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Poverty Isn't a Privilege: The White Man Is Your Brother Too By Keith Magee

 

Jan. 20, 2019
Poverty Isn't a Privilege: The White Man Is Your Brother Too
By Keith Magee
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Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is surrounded by Black and White people during the Poor People's Movement.

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Dr. Keith Magee



(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Writing to fellow clergy from a Birmingham Jail (The Negro Is Your Brother), Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. - gravely concerned about all who were poor and experiencing inequality - said, "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly."

The world, especially, America, will pause this weekend to honour Dr. King's 90th birthday and his life as a global humanitarian. Would not the greatest birthday gift to share be to truly identify the other as our brother, sister, family? How does one really love and heal a world if they don't see their neighbour as themselves?

Let us explore the world's events in this regard. The global crisis of the poor has affected the consciousness of both the UK and America. The UK has wrestled to the ground Brexit with no deal.

Meanwhile, America is in waiting to determine whether the one who was deemed the "White hope", will be exposed as a traitor. And he remains in a temper tantrum as the government remains shut down.

This mutiny is because, from former U. S. President Barack Obama to former UK Prime Minister David Cameron, few seem to adequately identify the group that is rapidly becoming visible among the least of these. The poverty data of the U.S. Census Bureau reported, on September 12, 2018, that roughly 12.8 million America children lived in poverty in 2017, with 4,026,000 being White. Likewise, the Joseph Rowntree Foundation report of December 4, 2018, indicates there are 4.1 million children living in poverty in the United Kingdom with 1,271,000 of them being White.

In the book, "Black Reconstruction in America", W.E.B. Du Bois introduced the concept of the psychological wage. Du Bois noted that while White labourers received a low wage, "they were compensated in part by a sort of public and psychological wage." They were given, "public deference and titles of courtesy because they were white." I'm not so sure that, in today's reality of White, having the access to public parks, pools and water fountains matters so much; when they, along with other non-white groups, are equally striving to feed, clothe and house their children.

The March on Washington was actually the awakening of the 'Poor People's Campaign.' Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr and his allies were going to the nation's capital to ask America to be true to the huge promissory note that was signed years ago.

King said that, "we are coming to engage in dramatic non-violent action, to call attention to the gulf between promise and fulfilment; to make the invisible visible." In the UK, as in America, those who have become invisible are forcing open the eyes of those who have forgotten them.

This year, 2019, marks 400 years since the first African immigrants - freedmen and indentured servants - arrived in Jamestown. The British had landed, three years earlier, having departed England as King Henry VIII had declared himself head of the new Church of England. These individuals desired a return to a simpler faith and wanted to purify the Church. However, these Puritans would use, in part, their religious system to oppress the Africans, forcing them into slavery. And, yet, these slaves would look for a saving grace from an individual depicted in the like image of their oppressor. That grace would have in it the power to forgive and mount up for civility for themselves and all of humanity.

Unlike America, the UK has no separation of church and state. In fact, 26 Bishops are in the House of Lords which includes the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby. Recently he said that, "The burden of proof is on those that are arguing for no deal, to show that it will not harm the poorest and most vulnerable ... How we care about them and how our politics affects them is a deeply moral issue."

In the cause of bringing freedom to those invisible ones who suffer, the church has at times been oppressor and in its better moments, a harbinger of liberation. For the Puritans, the desire to establish a true Christian faith while maintaining an allegiance to the corruptive power of White supremacy, rendered their faith in fact anti-Christian. In the case of King, his commitment to Christ, the liberator and the kingdom he proclaimed, motivated his refusal to accept the unjust status quo which weighed heavily on the poor and to act for the sake of justice.

The UK looks to the legacy of William Wilberforce, the abolitionist, or the current impact of churches who care for the needy through foodbanks and debt counselling or organized homes for refugee families. Selina Stone, lecturer in political theology at St Mellitus College, asks the pertinent question: "How will churches respond in the UK and in America, to those with their backs against the wall?"

Again, I ask, how does one really love and heal a world if they don't see their neighbour as themselves? Or in the words of Dr. King, "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly."

Keith Magee is a public intellectual with a focus on social justice and theology. He is currently senior fellow in culture and justice at University College London and is in pastoral leadership at The Berachah Church, Dorchester Centre, MA. For more information visit www.4justicesake.org or follow him on social media @keithlmagee.

