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The Problem is Not the Government! by Dr. E. Faye Williams

Oct. 27, 2013

The Problem is Not the Government!
By Dr. E. Faye Williams

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) – On March 23, 2010, I was in the Capitol watching every move, listening to every speech (pro and con), trying to figure out what could possibly be objectionable about affordable health care for all who needed it.  It was clear that Members of Congress were provided health care by us--the long suffering taxpayers.  What would be the benefit of denying millions of taxpaying citizens access to affordable health care when we pay for theirs?  Are we any less worthy of the emotional security that accrues to those capable of weathering the financial storms of catastrophic illness opposed to falling over the “financial cliff” into bankruptcy?

I’ve finally figured it out.  As Paul Ryan opined, “Some people are just takers.”  During his campaign for vice-president, he elaborated on “takers” and we thought that he was talking about poor people.  Now, the truth rings clear.  Ryan was attempting to disguise the real intent of his colleagues who want things for themselves at the expense of those who really need help.  The problem is not the government.  It’s the distortion of principles of governance by those so misguided that their selfishness overwhelms their failed commitment to public service.

A good example is Michele Bachmann who always seems to get things wrong.  Remember when she took great pride in proclaiming that John Wayne, the actor, was a native of her home and that she wanted to run her campaign in the same spirit as John Wayne from Waterloo, Iowa —only to discover that her “homeboy” was really the serial killer, John Wayne Gacy! Likewise, Bachmann rushed over to the WWII Memorial and joined in blaming the President, Park Police and anyone else she could think of for shutting down the government.  Factually, this shutdown was made possible by her vote, and the votes of politicians motivated more by racial animus than “the general welfare.”

Recently, we saw Utah’s Mike Lee, and other deniers of affordable health care, shift focus from the so-called damaging human impact of the ACA to finger-pointing at the technologically flawed launch of the program.  The fact hasn’t been lost that these miscreants created false equivalences on both sides of a single issue.  They offer nothing to the public discourse except their destructive obsession to erase the historical fingerprint of the first Black President.  More tragic is the reality that their shrill racist rants have found kindred spirits in a small, but vocal segment of the political right.

The infamous Ted Cruz returned to Texas last week to a hero’s welcome because he played such a big part in shutting down the government to prevent those in need from having affordable health care—causing our economy to lose 24 billion dollars in the process!  Yet, he leads the folk who want to save the taxpayers from government!  Upon examination, his tactics are like those of the homeowner who burns his home down because he thinks the kitchen needs remodeling!  His self-serving, grand-standing is a prime example of our need to be more careful in examining the motives of those who present themselves to govern.

Speaker John Boehner was elected to lead the U.S. House of Representatives, but we saw everything except leadership from him during the recent shutdown crisis.  He could only lead 87 members of his caucus to vote with him to end the awful economic crisis; on the other hand, Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi did not lose a single vote in her caucus.  Hers sounds like real leadership to me.  Speaker Boehner seems to need a bit more practice.

2014 gives us a chance to bring back sensible governance because the American people do need government.  We just need to change some of those doing the governing.

(Dr. E. Faye Williams is Chair of the National Congress of Black Women, Inc.  202/678-6788.  www.nationalcongressbw.org)

'Lazy' and Crazy by Julianne Malveaux

Oct. 27, 2013

'Lazy' and Crazy
By Julianne Malveaux

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Voter suppression is alive and well, especially in the State of North Carolina, where a Republican official, Don Yelton, proved himself to be at best intellectually limited, and at worse, downright crazy.

While discussing North Carolina's new voter ID law, Yelton made some absurd and incendiary statements. “The law is going to kick the Democrats in the butt. If it hurts a bunch of college kids [that are] too lazy to get up off their bohonkas and go get a photo ID, so be it. If it hurts a bunch of whites, so be it.”

