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New Report Finds 'Staggering Inequality' of Incomes Once Decried by MLK

Jan. 20, 2015

New Report Finds 'Staggering Inequality' of Incomes Once Decried by MLK

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In a Martin Luther King Day March in Washing, D.C., on Monday, protestors carried signs decrying economic inequality and joblessness, a reflection of many protests around the nation. PHOTO: Roy Lewis/TriceEdneyNews Wire

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from Global Information Network

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Income inequality, one of the issues that so troubled the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., is again front and center in today’s news. A new report on the topic has come up with figures that even caught the financial community by surprise.

 For example: members of the “world’s richest” club earn half-a-million dollars per minute, the report found… Seven out of ten people live in countries where the gap between the rich and poor is worse than thirty years ago.”

 Wall Street barons - “predominantly white, male and greying” - include Berkshire Hathaway chief Warren Buffett, whose account increased 9% between 2013 and 2014 to $58.2 billion. He’s at the top, followed by Bloomberg LP founder Michael Bloomberg, worth $33 billion — a 22% gain on the previous year. Carl Icahn is third with a tally of $24.5 billion, up 23%.

 It would take Microsoft founder Bill Gates 218 years to spend all its wealth, the researchers observed.

 Prepared by Oxfam International, a UK-based development organization, the report goes on: “Today there are 16 billionaires in sub-Saharan Africa, alongside the 358 million people living in extreme poverty... Every year, 100 million people are pushed into poverty because of the rising cost of health care.

 “If this trend continues, of an increasing wealth share to the richest, the top 1% will have more wealth than the remaining 99% of the people in just two years,” said Oxfam.

 When Dr. King marched on Washington for jobs and freedom, the federal minimum wage was $1.25 an hour. In today’s dollars, that guaranteed base wage would be $9.54 an hour.

 But the federal minimum wage today is just $7.25 an hour.

 In other words, low-wage workers are more than $2 behind where they were when Dr. King declared:

 “We refuse to believe that the bank of justice is bankrupt. We refuse to believe that there are insufficient funds in the great vaults of opportunity of this nation. So we’ve come to cash this check—a check that will give us upon demand the riches of freedom and the security of justice.”

 Kenyan activist Winnie Byanyima, who heads Oxfam, wrote on her blog: “Extreme economic inequality is out of control and getting worse. “From Ghana to Germany, South Africa to Spain, the gap between rich and poor is rapidly increasing.”

 “Across rich and poor countries alike, this inequality is fuelling conflict, corroding democracies, and damaging growth itself. Left unchecked, economic inequality will set back the fight against poverty and threaten global stability.”

 “Such stark inequality is not inevitable,” wrote Oxfam on their web page. Congressman Keith Ellison, D-Minn. concurred. “Workers are falling behind,” he said. “Income inequality threatens our democracy as Jim Crow segregation did in 1963.”

 President Obama’s upcoming State of the Union address is also expected to be dominated by the issue of income inequality. 

AME Church Leaders Cite Black Economic Empowerment as 2015 Goal by Hazel Trice Edney

Jan. 20, 2015

AME Church Leaders Cite Black Economic Empowerment as 2015 Goal
By Hazel Trice Edney

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The Rev. Jonathan Weaver


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National Bankers Association President Michael Grant, U.S. Black Chambers Inc. President Ron Busby, and A.M.E. board member, Rev. Jonathan Weaver
discuss a new plan for economic development through the Black Church.

(TriceEdneyWire.com)When Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated, he and other protestors had won passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Therefore, his agenda had turned toward the next major issue - economic empowerment for Black people.

Therefore, on April 3, 1968, planning a march on behalf of oppressed sanitation workers, Dr. King told preachers at the Mason Temple in Memphis, Tenn., “It's all right to talk about long white robes over yonder, in all of its symbolism. But ultimately people want some suits and dresses and shoes to wear down here!

“It's all right to talk about streets flowing with milk and honey, but God has commanded us to be concerned about the slums down here, and his children who can't eat three square meals a day.

"It's all right to talk about the new Jerusalem, but one day, God's preacher must talk about the new New York, the new Atlanta, the new Philadelphia, the new Los Angeles, the new Memphis, Tennessee. This is what we have to do.”

The next day, Dr. King was assassinated.

Nearly 47 years later as America celebrated the King birthday holiday this week, a group of church leaders appears to be carrying out this Black economic empowerment goal in earnest. Invited to speak to a recent gathering of pastors and leaders of the African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) Church, National Bankers Association President Michael Grant cited the words of human rights champion Paul Robeson:

‘“We realize that our future lies chiefly in our own hands,’” Grant quoted. “‘We know that neither institution nor friends can make a race stand unless it has strength in its own foundation; that races like individuals must stand or fall by their own merit; that to fully succeed they must practice the virtues of self-reliance, self-respect, industry, perseverance, and economy.’”

