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President Obama Begins Final Year with Plea for Gun Control by Hazel Trice Edney

Jan. 5, 2016

President Obama Begins Final Year with Plea for Gun Control
By Hazel Trice Edney

obamagunproposals

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President Barack Obama speaks with the attendees following a Jan. 4 meeting in the Oval Office on the executive actions he can take to curb gun violence. Listening to the President, from left: Neil Eggleston, Counsel to the President; Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates; Eric Nguyen, Associate Counsel to the President; Michael Bosworth, Deputy Counsel to the President; Senior Advisor Valerie Jarrett; Attorney General Loretta Lynch; Natalie Quillian, Deputy Assistant to the President (partially hidden behind the Attorney General) and FBI Director James Comey. Photo: Pete Souza/White House

 

(TriceEdneyWire.com) – President Barack Obama, citing the thousands of people who are killed each year by guns, gave a tearful address before the nation on Tuesday, pleading for Congress to pass “common sense” gun control legislation and announcing his use of executive orders to make progress.

“Every single year, more than 30,000 Americans have their lives cut short by guns -- 30,000.  Suicides.  Domestic violence.  Gang shootouts.  Accidents.  Hundreds of thousands of Americans have lost brothers and sisters, or buried their own children.  Many have had to learn to live with a disability, or learned to live without the love of their life,” Obama said in the East Room, surrounded by hundreds of victims of gun violence or supporters of gun control.

“A number of those people are here today.  They can tell you some stories.  In this room right here, there are a lot of stories. There’s a lot of heartache.  There’s a lot of resilience, there’s a lot of strength, but there’s also a lot of pain.  And this is just a small sample.”

In a nutshell, the following are some of the president’s proposals:

• Mandatory background checks by gun sellers or they will suffer criminal penalties.

• The funding 200 new Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms agents and investigators to help enforce our gun laws.

• An allocation of $500 million for the increase of mental health treatment and mandatory reporting to the background check system.

• Shape the future of gun safety technology through research by the Departments of Defense, Justice, and Homeland Security.

Obama’s stance drew immediate applause from civil rights leaders who daily endure the pain of community violence.

"The year is less than a week old, and already more than 120 people have been killed by guns. Gun violence has outpaced automobile accidents as a leading cause of death,” said National Urban League President Marc Morial.

"Gun violence is undeniably one of the worst public health crises in American history, yet our elected leaders have been woefully unresponsive. It's hard to imagine such inaction in the face of any other plague responsible for such death and devastation," he said.

Dr. Stephanie Myers, national co-chair for Black Women for Positive Change, called Obama’s stance courageous.

“President Obama's commitment to stand up to gun lobbies and gun show owners is historic and brave. Expanded background checks of gun purchasers at gun shows, over the Internet and wherever guns are sold should help to block the ability of gangs, criminals and other offenders to obtain dangerous weapons. Keeping guns out of the wrong hands should result in reduced street violence,” said Myers, whose organization has long championed the cause of non-violence.

The National Action Network’s Rev. Al Sharpton also said the proposals could reduce street crime. “Our community is disproportionately ravaged by gun violence and the President’s executive action today is an important step towards taking these deadly weapons off our streets. From tragic mass killings in Charleston, Sandy Hook and San Bernardino to the everyday carnage in inner cities, we clearly cannot allow this violent trend to continue,” Sharpton said in a statement.

The 40-minute speech outlined the specifics of his proposed gun measures, including a refutation by Republicans claiming his executive orders would violate the Constitution’s Second Amendment right to bear arms.

“No matter how many times people try to twist my words around - I taught constitutional law, I know a little about this,” he said to applause. “But I also believe that we can find ways to reduce gun violence consistent with the Second Amendment.”

He continued, “We all believe in the First Amendment, the guarantee of free speech, but we accept that you can’t yell ‘fire’ in a theater.  We understand there are some constraints on our freedom in order to protect innocent people.  We cherish our right to privacy, but we accept that you have to go through metal detectors before being allowed to board a plane. It’s not because people like doing that, but we understand that that’s part of the price of living in a civilized society.”

