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Rev. Jeremiah Wright and Rev. Howard-John Wesley are Master Teachers By A. Peter Bailey

March 18, 2019

Rev. Jeremiah Wright and Rev. Howard-John Wesley are Master Teachers
By A. Peter Bailey

apeterbailey

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - I strongly believe that one of the most valuable members of any community is a master teacher. Rev. Dr. Jeremiah A. Wright, (77), Pastor Emeritus of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, Illinois and Rev. Dr. Howard-John Wesley, (46), Pastor of Alfred Street Baptist Church in Alexandria, Virginia are master teachers. A quote credited to Nelson Mandela is also apt to when describing them. He noted “A good head and a good heart are a formidable combination.” Pastors Wright and Wesley are both blessed with that formidable combination.

That was re-affirmed recently when they delivered sermons in Howard University’s Andrew Rankin Memorial Chapel. Each provided over 1,500 congregants, many of them Howard students, faculty, and alumni, with a memorable and spiritual experience. In his sermon, “No More Masks,” Pastor Wright quoted Paul Laurence Dunbar (“We wear the masks that grins and lies”). He stated that we must remove those masks if we are to successfully move against white supremacy and white privilege. We should act like the strong and proud people that our ancestors were. He insisted that such conduct by too many of us today is not a proper way to celebrate Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s birthday. “There are two types of clergy,” he said, “the prophet whose allegiance is to God and the priest whose allegiance is to the government. Dr. King was a prophet; Billy Graham was a priest.”

Along with Dunbar, Pastor Wright also quoted Old and New Testaments, Maya Angelou, Brother Malcolm X, James Baldwin and Dr. King in his sermon. He also called out the word for God for some 15 African ethnic groups (not tribes, ethnic groups).

Pastor Wesley delivered an equally compelling sermon two weeks after Pastor Wright. He began by saying to the congregation, “I am going to disturb you today.” He then began to preach and teach about “Surviving Lots” from childhood into young adulthood, he noted he was taught that Sodom and Gomorrah’s destruction resulted from the overwhelming presence of homosexuality. “Then I read the Bible myself,” he stated. That reading informed him about the treachery of Lot, who owned the equivalent of a modern day hotel. When an invading army threatened his hotel, noted Pastor Wesley, Lot offered his “two virgin daughters” to the leaders of the invasion if they would spare his hotel. He then stated that there is a sizable number of modern day Lots who sexually exploit, abuse and harass women. They include corporate executives, politicians, professors, entertainers, athletes and even preachers. He expressed special concern about black women, who throughout this country’s history, have been sexually exploited by white males. He was equally scornful of black men who use their positions to sexually exploit black women. He urged male congregants in the chapel to stand and pledge to not be a modern day Lots and to assist black women who are victims of such behavior. Like he warned, Pastor Wesley disturbed people with that sermon.

On the other hand, he inspired them when he announced that his church had given $50,000 to financially strapped Bennett College and $100,000 to Howard to pay off the accounts of 34 seniors who are scheduled to graduate in May 2019. Now all they have to focus on is their grades. Alfred Streets contributions are the very definition of not just talking the talk, but walking the walk.

Master teachers, Pastor Wright and Pastor Wesley, bring to mind a quote from David Walker. “David Walker Appeals” is one of the most revolutionary documents in Black History. “I would crawl on my hands and knees to sit at the feet of a learned man… For colored people to acquire learning in this country makes tyrants quake and tremble on their sandy foundation.” The two pastors are learned men.

 

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What Blacks Have Already Lost Under Trump By Richard Prince

March 13, 2019

What Blacks Have Already Lost Under Trump
By Richard Prince

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U. S. Rep. Karen Bass, chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, addressing 
Richard Prince's Journalism Roundtable March 9. PHOTO: Don Baker


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U. S. Rep. Karen Bass (OFFICIAL PHOTO)


Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from Journal-isms

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - When candidate Donald Trump appealed for African American votes in the 2016 campaign, he famously asked, “What the hell do you have to lose?”