 

On King Holiday Commemoration: 600 Black Legislators Resolved to Push Policies for Economic Justice by Hazel Trice Edney

Jan. 20, 2019

On King Holiday Commemoration:
600 Black Legislators Resolved to Push Policies for Economic Justice
Resolution considered new win for Black Wealth 2020
By Hazel Trice Edney
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New York State Sen. James Sanders Jr.
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Michael Grant, former president, National Bankers Association

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - It was three years ago that a group of national business leaders launched a movement called Black Wealth 2020 partially based on the economic vision articulated by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

King said in his final speech on April 3, 1968: "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."

As America commemorates another Martin Luther King Jr. National Birthday Holiday Jan. 21, an organization of Black legislators have adopted a resolution to begin spreading the Black Wealth 2020 principles and initiatives with an aim to grow the economic justice movement that King started in Memphis just before he was assassinated April 4, 1968.

The National Black Caucus of State Legislators (NBCSL), a 600-member group of local and state Black elected officials, has encouraged its members to form Black Wealth 2020 economic task forces and adopted a resolution to promote its economic agenda in 2019.

"State legislators can play a critical role in the sustainability of communities through policy," said New York State Senator James Sanders Jr., who introduced and shepherded the resolution during the NBCSL's 42nd Annual Legislative Conference that concluded Dec. 1. "This initiative aims to financially empower the Black community in the areas of home and business ownership as well as to broaden opportunities for Black financial institutions. Under those conditions, I believe we must do more than announce these goals aloud, but work to firmly cement them throughout America in the form of solid legislation, so they can truly flourish."

This means the NBCSL, which represents 60 million people in 45 states, the U. S. Virgin Islands and the District of Columbia, will spend the next two years - and beyond - prioritizing policies that enhance Black economic growth through business ownership, homeownership and Black banking.

Sanders is chairman of the New York State Senate Banking Committee. He also leads the Senate Democratic Conference's Task Force on Minority and Women-owned Business Enterprise.

Sanders continues, "As we approach Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day, let us remember that he was a pioneer in this area, planting roots with his 'Poor Peoples Campaign,' which propelled the economic justice movement begun in Memphis. I am proud to aid in the continuation of Dr. King's vision. I look forward to working with my colleagues in government and also the private sector to further assist people of color."
The resolution is posted in its entirety at NBCSL.org.

The passage of the resolution represents the next steps of a promise made by Rep. Greg Porter, NBCSL's immediate past president, during his speech at the Black Wealth 2020 second anniversary luncheon last year. He called for unity behind the Black Wealth 2020 vision.
The backing of the legislators reinvigorates and expands the movement, says former National Bankers Association President Michael Grant, one of Black Wealth 2020's founders and chief spokespersons.

"The National Black Caucus of State Legislators, through exemplary leadership of Representative Greg Porter and State Senator James Sanders, helped the Black Wealth 2020 coalition take a quantum leap forward with the passage of Resolution BED-19-21. The NBCSL connects Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s vision of economic justice to a modern day movement that is making wealth-building throughout the Diaspora one of our highest single priorities."

Other Black Wealth 2020 founders are Ron Busby, president/CEO of the U.S. Black Chambers Inc. and Jim Winston, president of the National Organization of Black Owned Broadcasters.

"Whereas, the economic goals of Black wealth 2020 have historic roots, referencing to when Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. had launched the 'Poor People's Campaign', an economic justice movement that had begun in Memphis; the founders of Black Wealth 2020 view their work as a continuum of Dr. King's vision, with a unique contemporary strategy for sustainability," states the resolution. "Therefore, be it resolved, the National Black Caucus of State Legislators (NBCSL), encourages state policymakers and their membership to establish a Black Wealth 2020 economic task force designed to develop economic building blocks for the African-American population to addresses racial wealth gap."

The NBCSL, aiming even higher with its goals to spread the initiatives, said it will send a copy of the resolution to the "President of the United States, the Vice President of the United States, members of the United States House of Representatives and the United States Senate, and other federal and state government officials as appropriate."

At least a dozen other major Black organizations have either joined or expressed support for the Black Wealth 2020 economic initiatives. The goals seek to untangle a web of economic injustices including the following statistics outlined in the resolution:
  • There are only 2.6 million Black-owned businesses in the United States, whereas the U.S. black population is estimated to be over 40 million, according to the National Black Chamber of Commerce.
  • 27.6 percent of black applicants for conventional mortgage loans were denied in 2013 while White applicants were denied only 10.4 percent of the time, according to the National Association of Real Estate Brokers.
  • The number of Black-owned banks operating ln the U.S. has been dropping steadily for the past 15 years and fell to 23 last year, the lowest level in recent history, according to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
  • The median wealth of White households is 20 times that of Black households.
Among the successful initiatives of Black Wealth 2020 in its third year are an agreement between the Bishops of the African American Episcopal Church and Black-owned banks and a credit card established by the Black-owned Liberty Bank of New Orleans and the U. S. Black Chamber Inc. The NBCSL resolution points out that such initiatives will empower a nation where the pain of poverty and economic disparities are pervasive.