 

Yelton continued, showing his racism, “If it hurts a bunch of lazy blacks that want the government to give them everything, so be it,”

What is wrong with this man?  Has he no decency?  He tipped his hand by telling the world what he REALLY thinks, and indicating what the so-called voter ID laws are really about.  These laws are about suppressing likely Democratic votes.  They are about racism and racist attitudes.  These attitudes don’t belong in these United States of America, 150 years after the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation.

Who the heck is Don Yelton, anyway?  He’s a local North Carolina precinct chair who initially answered questions about his interview with some belligerence.  “I’ve been called a bigot before”, he said before adding that his best friend is black.  Then he goes on to talk about the “n” word, saying that if African Americans can use the word, then so can he!

Of course, Yelton was reprimanded by his party.  He ended up resigning over his comments.  But no one reprimanded Mitt Romney over his 47 percent comments, and no one has reprimanded the many Republican racists who cling to the past because they are frightened of our multicultural future.

I am waiting for someone to tell me that Yelton is “just one person” and that his views do not represent those of the Republican Party.  I’m also waiting for ants to eat snakes!  I am certain that Yelton has used these kinds of comments before.  Is this the first time he has been reprimanded?

To apply the world “lazy” to students and African Americans is disingenuous, racist, and insulting.  Yelton seemed careful, though, not to ignore senior citizens, some of who might be challenged to get new ID.  Yelton’s comments are especially revealing of the contempt that some elected officer for their constituents.  Now that Republicans control both houses of the North Carolina legislature, they are free to say what they really think.

This is not a North Carolina problem.  Lots of states want to suppress the vote with newer voter ID laws, fewer polling places, and other methods of keeping voters away from the polls.  These efforts to “kick Democrats in the butt” by attacking likely Democratic voters ought to mobilize voters to out maneuver and out vote these people who are so crazy that they call others lazy.  The lazy comment is connected to racist stereotypes.  Somebody needs to remind Mr. Yelton that the plantation and sharecropping systems that North Carolina’s economy rested on for at least a century was staffed by “lazy” people who were constantly being ripped off for their labor.

Shame on Don Yelton for being crazy enough to call hard working students and African Americans lazy.  Shame on the Republican Party that he purports to represent.  And shame on the state of North Carolina for its attempt to suppress the vote.  Shame, too, on the other states around the nation who, like North Carolina, who have made voter suppression a priority.

 

Julianne Malveaux is a DC based economist and author.

Anti-‘Redskins’ Movement Grows as Black Press Editor Drops Name By Hazel Trice Edney

Oct. 21, 2013

Anti-‘Redskins’ Movement Grows as Black Press Editor Drops Name
By Hazel Trice Edney

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In this May 2012 photo, Richmond Free Press Editor/Publisher Raymond H. Boone walks with Free Press photographer Sandra Sellars toward the entrance of the Virginia Supreme Court where she became the first Black newspaper photographer to cover an investiture in the Court's 232-year history. The break through came after a decade-long campaign by the paper. Boone has now waged the same type of campaign for the change of the name of the Washington 'Redskins'. PHOTO: Jerome Reid/Richmond Free Press

(TriceEdneyWire.com) – The editor-publisher of the award-winning Richmond Free Press has announced his paper will no longer use the name ‘Redskins’ to describe Washington, D.C.’s professional football team  because he says the name is racist, harkening to the historic torture and abuse of Native Americans.

“We want to make absolutely certain that the Free Press does not endorse or promote a totally unacceptable name. Also, it represents an opportunity to show that Washington, D.C. – the capital of the United States – is not riveted to the past and that Virginia is not riveted to the past. It’s an opportunity to move ahead and not to continue to encourage this take our nation back theme that the ultra conservatives have,” says Raymond H. Boone Sr. in an interview this week. “We should never become acclimated to the outrageous. And the Free Press is leading the expunging of this name so that it will not be a cause for people to find an unacceptable, racist unpatriotic name acceptable.”

Boone, who has a decades-long reputation as a force against racism in Virginia, announced his decision to drop the name in an editorial published in the Oct. 17-23 edition of the Free Press. He says the paper will only refer to the team as “the Washington professional football team.”

