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An Angry Black Man by Julianne Malveaux

Sept. 8, 2015

An Angry Black Man
By Julianne Malveaux

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Alison Parker, a rookie news reporter at WDJB, the Roanoke, Virginia CBS affiliate, had turned 24 just days before she was murdered on August 26.  Her work partner, photojournalist Adam Ward was about to move to Charlotte because his fiancé a producer at WDJB had a new job.  Both Parker and Ward were described in superlative terms by their bosses, she as a “star” who lit up the screen and had a limitless future, he as a capable and thorough cameraman, dedicated to his jobs.  By now, most have seen the gory footage of them being murdered on camera as Parker was interviewing Vicki Gardner, who led the local chamber of commerce.  She was shot in the back, and has survived.

These on-air murders are about as grisly as they come, and there can be no explanation, except insanity, to account for them.  What was wrong with Bryce Williams aka Vester Flanagan?  Why did he stalk and then kill two of his former colleagues.  He’d sued his former employer for racial discrimination and had his claim rebuffed.   Still, he maintained a sense of outrage because he felt he was treated unfairly.

You probably have never heard of Lonnie Gilchrist, a Wharton MBA, who was dismissed, he said, because of racism. He walked into the Merrill Lynch office in Boston and shot his boss, George Cook, saying, “no billionaire is going to ruin my life”.  He worked on commission, and according to many, was treated more like an office boy than a professional.  The noted attorney Charles Ogletree (current Harvard Law Professor) defended him in 1988-89, was one of the three defending attorneys.  Gilchrist pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity, and his lawyers used “racial rage” as one of the reasons that Gilchrist killed Cook.  The jury took five days and nearly 30 hours, and deadlocked before reaching a conclusion.  The case might have been a slam-dunk, but the jury obviously found at last some merit in the racial rage defense.

Nobody deserves to be massacred at any stage of their life. The folks at Mother Emanuel AME Church had lives to live and they were cut short.  The little children at Sandy Hook Elementary School, in Newton, CT had full lives ahead of them.  Anyone who picks up a gun and decides to fire at a group of people publicly has clearly taken leave of their senses.  Yet there is a difference in the way crazed people are discussed in the media. Bryce Williams aka Vester Flanagan was immediately described as angry and crazed, a judgment the media did not rush to when Dylann Roof, shooter at Mother Emmanuel in Charleston and Adam Lanza, shooter of Sandy Hook embarked on insane massacre activity.

Can race be a factor?  What happens when mental illness collides with racial rage?

The man who shot Alison Parker and Adam Ward either experienced or perceived racial slights.  The station manager Jeff Marks said Flanagan was “a man with a lot of anger”.  If even a fraction of the slights Flanagan said he’d experienced were correct he had a right to be angry.  Watermelon jokes?  Monkey slurs?  In the 21st century?  Come on people.  Some of us can turn the slur around or ignore it.  White folks might find this funny and some African Americans might find themselves profoundly offended. Those who already feel beleaguered might feel so offended that they’d respond angrily enough to be labeled “hostile” by a human resource manager.

Lonnie Gilchrist was also labeled an “angry” man.  One of his bosses said he got so angry at criticism that he reacted with such an outburst that “we were very frightened”.  How much stereotyping goes into labeling some black men as frightening?  Do they have to be taller?  Larger?  Or simply blacker? Descriptions of Williams aka Flanagan as an angry black man need to be contextualized. Some describe him as an arrogant man with a chip on his shoulder. Some of those terms are subjective.

How many African Americans have been described as “angry” when they simply attempt to hold their own in a mostly white space.  One coworker said Flanagan was angry because he responded crisply when she observed him as “too quiet”.   I guess if he laughed aloud he may have been considered “too boisterous.”

Even as we mourn Alison Parker and Adam Ward, we have to ask why their murderer snapped.  We have to ask why there are so many angry black men.  They don’t all scream, they don’t all shout, they don’t all shoot; most let their corrosive anger swallow them from inside.  Many of those outwardly functioning black men die a decade earlier than their white counterparts because of the anger they’ve internalized.

"What happens to a dream deferred", wrote Langston Hughes?  "Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun?  Does it fester like a sore and then run.  Maybe it just sags like a heavy load.  Or does it explode?"

