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CBC Members Back CFPB Payday Lending Accountability Actions By Charlene Crowell

State of the Union Offers a Ray of Hope for Main Street Marshall Plan's Robust, Targeted Infrastructure Development By Marc H. Morial

Feb. 3, 2018

To Be Equal 
State of the Union Offers a Ray of Hope for Main Street Marshall Plan's Robust, Targeted Infrastructure Development
By Marc H. Morial

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - “It turns out that advancing equal opportunity and economic empowerment is both morally right and good economics, because discrimination, poverty and ignorance restrict growth, while investments in education, infrastructure and scientific and technological research increase it, creating more good jobs and new wealth for all of us.” – President Bill Clinton

Since the presidential election last year, the Urban League Movement has been vocal in opposing those of the new administration’s policies which erode civil rights and opportunities for underserved communities. But we have remained optimistic that we could find common ground in the area of infrastructure development.

In his State of the Union address earlier this week, President Trump sounded a hopeful but vague note on rebuilding the nation’s crumbling infrastructure:

Tonight, I am calling on the Congress to produce a bill that generates at least $1.5 trillion for the new infrastructure investment we need. Every Federal dollar should be leveraged by partnering with State and local governments and, where appropriate, tapping into private sector investment -- to permanently fix the infrastructure deficit … Together, we can reclaim our building heritage. We will build gleaming new roads, bridges, highways, railways, and waterways across our land. And we will do it with American heart, American hands, and American grit.

Analysis of the Administration’s plan has found it “light on federal funds and details.” Of the $1.5 trillion, only $200 billion would come from federal funds – which would be offset by unspecified budget cuts.

Marc Morial is president/CEO of the National Urban League.

How You Can Celebrate Black History Month By Julianne Malveaux

Feb. 3, 2018

 

How You Can Celebrate Black History Month

By Julianne Malveaux

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Every year, the Association for the Study of African American Life and History selects a theme for Black History Month.  This year, the theme, African Americans in Times of War, is meant to commemorate the end of World War I, the war that supposedly made the world “safe for democracy”.   It is a war that African Americans fought for the right to fight in, a war that saw African Americans go abroad to fight for democracy, only to come home and be oppressed by segregation.  Undoubtedly, there will be many programs designed to lift up this theme, which ASALH sees as an opportunity to reflect on the African American role in all wars, including the contemporary “war on terrorism”.

 

What will you do to celebrate Black History Month?  Many will participate in programs at their schools or churches.  Some will gather for lunches and dinners and reflect on African American history.   However, I wonder how many will simply let the month of February slide without doing anything to commemorate this month.  Carter G. Woodson, the founder of ASALH and Black History Month (originally Negro History Week), would be spinning in his grave, if he knew how few of us celebrate this month.  (Of course, Black history is also American history, and we ought to celebrate Black history every month of the year!)

 

Dr. Eugene Williams, Sr. (a retired educator in the DC area) reached out to professional basketball teams to ask them to feature Lift Every Voice and Sing, the Negro National Anthem that was penned by James Weldon Johnson sung at games in the month of February.  He has commitments from the Washington Wizards, the Cleveland Cavaliers, the Golden State Warriors and George Washington University. Other teams, including the LA Lakers and the Atlanta Hawks, are considering the effort as well.  Dr. Williams isn’t representing an organization – he just had a great idea, and started calling NBA team offices with his request.

 

What will you do to celebrate Black History Month?  Will you mount an effort like Dr. Williams?  His independent effort will have an impact and ensure that NBA games commemorate Black history.  What can you do?  Here are a few ideas:

 

JOIN ASALH (www.asalh.org).  Memberships range from $45 for students to $100 (or more for life memberships).  What better way to celebrate Black History Month than by supporting the organization founded by the man who made our celebration possible?

 

REGISTER TO VOTE! The struggle for the right to vote is an integral part of our Black history.  Rev. Jesse Jackson once said, “The hands that picked peaches can now pick Presidents”.  There are lots of important races in 2018, and you honor Fannie Lou Hamer, Medgar Evers, Dr. Martin Luther King, Rosa Parks, and so many others with your vote.

 

HELP SOMEONE MAKE BLACK HISTORY. In Georgia, state legislator Stacey Abrams, is running for Governor.  She can win, too, if she can get the voter turnout and financial support that she needs.  If you live in Georgia, you can help this woman become the first African American to be Governor of a southern state.  You can learn more about her and get involved in her campaign by checking her out at www.staceyabrams.com.  Help this sister make history!

 

MAKE LEARNING BLACK HISTORY A FAMILY GAME. An organization called Urban Intellectuals has developed two volumes of flashcards that explore aspects of Black History.  You can check them out on Facebook, www.facebook.com/urban intellectuals, order their cards, and learn more of our history.