The President paused and wiped away tears as he recalled the Sandy Hook Elementary School tragedy of Dec. 21, 2014. That’s the day that 20-year-old mentally ill Adam Lanza shot and killed 20 first grade children and six adults, including his mother.

The President had been introduced by Mark Barden, whose son Daniel was killed in the Sandy Hook massacre. "Every time I think about those kids, it gets me mad," Obama said as he wiped away tears. "And by the way, it happens in Chicago every day."

The weight of the issue and the public messaging issued from the White House before and after the speech indicates that gun control may be another legacy for Obama. So far, it has mainly been health care, which has stood against every court test so far. Republicans have vowed to challenge Obama’s executive orders and GOP presidential candidates say they will repeal them if they win the White House.

Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin immediately tweeted his opposition: “No matter what President Obama says, his word does not trump the Second Amendment.”

Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus chimed in with a stinging statement, “The recent tragedies that have gripped our country are heartbreaking, but none of the unilateral restrictions President Obama is proposing would have prevented them, making his proposal all the more insulting and political.”

On the other hand, Democratic Presidential Candidate Hillary Clinton applauded the president, tweeting, “Thank you, @POTUS, for taking a crucial step forward on gun violence. Our next president has to build on that progress—not rip it away.”

Despite opposition from a majority Republican House and Senate, Obama will likely reinforce his points on gun laws during his final state of the Union message Jan. 12, with hopes that Congress will at least visit the measures.

“Yes, it will be hard, and it won’t happen overnight,” he said. “It won’t happen during this Congress.  It won’t happen during my presidency.  But a lot of things don’t happen overnight.  A woman’s right to vote didn’t happen overnight.  The liberation of African-Americans didn’t happen overnight.  LGBT rights - that was decades’ worth of work.  So just because it’s hard, that’s no excuse not to try.”

Gun Control Alone Can't Curb Violence by Jesse Jackson

Jan. 5, 2015

Gun Control Alone Can't Curb Violence
By Jesse Jackson 

NEWS ANALYSIS

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - America may now have more guns than people.

As President Barack Obama announces new executive action on gun control, U.S. gun manufacturing is a growth industry, almost doubling since the beginning of Obama Administration (5.6 million in 2009; 10.9 million in 2013). From 2001 to 2013, according to a Centers of Disease Control and Prevention report, 406,496 Americans were killed with firearms on U.S. soil. In contrast, the number of U.S. citizens killed by terrorists at home or abroad over the same years number 3,380. Chicago suffered a spike in gun homicides in 2015 with 470 homicides and 2,939 shooting victims, the worst of all U.S. cities.

Studies show a clear correlation: the more guns, the more homicides and the more people shot. Cities are racked by gun violence, yet gun ownership is much more prevalent in rural areas, as vividly displayed by the Bundy bunch that occupied an Oregon wildlife refuge over the weekend.

According to a General Social Survey report, gun ownership is declining. About 35 percent of adults were estimated to live in a household with a firearm in 2014, down from over half in the early 1980s. As hunting has declined in the country, so has gun ownership. Gun ownership is higher among whites than among blacks or Hispanics, higher among men than women. Gun ownership rises with income. It is higher among those earning more than $90,000 a year than among those earning less than $25,000. It is highest in the South Central U.S. and lowest in the Northeast and Pacific regions.

Now weapons designed for the purpose of mass killing in war are available for purchase at gun shows, online and at many gun stores. These weapons are powerful enough to stop trains or strafe planes that are landing or taking off. These are tools for terrorists, easily available for sale in America.

Obama has already delivered 15 national statements after shocking incidents of gun violence. Yet no national reforms have been passed — or even gotten much consideration. After the Charleston massacre, the Economist magazine compared mass shooting in the U.S. with the grotesque air pollution in China: a horrible health hazard which the country appears incapable of addressing.