Lonnie Gilchrist exploded.  Flangan exploded.  We can call them deranged, disturbed, or simply angry.  Yet we do ourselves a disservice if we fail to examine race as one source of their explosion.

Julianne Malveaux is an author and economist based in Washington, DC. She can be reached at www.juliannemalveaux.com

America’s Political Landscape: A Barren Wasteland By Dr. Wilmer J. Leon, III

America’s Political Landscape: A Barren Wasteland
By Dr. Wilmer J. Leon, III

NEWS ANALYSIS

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.--That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, --” Declaration of Independence -1776

Historically, America has been a country of broad ideas and vision as evidenced by the Declaration of Independence.  This document challenged the concept of the divinity of the king and rule by divine right. It introduced to Europeans the concepts of the laws of nature and a divine right of equality instilled into every man by the shear fact of birth. Roosevelt’s “New Deal”, Kennedy’s “New Frontier” and Johnson’s “War on Poverty” were also broad ideas and visions of what America had the potential to attain.

America has also been a conflicted country. High ideals and lofty aims have often been in conflict with capitalism, greed and concepts such as American exceptionalism and Manifest Destiny.

As a settler colonial state and global hegemon, America has imposed some of the most heinous crimes upon the world.  Those crimes include chattel slavery, Black Codes, Jim Crow, the genocide against Native Americans, the support of Israel’s genocide against the Palestinians and the invasion of Iraq are just a few examples of how America’s corrupt sense of self has wreaked havoc upon the world.

The 2016 presidential campaign should be a time when the best that America has to offer comes to the forefront.  The America with a progressive domestic agenda, broad ideas and vision; and an inclusive Weltanschauung – “comprehensive conception or image of the universe and of humanity's relation to it…a broad world view” should carry the day.

Yet, as we move into the 2016 presidential season and listen to the rhetoric of the presidential frontrunners from both parties, all we can conclude is that the American political landscape has become a barren political wasteland.  In assessing the current slate of candidates, the American voter is truly left with the unenviable task of selecting between the best of the worst and the lesser of evils.

As of this writing, according to Real Clear Politics, in the national polls Donald Trump leads the Republican Party with 26.5 percent. Trump offers worn xenophobic rhetoric: “I want to make America great again”, which is a rehash of Tom Tancredo’s Tea Party chant, “We want our country back”.

According to Trump, “When Mexico sends its people, they’re not sending their best…They’re not sending you. They’re sending people that have lots of problems, and they’re bringing those problems with us. They’re bringing drugs. They’re bringing crime. They’re rapists. And some, I assume, are good people.”

He offers constitutionally unrealistic solutions to immigration reform. They include stripping citizenship from U.S.-born children of undocumented immigrants, who become citizens at birth under the 14th Amendment to the Constitution.

Here is what we do know. According to the Washington Post, “Data on immigrants and crime are incomplete, but a range of studies show there is no evidence immigrants commit more crimes than native-born Americans. In fact, first-generation immigrants are predisposed to lower crime rates than native-born Americans.”

Dr. Ben Carson trails Trump with 12 percent of Republican support. Carson believes America is being destroyed by political correctness: “We need to be in a place where people feel free to express themselves and not to be intimidated by political correctness It’s destroying our nation.”

Carson also believes that being gay is a choice. And he linked homosexuals to “people who believe in bestiality.”

As a surgeon Carson believes the Affordable Care Act (ACA) is worse than slavery, "You know Obamacare is really I think the worst thing that has happened in this nation since slavery…" At the Republican Leadership Conference in 2014 Carson made comments to the Daily Beast in an interview saying the ACA “has been even more damaging to the United States than the terrorist attacks of 9/11.”

As a presidential hopeful he should be less concerned with political correctness and more concerned with truth, factual accuracy and correctness.  He offers no data to support his outrageous, inaccurate and wrong pronouncements. On the international front, Carson did not know that the Balkins are a part of NATO.