According to U. S. Rep. Karen Bass (D-Calif.), and chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, Blacks have ruefully found out under now-President Trump, to their detriment.

What rights and protections have African Americans lost? “Off the top of my head,” she said, answering a question at Sunday’s Journal-isms Roundtable from Lottie Joiner, editor of the NAACP’s Crisis magazine, “essentially, the assault on civil rights.

“Almost every cabinet secretary that he appointed, he gave them a mission of destroying and dismantling this agency that they were in charge of. And most of those agencies have civil rights areas. So you’re talking about education, you’re talking about the Environmental Protection Agency, if you’re talking about Health and Human Services, if you’re talking about the Department of Justice. So it’s the elimination, or the watering down, of civil rights protections across the board.

“One of the things he did right away, within a couple of weeks of being sworn in, was to reverse the consent decrees from police departments. . . . All of the voter suppression stuff that’s just been allowed to run amok. I could certainly get you more specific information, but that is a general way of looking at it. So environmental protection is huge in our communities, because you can go back to the Flint water [crisis], but loosening up regulations when it comes to the environment disproportionately impacts our neighborhoods.

“For example, in Los Angeles, this might be a little different now, but a few years ago, the leading cause of death of black children was asthma,” she continued. “Asthma, why? Because they live near freeways. It was the toxins in the air.

“And then when cap and trade kind of came in, which was meant to help the environment, you know that part of the way that works is, if I’m a polluter, then I put in money to allow myself to continue polluting, by buying trees someplace else. . . .

“So even in an environmentally aggressive state like California, you still have disproportionate impacts on communities of color. In the Central Valley in California, which is predominantly Latino, There’s a really high miscarriage rate. Why? Because of chemicals in the water. So when he reduces regulations in those areas, then it disproportionately impacts . . .  .

“And then in immigration, of course, there was that story [about a woman in the United States for more than 20 years] . . . her country was Liberia, which she lived in as a little kid, and now he’s getting ready to kick out 800 Liberians; and then there are the Haitians that have been kicked out. . . .”

There is also Lana Marks, Trump’s choice for ambassador to South Africa. Bass said, “. . . Trump appointed a woman to be ambassador to South Africa, and I believe her primary reason for being there is that she is a dues-paying member of Mar-a-Lago. She is, and this is the height of insult, a white South African.

“And professionally she is known for making purses. She sells purses. I’m not sure if anybody in the room can afford her purses. They cost $10- $15,000. That’s who we’ve appointed to South Africa, and that’s really significant, because can you imagine the message that sends to the South Africans?”

Yet there might be a silver lining amid the negativity. “One of the things that I hope will be said about this time period is that he was the catalyst for an awful amount of activism. . . .  We recognized that he was so horrific that we can never relax again and have to be involved. . . . You make us mad, you make us vote.”

Thousands Uprooted from Safe Haven Now Desperate for Food, Water and Shelter

March 5, 2019

Thousands Uprooted from Safe Haven Now Desperate for Food, Water and Shelter

 

african safe haven

 Nigerian refugees

 

(TriceEdneyWire.com/GIN) – An estimated 30,000 refugees have been uprooted by officials in Cameroon and Nigeria this month and sent to known hotbeds of insurgents including Boko Haram on the Nigerian side of the border.

 

Humanitarian groups including Action against Hunger are questioning the wisdom of forcing refugees to move to the city of Rann in Borno state, the epicentre of the decade-long insurgency that has killed more than 27,000.

 

“Reports from sources on the ground indicate that these people are in dire need of aid,” a UN briefing note stated.

 

There were also questions about whether the returns complied with international law on refugees, which require returns to be voluntary, the Agence France Press reported.

 

International and national humanitarian organizations abandoned Rann in January due to ongoing insecurity.