The resolution concludes: "Be it further resolved that the NBCSL urges state representatives todevelop and implement state and community-based intervention programs aimed to address historical and systematic barriers to homeownership, small business and access to capital."

Government Shutdown Impacting Well Beyond Federal Employees General Public Feeling the Affects, Many Trying to Help By Barrington M. Salmon

Jan. 14, 2019

Government Shutdown Impacting Well Beyond Federal Employees
General Public Feeling the Affects, Many Trying to Help
By Barrington M. Salmon 

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Lavette Lightford and Lori Mac, members of the National Treasury Employees Union, joined the AFL-CIO rally and march to the White House against the government shutdown Jan. 10. Their sign hits home with growing sentiments as anger rises and incomes plummet around the nation. PHOTO: Barrington Salmon/TriceEdneyWire.com

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - John E. DeFreitas began driving a taxicab when he was in college 40 years ago. The self-described ‘transportation specialist’ said he has watched what is now the longest federal government shutdown in U. S. history unfold and swallow up the lives of significant numbers of people.

While the focus of the media has centered primarily on the 800,000 federal employees who are currently sidelined without their paychecks because of the squabble over a wall on the southern border, the residual effects are being felt among people far removed from the federal government.

“Things haven’t slowed down, they have died,” DeFreitas said referring to the pulse of the taxicab business on and well beyond Capitol Hill in the wake of the shutdown. “It is so bad. There are no people on the street. I usually go to the Watergate where business is usually brisk but now it’s at about 30 percent of capacity. I wait two or three hours before somebody comes out and the few people coming out use cheap transportation. Unless they’re doing business, they won’t take taxis.”

DeFreitas said doormen’s hours have been cut back, others have been sidelined temporarily until business picks back up, and the numbers of maids, servers and cooks in restaurants in the Washington metropolitan area is being reduced or increased depending on demand.

“All the others outside of the federal government who’re being affected have lost wages and may never recoup them,” he said. “Nobody is saying how it directly and indirectly affects other people.”

Fela Sekou Turner, a celebrity hairstylist in the District of Columbia, located in the heart of the nation’s capital, caters to clientele who work for federal and DC governments. He said the ripple effects are being felt and seen at his spot.

“More of what we’re seeing is the experiences people are going through,” said Turner, a 23-year veteran and owner of Hair by Fela. “For example, we’re wrapping up our last clients at 5 on Friday when usually we’re not getting off ‘til 10 p.m. or 11. People know people, so we know what’s going on. People aren’t able to come because they’re nervous. Our salon, and those of our friends, have really been affected by this.”

By ‘this’, Turner means a partial shutdown of 11 federal agencies initiated by President Donald Trump on Dec 22. He made that move because he’s upset Congressional Democratic leaders have refused to agree to give him $5.7 billion for a wall to be constructed on America’s southern border – the wall that he repeatedly, during his campaign, said that Mexico would pay for. For months, Trump has issued warnings about the influx of thousands of Central and Latin American migrants who he has wrongly branded murderers, drug dealers and terrorists.

The wall, he contends – despite evidence to the contrary – will keep out tens of thousands of Central and Latin American migrants from entering the country. The president has threatened to declare a national security emergency though none exists. He is using hyperbole and misleading statements about the criminality of brown-skinned immigrants to bolster his case even though statistics show that immigrants commit less crimes than natural-born Americans.

Contrary to his characterizations, most of the migrants are fleeing their countries in protection of their own lives and the lives of their children and families. Many are running from gangs, violence and economic privations in their countries of origin.

Trump has stirred up fear among his base – majority White Americans. But House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) have refused to budge, accusing Trump of fearmongering and lying about the severity of the situation.

Trump is promising to keep the federal government closed until Democrats accede to his demands, for years if necessary.

As a consequence, the aforementioned 800,000 federal workers are sitting home. Approximately 420,000 people, deemed essential employees are working without pay and an additional 380,000 are on furlough forced to stay home without pay. Meanwhile, tens of thousands of federal government contractors – because they are subcontracted and are not full-time federal employees – are not being paid and may never receive back pay, according to the Associated Press and other reports.