Jeb Bush is in third place with 9.5 percent of Republican support. He cannot bring himself to admit that his brothers failed invasion of Iraq is the cause of the current conflicts in the Middle-East, Nigeria and other countries.  According to Jeb, Obama and Clinton “stood by as that hard-won victory by American and allied forces [in Iraq] was thrown away.” First, there was no “hard-won” victory. Second, Jeb conveniently ignores the fact that his brother, President Bush agreed, - reluctantly but did agree - to a withdrawal deadline of December 31, 2011 without leaving behind a residual force.

Hilary Clinton leads the Democratic hopefuls with 49 percent of support. According to a Huffington Post poll, Clinton has a 51 percent unfavorable rating to a 39 percent favorable rating. She is so bogged down in mismanaging a contrived email scandal that no one can hear her discussing issues such as income equality, college affordability, women’s health, and equal pay.

Sen. Bernie Sanders says he’s an independent in his heart but is running as a Democrat.  He has also admitted that he will support the Democratic candidate should he lose the nomination. He has shown his hand and relinquished any negotiating leverage before the game has even started.  In a nutshell, he’s running hard-left and even though he’s gaining in the polls he will probably fold in 2016, leaving progressive Democrats with Clinton.

Many voters are fed up with the gridlock in Washington. During President Obama’s term, the source of that gridlock can be traced back to the Republican leadership at a dinner on January 20, 2009 at the Caucus Room restaurant in Washington, DC. During that dinner several Republican leaders and strategists devised a plan to oppose any economic legislation proposed by the President. Other candidates are playing into the politics of phenotype and ethnicity in the wake of an African-American president and the myth of drug crazed raping Mexicans streaming across the US border.

Some Conservatives (Republicans) are speaking in racist, homophobic invectives and rants that have no basis in fact, but ring true in the ears of those narrow but well-funded and organized Tea Party and Christian conservative sects.  Democrats with no clear message are constantly taken off message and consumed by fiction and lies that they cannot put to rest.

The country of vision and great ideas is falling victim to a narrow sense of identity and single issue politics that is turning the American political landscape into a barren wasteland.

Dr. Wilmer Leon is the Producer/ Host of the Sirius/XM Satellite radio channel 126 call-in talk radio program “Inside the Issues with Wilmer Leon” Go to www.wilmerleon.com or email:This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. www.twitter.com/drwleon and Dr. Leon’s Prescription at Facebook.com  © 2015 InfoWave Communications, LLC

Therapy Gap for Depressed Black Seniors By Steve Manas

Sept. 6, 2015

Therapy Gap for Depressed Black Seniors
  By Steve Manas
black senior
Black senior citizens are less likely to receive the therapy they need for depression.
Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from NorthStarNewsToday.com

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - African Americans seniors are the least likely to be diagnosed with depression, and if diagnosed, the least likely to receive treatment, researchers report.

The disparities remain despite improvements to diagnostic tools and therapies in the two last decades, according to a study published online in  American Journal of Public Health.

Depression is a significant public health problem for older Americans—about 6.6 percent of elderly Americans experience an episode of major depression each year and can complicate medical conditions commonly found in the elderly, including heart failure, diabetes, and arthritis.

“If untreated or undertreated, depression can significantly diminish quality of life,” says Ayse Akincigil, assistant professor of social work at Rutgers. “Vigorous clinical and public health initiatives are needed to address this persisting disparity in care.”

For the study, researchers culled data from the U.S. Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey, 2001-2005 to get information on health care use and costs, health status, medical and prescription drug insurance coverage, access to care, and use of services.

Based on a national survey of 33,708 Medicare beneficiaries, depression diagnosis rates were 6.4 percent for non-Hispanic whites, 4.2 percent for African Americans, 7.2 percent for Hispanics and 3.8 percent for others. The heterogeneity of Hispanics makes it difficult to determine why they are undertreated and their treatment preferences, Akincigil says.

“Are there cultural differences or systemic differences regarding health care quality and access for treatment of depression?” Akincigil asks. “If African Americans prefer psychotherapy over drugs, then accessing therapists for treatment in poorer neighborhoods is a lot more difficult than it is for whites, who generally have higher incomes and live in neighborhoods more likely for therapists and doctors to be located.

“Whites use more antidepressants than African Americans. We presume they have better access to doctors and pharmacies, and more money to spend on drugs.”