Grant continued in his own words: “We played a major role in growing America from a small colonial outpost to the greatest industrial giant the world has ever known.  We don’t have to argue about our ability to grow wealth.  We have made everyone else rich, some filthy rich.  Isn’t it time that we finally make our efforts productive for ourselves?”

Grant was keynote speaker during a special session on “Economic Development through the Black Church” during the A.M.E. Church’s 2nd District Mid-year Opening Plenary Session in Raleigh, N.C. late last year. His speech preceded a panel discussion that also included Marie Johns, former deputy administrator at the Small Business Administration; Ron Busby, president/CEO of the U. S. Black Chambers Inc. and Rev. Jonathan Weaver, senior pastor of Greater Mt. Nebo A.M.E. Church in Bowie, Md., and board member of the A.M.E. organization that deals with economic growth and development projects.

Following the forum, Weaver says A.M.E. pastors, led by Bishop William P. DeVeaux, are now poised to carry out a specific plan that they hope will spread to other denominations and ultimately catch fire in other denominations and the Black community throughout 2015.

“Clearly where we are at this point is to actualize and implement what we discussed in Raleigh,” said Weaver in an interview. “The whole thrust was how Black churches can help to empower Black businesses.”

The starting plan, in a nutshell, is for churches located in the A.M.E. Second District - North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland and D.C. – to commit to the support of two Black-owned businesses. They are Thomas Morehead, president of a BMW dealership in Sterling, Va. and Donnell Thompson, co-founder/co-owner of RWDT Foods, Inc., a chain of restautrants based in N. Snellville, Ga.

AME church members buying from those two businesses will cause the churches to benefit from those sales; then identify other businesses in and around the states and “replicate this process”, Weaver described. After tracking the sales, initiated by the churches, the hope is that other church districts will get involved and that the movement will spread to other businesses and other churches.

“And we certainly hope and pray that this will become a much larger Black faith effort and we will reach out to the Baptist community, the Church of God and Christ and the list goes on,” Weaver said. “If we’re able to affect a significant change in terms of relationship with Black businesses, can you imagine if we’re able to boost their profit margin and therefore they are going to have to hire more people and therefore they will be reaching back to the faith community. More people will have jobs, they will have better jobs; therefore there will be less frustration, economically, in our community.”

So far, the congregations have been receptive to the idea, Weaver said. “Quite frankly, I’ve not met any resistance thus far.”

In his speech, Grant reminded the audience that a legacy of Black economic develop was at the core of the founding of the A.M.E. Church.

“I agree with that great A.M.E. historiographer, Dr. Dennis C. Dickerson, who said that the history of the African Methodist Episcopal Church – founded – by Bishop Richard Allen – reflects the black liberationist narrative of African – American history,” Grant said. “Nearly eight decades before the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation, Allen, a free man, was already promoting Black economic development.  So it is fitting that we come to his church today with an urgent message: The time for Americans of African descent to take our place at the roundtable of economic opportunity is now.  With each passing day, the price of not having a well – thought out economic agenda for Black America continues to extract a toll and degrade our position in this country and throughout the diaspora.”

Grant, who last year received the U. S. Department of Commerce’s Lifetime Achievement Award for his Black business advocacy, ticked off statistics that undergird the need for an economic movement to support Black-owned businesses and Black-owned banks:

There are currently 1.9 million Black-owned businesses in America, but only about one in 20 have more than one employee and less than 2 percent have annual gross receipts of more than $1,000,000.

In terms of relative wealth, White America is 20 times richer than Black America, according to a recent Pew Report.

In the 1960’s, we had 60 Black-owned banks.  Today, that number has dwindled to only 30.  What is insane about this tragic loss is this: The bank is the only institution in our community that can leverage or multiply dollars 7, 8, 9 or 10 times.  That means for every $1,000,000 dollars of invested capital in these banks, they are able to loan out 7, 8, 9 or $10 million for economic development, business growth and job creation.

Grant said African-Americans lost significant ground in business ownership after integration, largely because African-Americans were no longer forced to support each other.

“As long as we were forced to trade with each other and barter with each other, our businesses (small as they were) thrived.  But in our minds, we were never quite good enough.  We had internalized the lie about our lack of inherent worth,” he said. “When the doors of integration gave us the long – awaited pass to wine and dine with our former oppressors, we enthusiastically abandoned our own in search of an elusive White acceptance.  We believed then – and many of us still do – that association would bring on assimilation.”

