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Still hoping for change? By James Clingman

Dec. 10, 2014

Blackonomics

Still hoping for change?
By James Clingman

clingman

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - As the end of another tumultuous year approaches, Black people again find ourselves in the relative same economic and political position as we were the year before, and the years preceding.  In 2007, leading up to 2008, when the ultimate level of political history had finally come to fruition, Black folks and others were citing the mantra, “Hope and Change!”  Quite frankly we got more hope than real positive change—for Blacks, that is.

Just as our emotional bubble was inflated to its maximum capacity, now the air is coming out and we are heading back down from our lofty height, about to burst in a very short while.  Instead of saying, “We are the change we’ve been looking for,” in light of all the unrest and injustice, I and others say as we have said for decades, “The change you are looking for is in your pockets.”

Slowly but surely, albeit very late in the game, Black folks are learning that economic empowerment is the key to our progress and prosperity in this nation.  Decades of instructions from conscious elders, scholars, and activists seem to be taking hold on the minds of young people, despite the tired messages coming from some of our current leaders.  I am encouraged, indeed.

It is way past time that Black people acknowledge our situation, admit our mistakes, and work cooperatively to improve our economic situation, from which we can then build true political power.  It’s not the other way around, and fortunately the young generations see and understand that reality.

Although we still get our “marching” orders from political icons and media talking heads, many are determined to blaze a new trail that leads us to economic empowerment.  The sad part is that all we have to do is look back at the past 60 years and we can see how wrong and misguided we have been in our quest for parity and fairness.  Now, there is an enlightened, determined, and unwavering group of young people who are neither intimidated by the powerful nor swayed by the mis-leadership of the old guard and political gatekeepers.  It looks to me that they are in it for the long haul.

While Ferguson has brought about an awakening of sorts, the solution-based messages we still hear are, “March” and “Vote.”  The NAACP, as big and bad as it purports to be, has issued a call for a 120-mile walk from Ferguson to the Missouri governor’s office, the same guy who insulted them with his decisions in the aftermath of Michael Brown’s death.  Walk 120 miles?  The only thing we will get out of that is sore feet and worn shoe leather.  Oh yes, the businesses along the

route will benefit economically; I can hear them now saying, “Y’all come.”  We will be counting the miles, and they will be counting the dollars.  It’s no wonder the younger generation is marching to its own drummer.  They look back and see all the marching we did and ask, “Why are we still being subjected to the same things they marched against back in the day?” Can you blame them?

While many in my generation and older are still hoping for change, young folks have come to the understanding that the change they can and should control is in their pockets.  They are committed to implementing economic solutions to address the problems they face, not only in Ferguson, but across the nation.  They know that politics alone will not solve their problems; they know that the hue and cry from folks like Congressman John Lewis, who is now saying, “Republican voter suppression efforts played a crucial role in driving voter turnout to historic lows in 2014,” is ridiculous.

Mr. Lewis is calling for more involvement in the voting process rather than more involvement in the economic process of leveraging Black spending throughout the year.  He suggests that Republicans went into the homes of Black folks and forced them to stay away from the polls during the past election.  While there certainly are efforts afoot to curtail and suppress the vote, Black folks still have the right to do so.  Many chose not to vote because of nonsensical remedies put forth as relief for the inequities that exist across the board for Black people in this country.  They didn’t vote because they are frustrated by the past.

The old political agenda is not the primary agenda of our young people.  We fell head over heels for politics to solve our problems; they are using economics.  I believe young folks, the “new guard,” are saying: “No more symbolism; we want substance; no more speeches, we want specifics; no more rhetoric, we want results; no more dallying, we’ll use our dollars; and no more hope, we’ll use our change.”

Holder Announces Initiative to Address Profiling Storm

Dec. 8, 2014

Holder Announces Initiative to Address Profiling Storm
Nation Must Unite to “Address Realities Too Long Ignored”

By Zenitha Prince

agericholder

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from the Afro American Newspaper

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Attorney General Eric Holder announced Dec. 1 that the U.S. Justice Department will be updating its guidance on racial profiling.