He wrote, “The Richmond Free Press is expunging the nickname of the Washington professional football team from its news and editorial columns. The reason: The nickname is insulting to Native Americans, racist and divisive. Plus, it promotes the spreading ugly Tea Party mentality that is growing in Virginia and the Nation’s Capital.”

The editorial continues, “Our use of the depraved nickname would only serve to cause people to become more acclimated to the outrageous. It would give a cause for the regeneration of the despicable N-word and other derogatory names given to other racial groups.”

Daniel Snyder, the owner of the team, has vowed not to change the name, claiming that 90 percent of Native Americans, including many Native American students, do not want to change the name and view it as a source of pride. However, the stance by the 21-year-old newspaper joins a rising chorus of voices against the name, from people and organizations that associate it with race hatred, bigotry and the “ethnic cleansing” mentality perpetuated by President Andrew Jackson and his Indian Removal Act of May 28, 1830 - among others.

Jacqueline Pata, executive director of the National Congress of American Indians, a 69-year-old organization that promotes itself as the oldest, largest and most representative organization of American Indians and Alaska natives, also reframes from using the term, “Redskins”.

Speaking on an Aug. 26 panel, “No Lie Can Live Forever,” sponsored by the Kellogg Foundation in commemoration of the 50th Anniversary of the March on Washington, Pata said her community calls the team, “The Local Team”.

Responding to a question from the audience on whether the team’s name will eventually change 50 years past the civil rights anniversary, she says she believes there is definitely a movement toward it.

“I am feeling very optimistic because more and more voices of the people are stepping up,” Pata said. “I think it will get down to the economics of the owner who has definitely put his line in the sand. But, as the National Football League and as other sponsors of the team have started to urge the team to reconsider action, I think there is” the possibility.

Pata added that her organization would be happy to create “a winning opportunity for the fans” by helping “to come up with a name that is heroic and honorary and that we can all stand behind. I would love to be a part of that process and have an open invitation to do so.”

National Urban League President/CEO Marc Morial, also on the Kellogg panel, predicts the name change is inevitable.

“It will happen. It needs to happen.  It’s time for it to happen,” he said. “When I watch the team, it goes through my mind, ‘Has the time just come for this image and for this name to be changed?’ This is the nation’s capital and its institutions – and the football team here is an institution - need to be standing with what’s best for the future of the nation. I think it’s just that simple.”

President Obama recently told the Associated Press that he would “think about changing” the team’s name if he was the owner.

Boone is emphatic and - based on his historic stances - will only escalate his campaign against the name. The Free Press has made statewide and national news on numerous occasions with its campaigns against racism, including a successful 1992 campaign to remove Confederate flag emblems from the planes and uniforms of the Virginia Air National Guard. More recently, he waged a successful campaign to open the door for photographers from Black newspapers as a part of the official press core of the Virginia Supreme Court.

The tone of his editorial hints he will not blink:

“…The football team’s current nickname is the modern-day version of the Washington football team’s white supremacist mentality,” he writes. “Most of its stars are African-Americans who hold a slave status, reporting to the team’s ultraconservative owner, Daniel Snyder. He vows he will ‘never’ change the rotten name … a name that stems from the scalping and butchering of Native Americans by bounty hunters.”

He concludes with another call for the name to be changed. “In the meantime, the Free Press, along with a growing number of opponents of the racist nickname, will not print it.”

 

Editor’s note: Hazel Trice Edney, the writer of this article is a former reporter for the Richmond Free Press.

Black Clergy Push 'Obamacare' Enrollment as Glitches Get Fixed By Hazel Trice Edney

Oct. 22, 2013

Black Clergy Push 'Obamacare' Enrollment as Glitches Get Fixed
By Hazel Trice Edney

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Rev. Dr. Barbara Williams-Skinner

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Rev. C. T. Vivian

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Rev. Al Sharpton

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - A team of African-American preachers has sent a letter to President Barack Obama affirming their “commitment to the Affordable Care Act” even as the President has ordered the website overhauled.