The investigation focused on whether there are racial/ethnic differences in the rate of diagnosis of depression among the elderly, controlling for sociodemographic characteristics and depression symptoms (depressed mood, anhedonia) reported on a two-item screener, and also in treatment provided to those diagnosed with depression by a health care provider.

There is evidence that help-seeking patterns differ by race/ethnicity, contributing to the gap in depression diagnosis rates. Stigma, patient attitudes, and knowledge also may vary by race and ethnicity.

“African Americans might turn to their pastors or lay counselors in the absence of psychotherapists,” she said. “Low-income African Americans who were engaged in psychotherapy reported that stigma, dysfunctional coping behavior, shame, and denial could be reasons some African Americans do not seek professional help.”

Mistrust The nature of the patient-physician relationship also might contribute to disparities in depression diagnosis rates.

“African Americans reported greater distrust of physicians and poorer patient-physician communication than do white patients. Communication difficulties may contribute to lower rates of clinical detection of depression because the diagnosis of depression depends to a considerable degree on communication of subj ective distress,” Akincigil explains.

Racial and ethnic differences in the clinical presentation of depression may further explain the lower rates of depression detection among African-American patients.

Financial factors may also play a role in the detection rates. Among Medicare beneficiaries, African Americans are substantially less likely than non-Hispanic whites to have private supplemental insurance that covers charges larger than standard Medicare-approved amounts.

“Differences in provider reimbursement may favor increased clinical detection of depression in white patient groups if higher payment rates result in longer visits,” Akincigil says.

The study concludes that “efforts are needed to reduce the burden of undetected and untreated depression and to identify the barriers that generate disparities in detection and treatment.

“Promising approaches include providing universal depression screening and ensuring access to care in low-income and minority neighborhoods. An increase in the reimbursement of case management services for the treatment of depression also may be effective.”

Don't Forget: #BringBackOurGirls

Sept. 6, 2015

Don't Forget: #BringBackOurGirls
By U. S. Rep. Frederica S. Wilson

congresswomanfredericawilson

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Late last month, we marked a sad milestone: More than 500 days have passed since Boko Haram abducted nearly 300 Nigerian schoolgirls from their dormitory rooms in the dark of night and 219 of them are still missing.

I ask America to join me in creating a Twitter storm to commemorate the now more than 500 days of mystery surrounding the missing Chibok schoolgirls. Tweet messages of hope and peace. Tweet prayers, pictures of remembrance, blessings for the families, and words of consolation for everyone involved.

Tweet all day long. Tweet whenever you think about it. Tweet, tweet, tweet. The more we tweet the more pressure there will be to return the girls to safety.

During my first visit to Nigeria last June, I was inspired by the Nigerian “Bring Back Our Girls” movement and the courage displayed by the activists and the girls’ families, who have spent each and every one of the more than 500 days making sure their girls are not forgotten. Their constancy and faith have been galvanizing. That is why I promised to lead the effort to #BringBackOurGirls in the United States.

The Chibok girls’ abduction has helped Nigeria learn important lessons about the power of democracy and diplomacy. Frustrated by the indifference and inaction of former President Goodluck Johnathan, Nigerian voters elected a new leader – Muhammadu Buhari, the nation’s third democratically elected head of state, who has made the defeat of Boko Haram his new administration’s top priority.

During my second visit to Nigeria in August, I urged the West African nation’s citizens to hold President Buhari and other elected and military officials to their word. Just as the world must not forget the Chibok girls, these officials must never forget what they were hired to do: find the girls, defeat Boko Haram, rebuild the communities the group has decimated. They must also create economic and educational opportunities for the young Nigerians who are tempted by the terrorist group’s lure because they feel they have no other options.

“Pressure, Pressure, Pressure,” was my mantra to Nigerian voters.

President Buhari, with whom I met during my time there, really gets it. We had discussions about replicating the 5000 Role Models of Excellence Project in Nigeria to target young boys at risk.

In addition to making youth employment “a cardinal objective” of his administration, in a bold move, he has given Nigeria’s military a three-month deadline to put an end to Boko Haram and its reign of terror. The good news is that his generals will not have to do this on their own. The Nigerian leader has met with the heads of the border nations Cameroon, Benin, Niger and Chad, and encouraged them to put their political differences aside. Led by the Nigerian head of a new Multinational  Joint Task Force, the nations’ troops can literally box Boko Haram in and prevent the insurgents from crossing boundaries to avoid escape and more important, expand their reach. President Buhari recently announced plans to hire at least 10,000 new police officers to boost domestic security.