Fear, uncertainty and frustration is simmering as people try to figure out how to pay rent, mortgages, school fees, tuition and childcare, make car payments, determine what to cut back on, surmise what to eliminate and still take care of utilities and other facets of modern life that demand their money.

“I didn’t anticipate that it would last this long because of the optics; I thought it would last a week,” said Nurel Storey, vice president of the National Treasury Employees Union, Chapter 22 and a 33-year employee of the Internal Revenue Service. “There is fear and anxiety. There are a lot of single mothers, households where both parents work for the federal government, people with kids. They still have to eat, deal with bill collectors, take care of their homes.”

A recent Business Insider story points out that affected federal workers have more than $400 million in mortgage and rent payments due this month which could cause turmoil in the US housing market. Yet, there’s no resolution or end in sight for a shutdown that on Saturday, Jan. 12 became the longest federal shutdown in U.S. history. Economic experts say if it lasts two more weeks, the cost to the economy will exceed the price of the wall.

Diane Stevens, owner of the Cole Stevens Salon, and Clayton Lawson, an area barber, said the apprehension is palpable.

Stevens’ company has 49 employees and two locations, one on Capitol Hill and the other in Greenbelt, Md. She said they are just beginning to feel the effects of the shutdown but she still expects a spike.

“The beginning of the year is the time to do a splash of highlights, get a new haircut or different style for workouts. (But) we’ve been looking at the numbers and we’ve seen a decrease, probably around 25 percent,” she said. “People are getting nervous, especially women who multitask and take care of the kids, buy food and take care of the household. Coming to the hair salon is a stress reliever for them.”

Meanwhile, restaurants and an assortment of eateries have been offering affected workers free coffee, pizzas, burgers and other meals, according to published reports. Churches in and around D.C. have appealed for contributions to their food banks to assist furloughed federal workers and others during the hard times.

For example, world-famous Chef José Andrés is offering federal government employees free sandwiches until they get paid again. Meanwhile, other establishments are offering entrance into activities at community and fitness centers and private museums.

Turner, a Pittsburgh native, says this outpouring of support he’s seeing from regular people is unprecedented.

“I’ve never seen people come together as much as they have. On Facebook, people are giving groceries and discounts on business services,” he said. “So many people are saying, ‘No, we won’t let this happen.’ Even though it’s a lot for one person to do, when people pull together, a great deal can be done. This will bring a certain unity we haven’t had before. I think people will learn to take care of each other.”

Trump’s Flailing Will Get More Desperate — and More Dangerous by Jesse Jackson Sr.

Jan. 16, 2019

Trump’s Flailing Will Get More Desperate — and More Dangerous

By Jesse Jackson Sr.

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Since the striking victories of Democrats up and down the ballot in 2018, President Donald Trump has been flailing more and more wildly.

He’s setting new records for the length of the government shutdown, watched his defense secretary resign after suddenly announcing the withdrawal of troops from Syria, forced his attorney general to resign, found it difficult to find a permanent replacement for his departing chief of staff, and tweeted that he is “all alone in the White House.”

Quietly, the unrelenting investigation of Robert Mueller becomes ever more ominous. Now the new Democratic majority in the U.S. House of Representatives will probe the corruption of this most corrupt administration, from Trump’s business dealings to the corporate lobbyists who are running entire departments in the interests of their once and future employers.

While Trump issues insult after insult against opponents — Sen. Elizabeth Warren, former Vice President Joe Biden, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer — he reveals just how desperate he is.

Essentially, Trump now has three choices. He can stay in office and be impeached. The evidence of high crimes and misdemeanors is building each day, from trampling election laws by payoffs to keep his mistresses quiet to blatant self-enrichment that surely offends the Constitution’s ban on emoluments, to open and secret efforts to obstruct justice.

Democrats will no doubt wait for special prosecutor Mueller to issue his report. They will wait to see if Republicans, alarmed by their sinking poll numbers, begin to separate themselves from Trump. Sen. Mitt Romney’s blast at Trump may be an early warning of what’s likely to come.

Hearings on the impeachment of the president are inevitable. Impeachment in the House is likely. Whether the Republican-led Senate will protect the president remains to be seen.

If not impeached, Trump could stay in office and be disgraced. Disgrace appears unavoidable. He lost the popular vote to Hillary Clinton by 3 million votes at a time many Americans were desperate to change things.

Republicans lost several key congressional races last fall. That’s when the economy was at its best, and Trump’s foreign policy chaos hadn’t yet been felt. Two years from now, if he chooses to run for re-election, Trump will try to pull the Electoral College equivalent of an inside straight again, but he is most likely to be routed, bringing down with him many of the Republican senators who have lacked the backbone to stand up to him.