“We believe that access to quality health care is a fundamental civil and human right in America. Historically, over seven million African-Americans have been uninsured and denied access to care with devastating consequences. The Affordable Care Act provides African-Americans, along with Americans of all nationalities, access to desperately needed quality health care,” states the letter, signed by 14 preachers, all of whom lead major clerical or civic organizations. “We affirm our support for the Affordable Care Act. We understand that over time aspects of the Act will be revised as government learns more and to-be-expected administrative glitches will be appropriately addressed but it is essential that we work aggressively with what we have right now. We cannot afford to put this off any longer. Any further delay will have catastrophic effects on the nation’s uninsured.”

The three-page letter, complete with supporting scriptures, and starting with “Dear Mr. President”, was released to the media Monday evening.

The 14 names on the letter are the Rev. Dr. Otis Moss, Jr. chair, Faith Partnerships; Inc.; the Rev. Dr. Barbara Williams-Skinner, co-chair, National African American Clergy Network, who is heading the effort; the Reverend Dr. T. DeWitt Smith, Jr., co-chair, National African American Clergy Network; the Rev. Dr. Carroll A. Baltimore, president, Progressive National Baptist Convention, Inc.; Bishop George E. Battle, Jr., senior bishop, African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church; Bishop Charles Edward Blake, Sr., presiding Bishop and Chief Apostle, Church of God In Christ, Inc.; Bishop John R. Bryant, senior bishop, African Methodist Episcopal Church; the Rev. Dr. Ambassador Suzan Johnson Cook, founding president, Women In Ministry International; Bishop Paul A. G. Stewart, Sr., acting senior bishop, Christian Methodist Episcopal Church; Bishop Paul S. Morton, international presiding bishop, Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship International; the Rev. Dr. Julius R. Scruggs, president, National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc.; the Rev. Al Sharpton, president, National Action Network; the Rev. Dr. Stephen Thurston, president, National Baptist Convention of America, Inc., the Rev. Dr. C. T. Vivian, president, Southern Christian Leadership Conference.

The letter was released only hours after President Obama held a Rose Garden press conference deploring the embarrassing glitches on the enrollment website, HealthCare.gov, while praising the benefits of the new plans for those who have successfully enrolled.

“…The problem has been that the website that’s supposed to make it easy to apply for and purchase the insurance is not working the way it should for everybody.  And there’s no sugarcoating it,” Obama said. “The website has been too slow, people have been getting stuck during the application process.  And I think it’s fair to say that nobody is more frustrated by that than I am - precisely because the product is good.”

For anyone experiencing problems or needing answers to questions, he announced the toll free number, 1-800-318-2596 for help. The President has also embraced the Republican-invented nickname for the Affordable Care Act, appealing in a mass e-mail for people to “Join Team Obamacare.”

Meanwhile, amidst escalated criticism of the plan – mainly by Republicans - the pastors and their associates bolstered their support.

“We, leaders of predominantly African American denominations and other faith leaders, who lead millions of African American people of faith, believe that our devotion to God requires us to be actively involved in promoting the well-being of all people,” states the letter. “In some cases, we can best accomplish that objective by executing clearly defined, focused collaborative efforts amongst denominations and other faith based groups. We believe in those cases we can accomplish more together than we can separately. The issue of providing all Americans with access to quality health care is one of those issues.”

The letter lists their specific commitments, including to “Facilitate the critical enrollment numbers necessary to ensure the success of the Affordable Care Act” and “Seek other opportunities to work towards improving the health status of our constituencies” such as “Health and Wellness Sundays which will include thematic preaching on specified Sundays along with other related activities.”

They appealed for other pastors to sign onto the letter and the commitment: “We call on all others of like minds and empathetic hearts to join in this public affirmation by affixing your names to this historic document.”