“In the coming days, I will announce updated Justice Department guidance regarding profiling by federal law enforcement, which will institute rigorous new standards – and robust safeguards – to help end racial profiling, once and for all,” Holder said. “This new guidance will codify our commitment to the very highest standards of fair and effective policing.”

The retooled guidelines were announced as part of a suite of reforms the Obama administration announced this week in the wake of the grand jury decision in the police-involved shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and resulting worldwide protests.

“The problems we must confront are not only found in Ferguson…. We are dealing with concerns that are truly national in scope and that threaten the entire nation,” Holder said.  Broadly speaking, without mutual understanding between citizens – whose rights must be respected – and law enforcement officers – who make tremendous and often-unheralded personal sacrifices every day to preserve public safety – there can be no meaningful progress.

“But the issue is larger than just the police and the community,” he continued. “Our overall system of justice must be strengthened and made more fair.  In this way, we can ensure faith in the justice system.  Without that deserved faith, without that reasoned belief, there can be no justice.”

Holder made the announcement in an address at the renowned Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, where the attorney general and other Justice officials joined in the first of several meetings with law enforcement, civic, and community leaders around the country.

“It was here at Ebenezer Baptist, well over half a century ago, that our nation’s greatest advocate for justice, for peace, and for righteousness…Dr. King set out not merely to change our laws, but to change the world – and to pull the country he loved ever closer to its founding principles,” Holder said.

“It’s clear that our nation continues to face persistent challenges – along with the countless opportunities that Dr. King helped make possible,” Holder continued. “As we recommit ourselves to the cause with which he entrusted us, it’s apparent that our nation’s journey is not yet over.  And so we return once more to this hallowed place to seek shelter from a terrible storm – a storm that I’m certain we will weather, so long as we continue to stand united – and unafraid to address realities too long ignored.”

Black Diabetics Suffer From High Rates of Vision Loss

Dec. 8, 2014

Black Diabetics Suffer From High Rates of Vision Loss

blindness due to diabetes

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from BlackMansStreet.Today

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - African-Americans suffering from diabetes have higher rates of vision loss compared with other ethnic and racial groups, and poor access to eye exams play a role in the disparity, according to a study released by Johns Hopkins University and the University of Southern California.
African Americans suffer higher rates of vision loss and blindness from diabetes.African Americans suffer higher rates of vision loss and blindness from diabetes.

Diabetic macular edema (DME), one of the leading causes of blindness in diabetic patients in the U.S., occurs when fluid and protein accumulates on the macula of the eye, which is part of the retina, causing it to thicken and swell. Central vision is affected and, if left untreated, it can lead to slight blurring or even blindness.

“We were surprised that our research showed that African Americans have the highest rates of DME, when Hispanics tend to have the highest prevalence of diabetes,” said Rohit Varma, professor and chair of ophthalmology at USC and director of the USC Eye Institute. “There is not enough vision screening for DME among diabetics, yet there are much better therapies available that are covered by insurance.”

The Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) Ophthalmology published the study online. Part of the study also was posted on Futurity Research News. Diabetic eye disease is one of the leading causes of vision loss in people 20 to 70 years old. The Centers for Disease and Prevention estimated that 25.8 million Americans had diabetes in 2010.

Grand Jury in Another Fatal Police Shooting

Dec. 8, 2014

Grand Jury in Another Fatal Police Shooting

brooklynn district attorney ken thompson
Brooklyn District Attorney Ken Thompson will convene in the police shooting death of an unarmed Black man.

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from BlackmansStreet.Today

Brooklyn District Attorney Kenneth Thompson will present to a grand jury evidence surrounding the police shooting death of Akai Gurley, an unarmed man.

New York police officer Peter Liang shot and killed Gurley, 28, on Nov. 20 as he and his girlfriend walked down the stairs of the Louis H. Pink Houses, a housing project in Brooklyn. The elevator was either broken or slow and the couple decided to take the stairs.

Liang and his partner were patrolling the stairwell when Liang shot Gurley in the chest for no apparent reason. After being shot, Gurley fell two flights of stairs. New York Mayor Bill de Blasio and Bill Bratton, New York’s police commissioner, said Gurley was  innocent.