 

Shashwat Saraf, the country director of Action Against Hunger in Nigeria, said it was “difficult to imagine” it being safe for anyone to return. “Alarming” levels of severe acute malnutrition were found among children under five, he said.

 

The mass movement of internally displaced people comes as President Muhammadu Buhari takes office for a second term, having been declared the winner of a national election marred by mechanical errors with the voter card readers, a weeklong postponement, reports of vote-buying, and extremist attacks in the northeast.

 

Voter turnout was at a historic low at 35.6 percent of the population.

 

“The numbers alone are indicting,” said Adewunmi Emoruwa of The Election Network. “We have witnessed a record number of cancelled votes – more than double the numbers from the previous poll – and which is only a reflection of the widespread irregularities across every part of the country. We all observed as thugs had a field day unleashing terror on demographically profiled voters, which led to the suppressed turnout that has been recorded.”

 

Buhari won in 19 states – including the two most populous, Lagos and Kano – while the opposition candidate, Atiku Abubakar, was victorious in 17.

 

The two men are both northern Muslims in their 70s who have long been in politics. Buhari is seen by many as a strict, inflexible but personally incorruptible figure, while many hoped Atiku, a wealthy businessman and former vice-president, would enact policies to help boost Nigeria’s struggling economy.

 

The opposition has rejected the vote outcome. 

 

Global Information Network creates and distributes news and feature articles on current affairs in Africa to media outlets, scholars, students and activists in the U.S. and Canada. Our goal is to introduce important new voices on topics relevant to Americans, to increase the perspectives available to readers in North America and to bring into their view information about global issues that are overlooked or under-reported by mainstream media.

Yet Another March in Selma - the Birthplace of Modern Democracy in America By Jesse Jackson

March 5, 2019

Yet Another March in Selma - the Birthplace of Modern Democracy in America
By Jesse Jackson

NEWS ANALYSIS

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Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr. leads 2019 Selma to Montgomery marchers in prayer for the nation. 

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - This past weekend, political leaders from across the country gathered in Selma, Alabama, to commemorate “Bloody Sunday,” the 1965 march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge where peaceful demonstrators, attempting to cross the bridge, were violently driven back by Alabama State Troopers, Dallas County Sheriff’s deputies and a horse-mounted posse wielding billy clubs and water hoses to savage the crowd. 

The horrors played on TV sets across the country generated a national outrage that provided the final impetus for passage of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. In many ways, Selma is the birthplace of modern democracy in America, helping to secure the right to vote for African Americans and the young, and for providing the foundation for future battles for equality, including the equal rights of women. When former Alabama Gov. George Wallace was ill late in his life, I joined him for prayer. I asked him why he unleashed the troopers on the demonstrators in 1965.

He said, “I did them a favor.” Wallace argued that the mob would have been much worse on the peaceful marchers. He never even considered that he might have used the troopers to protect them from the mob. That was a mentality that, as Dr. Martin Luther King taught, could only be challenged by nonviolent protest that demonstrated our humanity while demanding our rights. 

In the commemorative ceremonies this year, presidential candidates Sen. Bernie Sanders and Cory Booker, as well as Sen. Sherrod Brown and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton were joined by many legislators and political leaders. They sensibly called on participants to rise up again to challenge the revival of systematic efforts to suppress the vote and to push back against the outrageous Supreme Court decision in Shelby v. Holder.

This decision gutted enforcement provisions of the Voting Rights Act, and opened the floodgates to a wave of discriminatory state laws meant to keep people of color from exercising their right to vote. There are laws that now require new forms of ID, voting districts have been gerrymandered and voter rolls purged. Laws now limit early voting and polling places have been closed or move without notice, and much, much more.

The brave marchers in 1965 did their part for democracy, now it is up to us to defend it and extend it. At the same time, while Selma is the birthplace of modern democracy, it is in danger of becoming a prop. Selma is the ninth poorest small town in America and 40 percent of its residents live in poverty. It exemplifies the rural and small-town America that has been left out of the recovery. Democrats tend to see rural America as Trump country.