Health Disparities Group Push for Equality in Immunizations

Oct. 21, 2013

Health Disparities Group Pushing for Equality in Immunizations
Watts, Dellums Ask CDC to Expand Meningitis Vaccine

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Former Congressman J. C. Watts

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Former Congressman Ron Dellums

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Dr. Michael LeNoir

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - A working group of Black leaders is calling on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to expand the recommendations for the bacterial meningitis vaccine to include infants as young as 6 months old.

Former Congressmen J.C. Watts, Jr., and Ron Dellums along with National Medical Association President Michael A. LeNoir, M.D. are leading a newly formed Health Disparities Working Group that's asking the CDC to take action on the vaccine at its next meeting Oct. 23, according to a news release.  

"We are excited about the strength of the working group and our first project which is focused on advocating for an expanded vaccinations recommendation that would help to ensure low-income and minority communities are not disadvantaged in access to quality medical care," said Dr. LeNoir in the statement.

Dellums adds, "We are concerned about the 'vaccine gap' in this country, which allows more affluent communities to receive important immunizations that are largely inaccessible to low-income and minority communities, and contributes to the growing health disparities," Congressman Watts said. "We believe adding the bacterial meningitis vaccine to the recommended list for infants will help ensure that low-income and minority communities that rely on federal and state vaccination programs will have access to this life-saving medication." 

Current Working Group members include Millicent Gorham, executive director for the National Office of the National Black Nurses Association; Wade Henderson, President and CEO of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights and The Leadership Conference Education Fund; Dr. Gary Puckrein, president and CEO of the National Minority Quality Forum; Daraka Satcher, president of the Satcher Group and Hilary Shelton, executive director of Government Affairs for the NAACP.

The CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices is scheduled to meet this week to consider recommending the bacterial meningitis vaccine for children as young as 6 months old. Adding the vaccine to the routine immunization schedule will ensure that it will be included in the federal Vaccines for Children program, which provides approximately 82 million vaccines to 40 million low-income children each year. The recommendation will also improve vaccine coverage among private insurers and devote resources to education about the disease.

"A failure by ACIP to recommend the bacterial meningitis vaccine for children will perpetuate the disproportionately high rates of amenable morbidity and mortality associated with this disease in underserved populations throughout the country. We urge ACIP to be decisive and proactive in protecting the health and futures of all of America's children," said Dr. Puckrein.

Bacterial meningitis, while rare, is a deadly disease that kills approximately 500 people each year. The first symptoms are often similar to a cold or flu, but in hours the bacteria can attack the body, leaving those who survive with lost limbs, learning disabilities and hearing loss. The African-American community is at greater risk for bacterial meningitis because many low-income black families face key risk factors, including over-crowding, underlying illnesses and tobacco use.

One of the Working Group's projects is to raise awareness about the growing disparity in health for low-income and minority families in the United States, which the National Institute of Health recently labeled as one of the nation's greatest challenges. A recent CDC report found large racial, ethnic and income disparities in preventable hospitalizations, where blacks experience a rate more than double that of whites. Preventable incidents account for more than 1 million hospitalizations each year, at a cost of more than $6.7 billion annually.

The Working Group will work on a myriad of issues facing low-income and minority communities, including the so-called "vaccine gap." The NIH has identified access to vaccines as a major factor in curbing health disparities. Studies have found that minorities are more likely to not receive immunizations because of limited access to preventative healthcare and lack of education on the importance of regular vaccinations.

According to the release, Watts, Dellums and LeNoir will serve as co-chairs of the Working Group. During his time in Congress, Watts was a strong advocate for health disparities, working closely with Congresswoman Donna Christensen to make April National Minority Health Month.  Dellums was a staunch supporter of programs to end infectious diseases during his more than four-decade career in public service. President Clinton appointed Dellums to the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS in 1999. LeNoiris has been an active member of the NMA for 30 years. His other leadership roles with NMA include speaker of the House of Delegates, trustee, and chair of Region VI and chair of the Pediatric, Community Medicine and Allergy sections.

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