Dr. King concluded on April 3, 1968, the eve of his assassination: “We've got to stay together and maintain unity. You know, whenever Pharaoh wanted to prolong the period of slavery in Egypt, he had a favorite, favorite formula for doing it. What was that? He kept the slaves fighting among themselves. But whenever the slaves get together, something happens in Pharaoh's court, and he cannot hold the slaves in slavery. When the slaves get together, that's the beginning of getting out of slavery. Now let us maintain unity.”

Reparations Conference Scheduled for New York

Jan. 17, 2015

Reparations Conference Scheduled for New York

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U. S. Rep. John Conyers to be honored following Reparations Conference. His legislation has kept the issue alive for decades.

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from BlackmansStreet.Today

 (TriceEdneyWire.com) - Growing outrage surrounding homicides of unarmed African-American men by police and the refusal by grand juries to indict the officers has sparked new interest about the reparations movement in the United States, according to Don Rojas, spokesman for the Institute of the Black World 21st Century, which is hosting a reparations conference April 9-12 in New York.

The so-called war on drugs in which Black men are serving long terms in prison also has fueled growing anger. Once the men leave prison, they are often unable to get jobs, and they are prohibited from voting.

“A lot of young people who are participating in BlackLivesMatter, have never heard of the reparations movement,” Rojas told Blackmans­Street Today and NorthStar News & Analysis. “They are much more progressive and rallies are being held in New York, Los Angeles and other cities.”

The Institute of the Black World, which is based in Queens, N.Y., will host the conference that will be attended by Sir Hilary McD. Beckles, head of the Caribbean Community Commission or CARICOM, a Georgetown, Guy­ana-based organization that represents 15 Caribbean countries. Beckles is author of Britain’s Black Debt: Reparations for Caribbean Slavery and Native Genocide.

CARICOM is seeking reparations from European countries as a result of the transatlantic slave trade. CARICOM representatives are expected to attend the conference. The U.S. conference is inspired by CARICOM.

Thirteen of the 15 Caribbean countries that have established national reparations commissions also will send representatives to the New York conference. In addition, South and Central American countries that have established reparations commissions also are sending representatives.

The conference is being held at various locations in Brooklyn, Queens and Manhattan, which have become one of the many battlegrounds for the fight against police killings of unarmed Black men.

An opening rally is being held in Harlem, the symbolic capital of black America and a closing rally will be held in Brooklyn, which boasts the nation’s largest Caribbean population.

The goal of the conference is to establish a National African American Reparations Com­mission to intensify the reparations movement in this country.

The National African American Reparations Commission wants to select a 15-member committee that will hold town hall meetings nationwide to decide on a 10-point plan for reparations.

After the New York meeting, members of the Institute for the Black World 21st Century will travel to Detroit to meet U.S. Rep. John Conyers (D., Mich.) to honor the Congressman and to revive his legislation calling for reparations. Institute of the Black World will honor Conyers’ 50 years of public service.

The scheduled New York conference follows a one-day conference held last April in Chicago.

For more information about attending the New York conference, preregistration is at http://ibw21.org/.

With Presidential Elections Feb. 14, Boko Haram Commits 'Deadliest Massacre Yet'

Jan. 18, 2015

With Presidential Elections Feb. 14, Boko Haram Commits 'Deadliest Massacre Yet' 

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Nigerian Pres. Goodluck Jonathan

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from Global Information Network

(TriceEdneyWire.com) – The northern Nigerian town of Baga was devastated over the weekend by a surprise raid conducted by Boko Haram insurgents apparently aimed at a major military base constructed there.

Amnesty International estimates the death toll could be as high as 2,000, though some witnesses cite lower tolls in the hundreds.

Maj. Gen. Chris Olukolade, a military spokesman, said Monday that the evidence available so far indicates a death toll of no more than 150, including insurgents killed in combat with troops. The military said 14 soldiers were killed and 30 were wounded in the Baga attack, but that "law, order and normalcy" would soon be restored to the area.

Nigeria has often been accused of underestimating casualty figures to downplay the threat of Boko Haram.

It is the second major assault on Baga which was earlier caught in the crosshairs between the Nigerian military and insurgents. Soldiers ransacked the town in April 2013 after Boko Haram militants attacked a military patrol, killing a soldier and wounding 5 others.

Community leaders told Human Rights Watch at that time that soldiers began burning down their homes in retaliation, shooting people as they fled. They counted 2,000 burned homes and 183 bodies. Satellite images of the town analyzed by HRW corroborated these accounts and identified 2,275 destroyed buildings, the vast majority residences, with another 125 severely damaged.

The Nigerian government dismissed the evidence, claiming only 30 homes were destroyed.

“The Nigerian military has a duty to protect itself and the population from Boko Haram attacks, but the evidence indicates that it engaged more in destruction than in protection,” said Daniel Bekele, Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “The glaring discrepancies between the facts on the ground and statements by senior military officials raise concerns that they tried to cover up military abuses.”