Gun control doesn’t cost much. America has another abiding challenge — the explosive catastrophe of urban poverty — that also goes unmet. The City Observatory, an urban policy think tank in Portland, Ore., reports that the number of high-poverty urban neighborhoods in the nation’s 51 largest cities tripled — to 3,100 — between 1970 and 2010. The number of poor persons living in those areas doubled over those years. The poor are more isolated and concentrated than ever. African-Americans and Hispanics suffer the highest rates of poverty — and are the most isolated into separate and unequal neighborhoods. Twenty percent  of U.S. children lived in poverty by end of 2013; poverty among African-American children was nearly twice that (38 percent).

To deal with our impoverished neighborhoods, it isn’t enough to get rid of the guns. The public squalor of our inner cities has to be addressed: schools modernized, affordable housing built, mass transit supplied, available jobs created. Dealing with entrenched poverty costs real money, but less than we spend on the police, jails, drugs, alcoholism, and chronic illness — the dysfunction that comes from poverty.

Today’s politicians don’t want to spend political capital on guns or fiscal capital on poverty. They’d rather pay more on the back end from failing to act than risk the up-front political and economic costs of dealing with the problems. So the war on guns is lost; the war on poverty abandoned. And the hopes of millions are dashed by that failure. In the circus of the current presidential campaign, these are two fundamental challenges that ought to be at the center of our debate.

NBA Players Shoot to Score Against Gun Violence by Frederick H. Lowe

Jan. 4, 2015

NBA Players Shoot to Score Against Gun Violence 
By Frederick H. Lowe

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Carmelo Anthony

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from NorthStarNewsToday.com

(TriceEdneyWire.com)-The NBA has some great shooters but they do it without guns and they are urging others to follow their lead.

As part of the “End Gun Violence” campaign, some the of the sport’s top stars, including Carmelo Anthony, Stephen Curry, Chris Paul and Joakim Noah, have begun focusing on the 88 Americans killed every day by gun violence and the hundreds of others who are injured.

The campaign is a series of PSAs that began airing during NBA games played on Christmas Day. Writer, actor and director Spike Lee directed the “End Gun Violence,” public service announcements for gun violence survivors from the Everytown Survivor Network.

The PSAs make clear that high profile professional athletes have become involved in pressing social issues.

After police shot and killed Michael Brown, athletes wore warm up jerseys that boasted his name. After a New York cop used an illegal chokehold to murder Eric Garner, athletes wore “I can’t breathe” jerseys, the last words Garner uttered before he died. NFL and NBA players also wore warm up jerseys that said “#Black Lives Matter.”

Recently, the University of Missouri football team refused to play a game until Tom Wolfe, the school’s president resigned. Students, including student athletes, charged Wolfe with ignoring blatant racism on campus. Wolfe stepped down.

“All over America people are tired of daily gun violence,” said Carmelo Anthony of the New York Kicks. “But I’ve spoken with people about this in Baltimore, in New York, and across the United States and I know people are ready for their voices to be heard. Basketball brought me to a different route in my life, but every kid should have an outlet to reach his or her full potential. Using this platform to speak out, I know we can keep guns out of the wrong hands and save lives.”

Anthony, who plays forward or strong forward, averages 21.8 points per game.

Stephen Curry II, who plays guard and point guard for the NBA champion Golden State Warriors, said a shooting death shocked him.

“I heard over the summer about a shooting that killed a three-year-old girl, and I immediately thought about my three-year-old daughter, Riley.” Curry averages 30.8 points per game.

John Feinblatt, president of Everytown for Gun Safety, said the organization is proud to join with these NBA stars and Spike Lee to highlight stories of gun violence in America and bring people together to address the problem.

The campaign features 35 gun violence survivors from all across the country, from Boston to Chicago to New York City and includes stories of everyday gun violence in urban communities to mass shootings in Newtown, Conn., Aurora, Colo., and Tucson, Ariz. Survivors will share personal stories about gun violence.

'Co-Working' Takes Root in Tech-Savvy Africa

Jan. 5, 2015

'Co-Working' Takes Root in Tech-Savvy Africa

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Entrepreneurs at Ouagalab


Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from Global Information Network

(TricEdneyWire.com) - The internet entrepreneur you saw staring intently into his or her laptop at a coffee shop, library or in a quiet corner of the bus terminal is finally moving indoors.

