banner2e top

Young Americans are Under Siege


April 22, 2012

Young Americans are Under Siege

By Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, Sr.

Jesse3

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Rick Santorum’s presidential campaign had one major effect: It exposed what has become known as the “war on women,” the Republican right’s opposition to contraception, family planning and the Lilly Ledbetter Equal Pay Act. Too bad Santorum decided to suspend his campaign. If he had followed up on calling Obama a “snob” for encouraging students to go to college, he might have exposed the conservative war on the young.

Young people find themselves under siege. Youth unemployment for ages 16 to 24 is at Arab Spring levels — officially 16.5 percent. In public schools, children are being hit with teacher layoffs, bigger class sizes, less bus service, fees for sports and other extracurricular activities and less course offerings.

Colleges are raising tuitions and shorting aid programs. Student debt is greater than credit card debt, with Americans owing more than $1 trillion, with new graduates averaging over $25,000. And these students are graduating into the worst job market since the 1930s. Even if they find work, increasing numbers are forced by economic need to live with their parents.

And even their right to vote is under attack. Voters 18 to 25 turned out in large numbers for Barack Obama in 2008. Republican governors and state legislators — guided by the conservative, corporate-funded American Legislative Exchange Council — have pushed voter ID laws that make it harder for students to vote. The Brennan Center estimates that 5 million voters might be disqualified, many of them young people.

And it’s getting worse. In July, the interest rate on U.S. government-sponsored student loans is scheduled to double to 6.8 percent from 3.4 percent. This will add thousands to the debt owed by today’s students, and to the cost of repaying that debt over time. Rep. Karen Bass (D-Calif.) has prepared legislation that would extend the 3.4 percent rate, paying for it by ending top end tax breaks — including those on corporate jets.

But House Republicans, led by Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), seem intent on letting the rate double. Ryan’s budget proposal would force cuts in Pell grants and raise interest rates for students as it seeks to virtually eliminate anything in the government beyond the military, Social Security, Medicare and other health-care plans. Republicans are also intent on repealing health-care reform. The reform enables young people to be covered under their parents’ plans until age 26.

And parents often feel the pain when their children are afflicted. Parents stretch to provide support for their unemployed children, including living space those who can’t afford to live separately. Uninsured calamity often becomes a family sacrifice. Parents guarantee many of their children’s student loans. Americans over 60 owe a staggering $36 billion in student loans.

We can’t afford to lose this war on the young. Providing aid to states and localities to rehire teachers would help fuel the recovery and create about a million jobs. Direct public employment for the young in job corps and green corps would more than pay for itself in reduced crime, increased productivity and reduced incidence of drugs and depression. Providing free tuition for public college would cost an estimated $30 billion a year. A tax on destabilizing financial speculation could cover all of that. We have choices. This is still a rich nation. We can afford to invest in our kids. We simply have to choose.

Malawi Becomes Second African Nation With Woman Prez

April 16, 2012

Malawi Becomes Second African Nation With Woman Prez

By Fungai Maboreke


Special to the Trice Edney Wire Service from GIN

(joyce bandaTriceEdneyWire.com) – Following the sudden death of Malawi’s President Bingu wa Mutharika last Thursday, Vice President Joyce Banda was sworn into office, making her the second female President in Africa. President Bingu wa Mutharika died from cardiac arrest. His death was officially confirmed Friday after a day of denials that he had passed.

The new President has received international and national awards for her support of women’s rights. She also becomes the third most powerful female politician after Liberian President Ellen Sirleaf-Johnson and Nigerian Finance Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iwela. After her swearing-in, Mrs Banda began cleaning house, purging allies of the former president. "Although we are in mourning, certain decisions cannot wait," Banda told a news conference in the capital Lilongwe, three days after taking office.

She also announced an investigation into the mysterious murder of student activist Robert Chasowa. Mutharika's critics have accused police of staging a hit against Chasowa, implicating former police chief Peter Mukhito, who was sacked on Monday.