Trump appealed to rural voters by stoking their fears and turning them against each other, but he has come up with no plan to help them. Trump offers only hate, not hope. The new Democratic majority in the House is in many ways the fruit of the sacrifices made at Selma and elsewhere. Democrats should see Selma and rural America as both an obligation and an opportunity. What’s needed is a comprehensive rural reconstruction plan, a modern version of what Franklin D. Roosevelt did when he built the Tennessee Valley Authority and modernized the Department of Agriculture, which literally electrified rural America. 

Today, the Department of Agriculture has the authority and the capacity to invest in water and sewage systems, modernize utilities, provide broadband to underserved communities, offer zero interest loans to community centers and subsidize affordable housing. What we need is a plan and a budget to get this done. House Democrats should make this a priority. Let’s honor those who sacrificed so much by repealing voter suppression laws. But let us also make Selma the birthplace of a new economic justice in rural America. Selma should be more than a symbol of past struggles; it must also become a beacon for a new hope.

Standing By Her Man: Black Woman Used as Willing Prop to Support White Congressman, Birther By Frederick H. Lowe

March 4, 2019

Standing By Her Man: Black Woman Used as Willing Prop to Support White Congressman, Birther
By Frederick H. Lowe

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U. S. Rep. Elijah Cummings, (D-Md.) preside over contentious Oversight and Reform Committee hearing. PHOTO: Paulette Singleton/Trice Edney News Wire

 

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Lynne Patton standing behind Congressman Mark Meadows during a congressional hearing on Feb. 27.

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from NorthStarNewsToday.com

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - North Carolina Congressman Mark Meadows trotted out Lynne Patton, a Black woman, to say President Donald Trump wasn’t a racist after Michael Cohen, Trump’s former fixer, testified before a Congressional Committee that Trump was a racist.
 

Meadows played a key role in the birther movement that damaged President Barack Obama’s presidency by casting doubt that he was born in the United States, a requirement to be president, while paving the way for Trump to enter the White House.
In 2012, at the Blue Ridge Tea Party Candidate Forum, Meadows, a Republican, said, "We’ll  send Obama back home to Kenya or where ever it is,” to loud applause.  A video of Meadows making the comment has been posted on Twitter.

Cohen, who testified before the House Oversight and Reform Committee Feb. 27, listed several examples supporting his assertion that Trump was a racist. Congressman Elijah Cummings, (D-Md.) is the committee’s chair.

Cohen testified that Trump called Black countries “shitholes” and said Blacks were too stupid to vote for him. Trump also said only Blacks run "shithole countries". He made that statement when Barack Obama was president of the United States, Cohen said. He also pointed out that there aren’t any Blacks in top positions in the Trump administration. 

 Meadows, chairman of the ultra conservative Freedom Caucus, ordered Patton stand behind him during the committee hearing to refute Cohen’s allegations that Trump was a racist.  Patton, a regional executive for the Department of Housing Urban Development, and a Trump appointee, didn’t speak. After a few minutes, she sat down.

U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D, Michigan) called Patton a prop, and Meadows almost burst into angry tears, believing Tlaib, who is Palestinian was calling him a racist.

 “Just because someone has a person of color, a Black person, working for them does not mean that they aren’t racist,” Tlaib said. “And it is insensitive … the fact that someone would actually use a prop, a Black woman in this chamber, in this committee, is alone racist in itself.”

The heated exchange was among the most intense parts of the highly anticipated Cohen hearing.

On Fox News, a disgusted Patton denied she was a prop. She said committee members put more faith in a White man going to prison than a highly educated Black woman. A judge sentenced Cohen to three years in prison for lying to Congress.

Cummings came to Meadows’ rescue, claiming he was one of his best friends. Cummings’ intervention angered some observers.
Later, Meadows said he made the comment about Obama to win an election. He and Tlaib later made up.

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