The workplace has taken a step into the new century with a configuration called “co-working.” First spotted in San Francisco at the “Hat Factory” in 2005, it was a loft for creative types with a laptop just needing a table and chair, an outlet and a wireless connection.

From SF’s “Citizen Space,” co-working places are popping up worldwide, with over 700 locations in the United States alone. The number of co-working spaces and available seats have roughly doubled each year.

Co-working in Africa has also come of age. In Angola, KiandaHub is seeking funding to become central to the country’s growing startup ecosystem.

A technology and innovation hub, KiandaHub was founded in February of last year by Mauro Yange, Dizando Norton and Joel Epalanga, and currently has a team of seven.

“Our meetings were held at restaurants and some events and other activities in very humble venues, where we could not even breathe or think properly, but the willingness to make things happen was bigger than anything else,” Epalanga said.

Angola’s co-working initiative emerged from studies at South Africa’s RLabs at Cape Peninsula University Technology in Cape Town.

Next month, South Africa will host Coworking Africa Meet Up 2016, a full day conference at the Design Bank on Harrington St, Cape Town. Featured at the event will be “Garage” – a growing network with 3 established spaces in Cape Town, Nairobi and Lagos. Each space has its own identity, creating an environment suited for building unique partnerships locally and internationally.

Currently, there are more than 250 active co-working spaces on the African continent and South Africa is leading the movement with 42 spaces and 23 tech hubs. However there is still a need for a more established community. Coworkers and space operators still face a variety of obstacles, ranging from lack of infrastructure to staggeringly high real estate prices and various other sociopolitical barriers.

Still, optimist Yaw Owusu, head of Gateway Innovations Ltd, and developer of Ghana Cyber City, predicts “an explosive growth” in co-working communities across Africa as youth population and income levels increase.

Tidiane Ball, founder of DoniLab, a co-working space in Bamako, Mali, adds: “In our African countries, young people have projects but have no environment conducive to develop. I was in the same situation. In 2009 I had the idea to create malisante.net which is a medical information site.

A student at the time, Ball lacked the funds to have a fixed Internet connection. Finally, in 2013 he set up DoniLab to help those in the same condition. “Co-working is just starting in Mali. The demand mainly comes from young unemployed graduates. This is explained by the fact that these young people have realized that they need to create their own business and work in synergy.

“Co-working spaces in Africa must work together to exist in the long term,” he said. “These collaborations can be: a technology exchange, exchange of knowledge and experiences.” Donilab currently partners with Ouagalab, a start-up based in Burkina Faso. 

Top Black Stories Last Year Foreshadow Continued Calls for Justice in 2016 By Hazel Trice Edney

Jan. 4, 2016

Top Black Stories Last Year Foreshadow Continued Calls for Justice in 2016
By Hazel Trice Edney

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President Barack Obama and the first family joined thousands of marchers in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of 'Bloody Sunday', March 7, 1965.
Obstructions to voting rights remain key issues as America prepares for the 2016 presidential elections. PHOTO: White House

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President Obama speaks at the June 26 funeral of Rev. Dr. Clementa Pinckney, pastor of "Mother" Emmanuel A.M.E. Church, killed with eight of his parishioners by a young White supremacist. PHOTO: White House

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Last year’s top stories in the Black Press appear to predict continued protests, advocacy and legislation in 2016 on the same key issues that have long plagued Black America.

Racism and White supremacy, police misconduct, economic inequality, gun violence, criminal justice inequities, and voting rights challenges were among the top Black press issues in 2015 and – with presidential elections and continued protests, will continue into 2016 and likely beyond.