"As a mother, I feel for my fellow mother who doesn't know what killed her son. I understand how painful it is, and I will make sure we find out who killed our son Chasowa," Banda said.

She also sacked the head of the Malawi Broadcasting Corporation, Bright Malopa, another Mutharika ally who used state media to campaign against her.

The new director general is Benson Tembo, a veteran broadcaster and former diplomat whose last posting was as ambassador to Zimbabwe.

Serious Threat to President Obama? Secret Service Investigates

Serious Threat to President Obama? Secret Service Investigates

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

official_portrait_of_barack_obama

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Right-wing rock star Ted Nugent’s inflammatory comments about President Obama have triggered a Secret Service investigation into a potential threat against the president, increasing fears about the safety of the nation’s first Black chief executive.

Concern about the performer’s extremist remarks ratcheted up in the wake of the arrest of a 40-year-old Roanoke man on federal charges of threatening the president. A grand jury indicted Steven John Gurczynski for allegedly making threats against President Obama in November and December 2010.

Nugent, 63, meanwhile, is attracting attention for what the gun-loving guitarist told a National Rifle Association convention earlier this month.

“I’ll tell you this right now: If Barack Obama becomes the president in November, I will either be dead or in jail by this time next year,” Nugent told the audience, according to the Washington Post. But wait — there’s more: “Our president, and attorney general, our vice president, Hillary Clinton — they’re criminals,”

Nugent continued in a rant that was videotaped  and has since been widely aired on cable and network news broadcasts.

“We’re Americans because we defied the king,” he added. “We are patriots; we are bravehearts. We need to ride into that battlefield and chop their heads off in November.”

Just what did Nugent mean by those comments? That’s likely what Secret Service agents asked Nugent when they met with him last week. Agents will seek to find out whether Mr. Nugent’s comments rise to the level of a threat against the president.Federal law prohibits “anythreat to take the life of, to kidnap, or to inflict bodily harm upon” the president and successors to the presidency.

A conviction can result in fines and up to five years in prison. But do Nugent’s comments constitute a “threat”? Not if “a reasonable personwould interpret them as mere political hyperbole, idle talk or jest,” the Justice Department’s manual for federal prosecutors advises.

That’s probably why the aging rock ‘n’ roller is not shying away from his comments or the Secret Service investigation.

“They have a duty. I support them,” Nugent said on a talk radio show, according to Rolling Stone. “I’ve never threatened. I don’t waste breath threatening.”

The Affordable Health Care Act: A Cure All for What Ails Us or The Best New Deal to Eliminate Health Disparities?

The Affordable Health Care Act:  A Cure All for What Ails
Us or The Best New Deal to Eliminate Health Disparities?

By Dr. Elsie Scott

drelsiescott

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - On March 26, the Supreme Court of the United States began hearing arguments about the constitutionality of the individual mandate under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), which requires all citizens to have a certain minimum of health insurance coverage or pay a fine.  At the heart of the argument against the mandate is whether the federal government can force people to have health insurance.  Many believe that it cannot and view the possible repeal of the mandate as the beginning of the end for the Affordable Care Act. But what’s really at stake is far more complex.  At issue is the well being of millions of Americans who are at the short end of the current health care system.

The purpose of the ACA is not to have the government become the Big Boss of Health Care.  The main premise behind the Act is to turn around our failing health care system and address our health care disparities head on. Despite its shortcomings, the ACA is one of the prime examples of the federal government using public policy to achieve a common good.

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) reports that, in 2008, the U.S. spent more on health care per capita than 11 similarly-industrialized countries. Our nation also had one of the highest growth rates of health care spending, along with the highest prescription drug costs and the highest rate of prescription drug utilization.

Hospital admission rates for three out of five chronic conditions—asthma, congestive heart failure and acute diabetes complications—were highest in the U.S..in 2007, as was the rate of lower-extremity amputations due to diabetes. On the other hand, the five-year survival rates for breast, colorectal and ovarian cancer were high, with the U.S. ranking first among eight nations in breast and colorectal cancer survival and fourth in ovarian cancer survival rates.