At the same time, the investigations of his various business dealings, his tax returns, his conflicts of interests will end in myriad lawsuits, if not criminal charges. Once he is defeated, Trump will face not only unending lawsuits for damages, but the real possibility of jail time for himself or his family or both.

Alternatively, Trump — the deal maker — could cut a deal to define his fate. After the Mueller report is issued, as the congressional investigations accelerate, as various criminal investigations begin, he could seek to negotiate his way out. Cut a deal that would give him and his family immunity from criminal liability and possibly civil liability in exchange for his resignation, sparing the nation the agony of what will inevitably be an ugly, divisive fight over impeachment and over criminal indictment after he is defeated.

Americans tend to forgive and forget, once an offender resigns. President Gerald Ford took a hit for pardoning President Richard Nixon, but Nixon survived and regained some of his stature with books on foreign policy. Pelosi and Schumer might take a hit for cutting a deal with Trump, but Trump could retain his freedom and his celebrity, with a base surely willing to support him in the wilderness.

It has come to this: impeachment, disgrace or resignation. Trump, no doubt, will rail against his fate. He’ll claim he could be vindicated in court or in Congress or in the elections. His twittering will grow more frantic and more venomous.

His impulsive and destructive behavior — pulling troops out of Syria suddenly and then reversing position and reversing again, shutting down the government over a wall that won’t be built, using the bully pulpit to try to intimidate his former associates who are testifying against him — will get ever more dangerous.

His flailing only deepens the hold that he is already in. Trump never expected to win the presidency. He clearly might find it sensible to save his fortune and freedom by resigning from a position he never expected to hold.

CIAA Tournament Moving to Baltimore With Possible $50 Million Economic Impact


Jan. 13, 2019

CIAA Tournament Moving to Baltimore With Possible $50 Million Economic Impact 

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CIAA Commissioner Jacqie McWilliams

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from the Richmond Free Press

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - The board of directors of the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA),has announced that the men’s and women’s basketball games will be held in 2021, 2022 and 2023 at Royal Farms Arena, an 11,100-seat facility in downtown Baltimore, about a block away from the Baltimore Convention Center and a short distance from the popular Inner Harbor.

The arena was formerly known as the Baltimore Civic Center.

“This is an exciting time for the CIAA as we have an opportunity to bring the tournament to a new market,” said Commissioner Jacqie McWilliams.

“We’re moving it closer to many of the northern institutions who have traveled to Charlotte for more than a decade.”

The annual CIAA basketball tournament has been held in Charlotte, N.C., since 2005 and will remain in Charlotte this season and next. This year’s tournament is scheduled Feb. 25 through March 5 at the 20,200-seat Spectrum Center, the home of the NBA’s Charlotte Hornets. It also is adjacent to the smaller Bojangles Coliseum.

The tournament has become a lucrative event for any host city. Estimates show the basketball games, plus a nearly weeklong lineup of satellite events, pump some $50 million into the Queen City’s economy.

Charlotte and Norfolk were finalists with Baltimore to host the tournament, beginning in 2021. Baltimore last hosted the tournament in 1951, when only men’s teams competed.

Baltimore Mayor Catherine E. Pugh said the city is “honored” to have been chosen.

“Baltimore is a city of unsurpassed hospitality and civic and cultural amenities that make it a destination for hundreds of thousands of visitors annually,” she said. “We look forward to welcoming the CIAA, its players and many fans, and to hosting these major tournaments in a way that demonstrates what a truly great city we are, and what a great decision this will be for all.”

The conference consists of mostly Black colleges and universities. The closest CIAA member to the new site is Bowie State University, located about 29 miles away. Morgan State University in Baltimore was a member of the CIAA from 1929 to 1970, when it left to join MEAC.

Others CIAA member universities closest to Baltimore are Lincoln University of Pennsylvania, 235 miles; Virginia Union University in Richmond, 153 miles; and Virginia State University in Ettrick, 177 miles.

Baltimore is 447 miles from the CIAA headquarters in Charlotte and from CIAA affiliate Johnson C. Smith University in Charlotte.

The newest CIAA member institution, Claflin University in Orangeburg, S.C., is 540 miles from Maryland’s largest city.

However, many people attending the CIAA Tournament and accompanying events are alumni and/or friends of former conference schools, such as Norfolk State and Hampton universities in Virginia, Howard University in Washington and Morgan State.

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