The following are the synopses:

  • Racial Terrorism: Dylan Roof – On June 17, the unthinkable happened. A 21-year-old White man shot and killed nine people who had conducted prayer and Bible study with him at Charleston, S.C.’s historic “Mother” Emmanuel A.M.E. Church. Sadness and horror swept the nation, intensified by the fact that Roof said he had come to the church “to kill Black people.” President Obama delivered the eulogy of the pastor, the Rev. Dr. Clementa Pinckney, also a member of the South Carolina state legislature.
  • Battles against Confederate flag, emblems, and monuments: Following the mass shooting at “Mother Emanuel”, South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley led the removal of the Confederate flag from atop the S. C. statehouse July 10. The act of hate by Roof, who waved the flag as a symbol of racial hate, was the impetus to do what had been fought over for decades. Dylan now faces hate crimes charges.
  • Black Lives Matter movement: The largely youth-led protests demanding the end to unjust police killings of unarmed African-Americans raged throughout 2015 and has continued into the New Year. The death of Baltimore’s Freddie Gray, culminated in fiery rebellions in April. Six police officers have been charged in his death. In Chicago, protests continued through Christmas in the video-taped death of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald, shot 16 times as he clearly walked away from police holding a small knife. Once the video was released a year later, Officer Jason Van Dyke was arrested and charged with murder in his death. Now the Dec. 26 death of 55-year-old mother and Grandmother Bettie Jones has sparked outrage across the country. Police claim they were shooting at Quintonio LeGrier as he hurled a metal baseball bat. Questions surround why Jones, a neighbor was shot and whether police needed to shoot to kill LeGrier.
  • 20th anniversary Million Man March: The call by Nation of Islam Minister Louis Farrakhan to commemorate the 1995 march on the Washington Mall yielded what appeared to be another million Oct. 10. Though Farrakhan’s speech hit on a number of themes, the focal issue at the gathering was economic justice.
  • Economic Justice/Unemployment: The adult Black jobless rate dipped below double digits on occasions, but remain twice that of White unemployment and consistently above the average unemployment rate. Likewise, economic justice in general remained on crisis level. According to Forbes Magazine, the typical White family has 16 times the wealth as a Black family.
  • 50th Anniversary of Voting Rights March across Edmund Pettus Bridge: Thousands traveled to Selma, Ala. to commemorate the 50th Anniversary of “Bloody Sunday”, the March 7, 1965 march during which Alabama State police officers attacked and beat marchers, including Congressman John Lewis (D-Ga.). As the Nov. 8, 2016 presidential elections rev up, activists say obstructions to and attacks on voting rights remain among their chief concerns.
  • Rise of Donald Trump on platform of bigotry: Billionaire businessman Donald Trump has risen to the top of the GOP ticket with Iowa primaries less than a month away. Trump has drawn a large following of people who are apparently attracted to his exclusionary rhetoric, which began with his implying that Mexican immigrants are rapists and murders. His most recent shocker is his call for a band on all Muslims entering the U. S. He also implied that a Black Lives Matter activist "perhaps should have been ruffed up" for interrupting one of his rallies. This statement was made after the activist was attacked and beaten by Trump supporters.
  • Loretta Lynch becomes first Black woman attorney general: Attorney General Loretta Lynch succeeded the first Black attorney general Eric Holder. After a long fought battle for her Senate confirmation, she was sworn in by Vice President Joseph Biden April 27.  Among her major acts so far, she has been initiated federal investigations into the racial patterns and practices of both Baltimore and Chicago police departments.
  • Gun Violence: From street crimes to mass shootings thousands were killed by gun violence across the U. S. in 2015. Baltimore, Chicago as a string of cities around the nation hit record numbers of homicides. Citing a Congressional stalemate on the issue, President Obama, Jan. 4, prepared to announce his intention to use executive powers to enforce gun restrictions.
  • Criminal Justice Reforms: President Obama became the first sitting president to visit a federal prison. From information he gathered about federal prisoners, he announced he would push to “ban the box”, the nickname for the movement to rid federal job applications of the question about past incarcerations. In July, Obama also pardoned 46 non-violent drug offenders. Despite these moves and his calls for a closer look at the so-called “war on drugs”, activists say far too many convicted felons remain without voting rights after serving their time.

In President Obama's  last year, many in Black America await whether he will make new strides on any of these issues. His Jan. 12, 2016 State of the Union Address will perhaps be a litmus test of his intentions. But with a Congress that is at a partisan stalement, he may continue using executive powers.

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