Ignatius Kaigama, the Catholic Archbishop of Jos, in central Nigeria, accused the West of ignoring the threat posed by Boko Haram.

Putting down Boko Haram required international support and unity of the type shown after last week's militant attacks in France, he said. "We need that spirit to be spread around… Not just when [an attack] happens in Europe, but when it happens in Nigeria, in Niger, in Cameroon.”

His remarks came after some 23 people were killed over the weekend by two teenage girls  who blew themselves up at a marketplace in northeastern Nigeria.

Elsewhere in the country, ethnic tensions were stirred up in a Sunday service lead by the prelate of the Methodist Church of Nigeria, Samuel Uche. At an event attended by Pres. Goodluck Jonathan, the Senate President, and top military brass, the cleric accused the Fulanis and Kanuris of attempting to bring Boko Haram to power.

Archbishop Uche called for the arrest and prosecution of the leaders of opposition over their threats to form a parallel government if presidential elections slated for Feb. 14 are rigged. Pres. Jonathan has also called for the disqualification of the opposition candidate, Muhammadu Buhari.

Presidential elections are scheduled for Feb. 14. 

What’s in a Million? By James Clingman

Blackonomics

What’s in a Million?
By James Clingman

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Exactly what is there in one million Black folks united in their will and purpose?  What is in a million brothers and sisters who are tired of the same old rhetoric, the same old leaders, and the same old ways of dealing with political and economic empowerment?  What’s in a group of one million Blacks who are unapologetic about their identity?  What’s in such a group that, collectively and cooperatively, is willing to sacrifice some of its members’ time, talent, and treasure for the uplift of Black people in this country?

Considering our relative position within the political system, is it rational to believe that one million like-minded Black voters could affect positive change by leveraging their votes to obtain concessions from candidates prior to and after an election?  What would be the result of one million Black independent-thinking voters deciding to register as “No Party Affiliation” rather than as Dems, Repubs, or any other formal political party?  What if we followed through on Theodore Johnson’s article on The Root.com, "Black America Needs Its Own President"?

Is it reasonable to think that one million conscious Black consumers would have the power to affect the bottom line of corporations to the point of getting those companies to take public positions in support of justice for Black people?  Could those one million consumers ultimately obtain reciprocity in the marketplace by leveraging and redirecting a greater portion of their dollars to their own businesses?

Many questions to answer, yes, but those questions point to choices; they will suggest to some of us, first, that Black people would never declare themselves independent of the Democrat Party and that Black people will never cooperate in support of one another economically.  But to others of us those questions raise attractive alternatives to what we are doing now; they suggest very strongly that we can be more self-determined via simple but powerful tactics that impact the two systems that run this nation and the world.

Recognizing that everyone will not want to walk the road toward economic and political transition (After all, everyone did not want to go with Harriet Tubman), there are no “marching orders” being trumpeted by the group that is shouldering the responsibility of bringing together one million conscious Black voters and consumers.  This is a “Whosoever will, let him come” movement.

The movement is simply called, “One Million Conscious Black Voters and Contributors.”  To the skeptics out there who think Black folks are too individualistic to come together in such a large number, that one million Black folks will not cooperate, that we have too many schisms among us, and we will not trust one another, we say, “Not so.”  The key word in the name of the group is “Conscious.”  Even further, there is no need to pressure anyone to join.  I know there are one million conscious Blacks in America (about 2%) who will join this movement without being prodded, which eliminates our need to cajole, persuade, or spend a lot of time trying to convince them of why they should.  If we can’t find two in every hundred among us, the result would be analogous to Abraham failing to find a few righteous men in Sodom and Gomorrah.

The Million Man March proved that Blacks will come together across religious, ideological, and economic lines for a righteous and necessary cause.  Those who attended nearly 20 years ago will remember the cooperative and accommodating spirit among the men, the supportive attitudes of the women who stayed home and encouraged their men to participate, and the subsequent follow through by many of the men upon returning home.  Much good work was done by individuals who were committed and determined to keep the promise they made that day.

As Amefika Geuka always quotes Marcus Garvey, “There is nothing common to man that man cannot do.” We have already shown through many collective efforts that all we need are a relative few conscious, committed, dedicated, and intentional men and women to accomplish the tasks at hand.

With that in mind, rather than ask “what’s” in a million, we must see “who’s” in a million?  If you have not added your name to the list, one thing is for sure: You are not in the million.  Names are being added every day; just go to www.amefika.com to be informed, and send an email to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. to sign up.

We can do more to help our organizations, our businesses, and our schools by leveraging our votes and by “contributing” our resources to this movement, thereby, getting more political quo in return for our political quid and reciprocity in the marketplace.  Be “One of the Million” and let’s finally let our people and everyone else know that we are very serious about being economically and politically empowered. Whosoever will…

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