As the information above suggests, much of our health care spending goes to chronic disease management. According to a May 2011 column by Kaiser Health News, three-fourths of every dollar spent on health care in the U.S. goes toward dealing with preventable and manageable chronic diseases but less than 5 cents per dollar is spent on prevention.

Furthermore, many health care services that would be best delivered in a primary care setting often take place in the emergency room. Indeed, a significant portion of our skyrocketing health care costs are spent on inappropriate emergency room visits. A 2010 study by the Rand Corporation found that we spend $4.4 billion annually on emergency room visits for routine, non-urgent care, with nearly 20 percent of all visits involving minor infections, strains and fractures.

The problem of health in the U.S. is further compounded by persistent inequalities in health status, health outcomes and health care by race/ethnicity, income and geography. Countless research indicates that African Americans and other people of color suffer disproportionately higher rates of morbidity and mortality from chronic disease, such as diabetes, heart disease, stroke and HIV/AIDS. While the reasons for these disparities are often debated, it is imperative that we focus intentionally on reversing them given our demographic changes and for the sake of our national growth and prosperity.

So why do we need health insurance? Because it’s a quasi-requirement to access health care in our country. It is very costly to get medical care in this country without insurance coverage. Though greatly subsidized through public funds, the cost of providing uncompensated care is one that many providers cannot afford. There’s also a great deal of research which illustrates the dire health and financial consequences of being uninsured for individuals and the nation as a whole.

Our health care system is in serious need of repair.  Insurance coverage and a focus on prevention are essential components for fixing it and for reversing health disparities. The Affordable Care Act includes critical provisions for doing both.

Dr. Elsie Scott is President/CEO of the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation

Murder and Hate Crime Charges Filed in Tulsa Shootings of Black Men

April 16, 2012

Murder and Hate Crime Charges Filed in Tulsa Shootings of Black Men

By Hazel Trice Edney

england-watts

Jake England and Alvin Watts

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Murder and hate crime charges have been filed against the two Tulsa, Okla. men arrested on Easter Sunday for the random shootings of five Black men on Good Friday.

Jake England, 19, and Alvin Watts, 33, both White, have confessed to the shootings, which killed three of the men, Dannaer Fields, 49, Bobby Clark, 54 and William Allen, 31. Wounded were Deon Tucker, 44, and David Hall, 46.

Though the two men have confessed to the shootings, they pled not-guilty to the charges. England had used the N-Word toward Blacks on his Facebook page shortly before the shootings, noting that his father was shot and killed by a Black man two years ago.

The suspects are being held on more than $9 million bond. The men could get the death penalty on the murder charges. Oklahoma’s hate crime charge carries only a one-year sentence and $1,000 fine. Federal hate crime charges have not yet been filed.

The quick arrests within 36 hours of the shootings are being applauded by civil rights leaders. Rev. Jesse Jackson traveled to Tulsa last week to assure the maximum charges amidst uneasiness. Tulsa was the site of the worst race riot in history in 1921. More than 300 Blacks were killed and more than 1,000 of their homes and business on “Black Wall Street” were burned by Whites after an uprising over what was a lie. After a Black man mistakenly stepped on the foot of a White female elevator operator, the false rumor spread that he had raped her.

There has been no connection made between England, Watts and the memory of those riots. But, memories of the incident quickly rose in the aftermath of the shootings.

"We are glad that the Prosecutors in Tulsa, Oklahoma have filed first-degree murder and hate crime charges against the two suspects in the Oklahoma shootings. I was scheduled to be in Tulsa this weekend but now feel that I can be more useful to the families of the victims to remain at my national convention and raise money for them,” the Rev. Al Sharpton said in a statement. “I will conduct my national radio broadcast from my national convention Sunday and will kick off the drive with $3000 from National Action Network, $1000 for each family of the three deceased victims. I am available to come to visit at the family’s request at a later date."

X