Instead of trying to save Gurley’s life, Liang texted his union representative, according to the New York Daily News.

Thompson said he will impanel a grand jury, but he did not set a timetable.

“I pledge to conduct a full and fair investigation and to give the grand jury all of the information necessary to do its job,” Thompson said in a statement.

Gurley was buried Saturday.

Put Those Police Cameras on the Bankers By Jesse Jackson

Dec. 9, 2014

Put Those Police Cameras on the Bankers
By Jesse Jackson

Jesse3

(TriceEdneyWire.com) n-n A week ago Sunday, five St. Louis Rams professional football players entered a game with their hands up, protesting the killing of Michael Brown. They stand in the lineage of John Carlos and Tommie Smith, of Muhammad Ali, identifying with the pain in their communities and turning protest into power.

The gesture turned to chants — “Hands up; Don’t Shoot” in demonstrations across the country. Protesters shut down major thoroughfares from Manhattan to Chicago to Los Angeles to decry the Staten Island grand jury that refused to indict the policemen who killed Eric Garner, turning his plea — “I can’t breathe” — into a call for justice.

In these cases, there was no cross examination and thus no indictments. “Justice” rings hollow across the nation. Injustice reins.

These demonstrations, largely by young and remarkably multi-racial crowds, are not the first. They were preceded by Occupy Wall Street, indicting the 1 percent and spreading to hundreds of cities. They were foreshadowed by the dreamers, children demanding the right to come out of the shadows of the undocumented.

They were accompanied by record numbers of workers in low wage jobs at fast food restaurants and the Dollar Stores walking off their jobs in some 190 cities.

They were complemented by women demanding gender equality, particularly at the workplace where discrimination and sexism are still rife.

The streams of alienation and disparities are converging into a river. Injustices in this new age are not only inflammable, they are increasingly inflamed.

The official reaction to police immunity for the killing of unarmed black boys and men Ferguson and Staten Island and Cleveland and Brooklyn has focused, not surprisingly, on the police. The president has created a Task Force on 21st Century Policy, with instructions to report in 90 days. He’s committed millions to put cameras on police.

But he might be better advised to put cameras on bankers. Reckless, unaccountable and murderous police behavior must end, but the police are simply the gatekeepers assigned to keep order.

Behind the gate is the American policy of isolating poor people of color in ghettos, ghettos deprived of jobs, of capital, of decent health care, of affordable housing, of good schools.

Police are assigned to patrol these zones of despair, part of the only thriving industry in these neighborhoods — the jail-industrial complex of more police, police stations, courthouses, bondsmen, jailors, judges, lawyers and prosecutors, court recorders and guards and much more. In this pressure cooker, all of us are vulnerable — none of us are safe until all of us are safe.

In the Civil Rights Movement, the Bull Connors were the violent enforcers. But they were not the issue: The issue was legal segregation that deprived African Americans of their rights and locked them into second-class citizenship.

Today, the police killing of unarmed Blacks is unacceptable and reaching crisis proportions. But the issue is a national policy that abandons poor people of color in their ghettos. If we put cameras on the police, we may get better policing and less injustice (although Eric Garner’s killing was on camera). But what we need is an urban development policy that attacks segregation by race, rebuilds poor neighborhoods, invests in the health and education of poor infants and children, erects affordable housing, offers training for and transport to jobs that exist.

The demonstrations are about justice for Michael Brown and Eric Garner and others that can be and will be added to the list. But they aren’t just about those killings. They are about a national ghetto policy, a national worker impoverishment policy, a national inequality policy.

The slogan “No justice, no peace,” reverberates throughout the country. And the demonstrations are growing and spreading. Different streams of protest are coming together. Occupy Wall Street exposed the 1 percent. The strikes of low wage workers expose the global corporations. The “Hands up, Don’t Shoot” demonstrations expose the harsh injustices of jail-industrial complex.

Dr. Martin Luther King taught us: “There comes a time when one must take a position that is neither safe, nor politics, nor popular, but one must take it because it is right. Today, across America, more and more Americans are standing up for what is right.

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