot of times these 
Christians are very sincere. They're just very, very short on history, and very little 
sense of the way in which they're being manipulated, especially around issues 
of gay marriage, appeals to the homophobia, as well as issues of abortion. 
Very dangerous, but prophetic Christianity, must be reinvigorated if in fact 
democracy is actually to expand on the ground. 
AMY GOODMAN: Cornel West, I want to thank you very much for being with us. 
Professor of Princeton University, theology and African American studies. Cornel 
West has a new book out, it is called, Democracy Matters: Winning the Fight 
Against Imperialism. Thanks for joining us. 
CORNEL WEST: Thank you so very much. Good luck in the work you do here. You 
are a leaven in the loaf when it comes to the cowardly actions of so many of 
the journalists in the world. Thank God we got Amy Goodman, thank God we got 
Democracy Now! 
AMY GOODMAN: Thank you, Cornel West, tonight in Harlem, tomorrow at Cooper 
Union and Brooklyn. 

Wahh Duul! Noppi Deyh! Yahya's interpretation: Absolutely, no dissenting 
voice against Yahya or A[F]PRC, or NIA thugs will beat, maimed or kill victim; 
Being apolitical or intimidated, ultimate faith is Suddent Death Syndrome, #1 
killer of Gambians since July 22, 1994

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