The United Nations also joined in the fight to defeat Boko Haram. In late August U.N. Secretary General Bank Ki Moon visited Nigeria and pledged the international organization’s solidarity and support to counter extremism and terrorism. French President Francois Hollande also has offered to organize an international meeting to examine ways to defeat Boko Haram.

The whole world has been moved by the Chibok girls’ fate, the U.N. secretary general noted, but there are still so many people who are unaware of their abduction and, sadly,  many more who simply do not care.

In addition to the big steps, President Buhari and others are taking to shut these terrorists down, social media can be a powerful tool. So, each day, remember to tweet, tweet, tweet . #JoinRepWilson so we can #BringBackOurGirls.

Congresswoman Frederica S. Wilson is a third-term Congresswoman from Florida representing parts of Northern Miami-Dade and Southeast Broward counties. A former state legislator and school principal, she is the founder of the 5000 Role Models for Excellence Project, a mentoring program for young males at risk of dropping out of school. Congresswoman Wilson also founded the Florida Ports Caucus, a bipartisan taskforce that coordinates federal action in support of Florida’s harbors and waterways.

 

 

 

 

Black Children Suspended and Expelled from Schools at Extremely High Rates By Frederick H. Lowe

Sept. 6, 2015

Black Children Suspended and Expelled from Schools at Extremely High Rates
By Frederick H. Lowe
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Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from NorthStarNewsToday.com

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - African-American boys comprise 47 percent of suspensions and 44 percent of expulsions from kindergarten through 12th grade in public schools in 13 Southern states.  These removals from school result in many of them being referred to the police, unlike White students who are disciplined by school officials, according to a report just published by the University of Pennsylvania.

Black girls, however, are suspended or expelled from school at much higher rates than black boys in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and West Virginia, the states covered in the study. African-American girls comprise 56 percent of suspensions and 45 percent expulsions, the report stated.

Nationally, 1.2 million Black students were suspended from K-12 public schools in a single academic year, and 55 percent of the suspensions occurred in the 13 Southern states named, according to a report published by the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education Center for the Study of Race and Equity and Education.

In the U.S., Black boys comprised 35 percent of students’ suspended and 34 percent of students expelled. Nationally, 45 percent of black girls were suspended and 42 percent were expelled.

The study, titled “Disproportionate Impact of K-12 School Suspension and Expulsion on Black Students in Southern States,” reported that African Americans were 24 percent of the population of the 3,022 districts analyzed, but the rates at which they were suspended or expelled were disproportionately high.

A suspension is a temporary exclusion. An expulsion is a much harsher punishment, which means the student is forced to leave the school grounds until he or she is given permission to return when a negotiated agreement between the student and the school or school district is reached.

The report noted that in 77 Southern school districts, black students were disproportionately expelled at rates five times or higher than their representation in the student population.  In 181 districts, African Americans were 100% of the students expelled from public schools. And in 484 districts, blacks were 50 percent or more of the students expelled from public schools.

As for suspensions, in 132 school districts, black students were disproportionately suspended at rates five times or higher than their representation in the student population. In 84 districts, African Americans were 100% of students suspended from public schools.

U.S. Rep. Cedric Richmond (D., Louisiana), said, “From the data available, we know that black students are disproportionately suspended, expelled, and referred to the criminal justice system by schools. The overuse of these punishments and disproportionate use on students of color are serious problems that we have to address right now.”

Richmond said suspensions and expulsions often lead to students dropping out of school which in turn results in the student reaching adulthood and earning much less over his or her  lifetime than fellow students who are awarded their high school diplomas.

A 2002 study reported that black students were most often suspended for being disrespectful and threatening, loitering, excessive noise. However, their white classmates were likely referred to school discipline officers for less subjective offenses, such as smoking, leaving school classrooms or school grounds without permission, vandalism and using obscene language, the report stated.

The study notes that zero-tolerance policies enacted through rigid practices and predetermined consequences that limit discretion in individual cases, have led to increased suspensions and expulsions.

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