 

GIVE A CHILD A GIFT OF A BLACK HISTORY BOOK. One of my favorites, Preaching to the Chickens:  The Story of Young John Lewis, by Jabari Asim, celebrates a contemporary hero, Congressman John Lewis.  Another, Minty:  The Story of a Young Harriet Tubman by Alan Schroeder, tells the story of the Maryland icon who helped dozens of enslaved people escape through the Underground Railroad (legend says it is hundreds, but at Harriet Tubman Museum (operated by the National Park Service in Church Creek, Maryland) researchers say some of the estimates are too high.  The Youngest Marcher:  The Story of Audrey Faye Hendricks, a Young Civil Rights Activist by Cynthia Levinson will motivate young people to activism.  Sit In:  How Four Friends Stood Up By Sitting Down by Andrea Davis Pinkney and Brian Pinkney will also motivate young people to take on activist roles.

 

There are so many other things you might do to celebrate Black History Month.  Encourage your friends, regardless of race, to learn more about the amazing story of African American survival and resilience despite the racism that defines this country.  May your Black History Month be exciting and enlightening!

 

Julianne Malveaux is an author and economist. Her latest book “Are We Better Off? Race, Obama and Public Policy” is available via www.amazon.com for booking, wholesale inquiries or for more info visitwww.juliannemalveaux.com

Distraction by Dr. E. Faye Williams, Esq.

Feb. 3, 2018

Distraction
By Dr. E. Faye Williams, Esq.

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) — We’ve just heard #45's first State of the Union message.  Some had hoped he'd be decent, if not presidential.  Considering White House paranoia over the Russia investigation, for many, his speech has already been pushed into the fog of forgetfulness by news of the public release of classified information from the House of Representatives' Intelligence Committee.  In coming days, you must guard against manufactured news that is nothing more than a distraction to past, present and future miscreant behavior by the current administration.

As I write this, there are roughly thirty-nine weeks remaining until the Mid-term Elections.  My best instincts tell me that it is far past time when we must reject the myriad of distractions that have been launched by the current administration and focus on, in my humble opinion, the most important issue facing our nation -- the manipulation and subversion of our electoral process by an adversarial foreign government.  Although this threat was verified by our national security agencies as valid and operational in favor of #45 during the 2016 presidential election, little has been done by #45 or the Republican led Congress to remedy this problem.

On November 6, 2018, I doubt that many Americans will remember the $130,000 in hush-money paid to Stephanie Clifford by a Trump attorney or even that her stage name is "Stormy Daniels."  Only a few will remember that, allegedly angry with #45 because of the "Stormy" revelation, Melania pulled-out of her scheduled trip with #45 to the big corporate/financial 'shindig' in Davos, Switzerland.

I'm also sure that only those directly or indirectly affected by #45's intemperate, "Sh!?hole" comments will retain active and conscious memory of those unbalanced remarks.  Only because he demonstrates his indecisiveness so frequently will millions of Americans wonder what policy decisions will spring from the warped mind of that "very stable genius?"  In November, after the accumulation of nearly two year's worth of exaggeration, misrepresentation and outright public LIES, averaging a little more than five per day, I'm sure most Americans will have placed most of them into the trash bag of their memories.

I think, however, that, based on their personalized concerns, enough people will remember some of what I've described or some of the other voluminous deviations from presidential normalcy committed by #45.

What is lacking is that we’re yet to address the issue of Russian interference in our electoral process.  Unfortunately, prolonged attention given to any of the issues I've mentioned does disservice to our individual and national interests.  By not taking remedial action, we’re inviting the same interference in the 2018 and subsequent elections.

Not being one to offer a problem without a solution, I am calling on NCBW members and all others who find logic in my weekly missives to inundate their Members of the House of Representatives and Senators with calls/letters urging them to ignore the distractions. They must divert their full-attention from the never-ending deluge of "Trump initiated drama" and concentrate on developing remedies for the deficiencies that have allowed the Russians, or any other adversary, to interfere with our most sacred civil process. Change will not occur without your influence.

In his last address to the Senate before his resignation, then-Senator Al Franken warned, "At the end of the day, it's going to be up to the American people...We will always have the democracy we deserve, if not the government we want.”

We ALL have the responsibility to stand against those, like #45, who would deconstruct those institutions that provide for the orderly operation of government and that have given us relatively consistent social stability.  We've seen how #45 and those aligned with his perverse value system try to govern.  The democracy we strive for must not and shall not allow them to succeed.

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

At ‘Real State of Our Union’ Trump Derided for 'White Nationalist' Conduct by Barrington M. Salmon

Jan. 31, 2018

At ‘Real State of Our Union’ Trump Derided for 'White Nationalist' Conduct
By Barrington M. Salmon
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Journalist Roland Martin Hosts the 'Real State of Our Union' PHOTO: Paulette Singleton/Trice Edney News Wire
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Rev. Dr. William J. Barber lock arms with activists and audience members at the "Real State of Our Union". PHOTO: Paulette Singleton/Trice Edney News Wire

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - In stirring comments that were more sermon than speech, the Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II derided the Trump administration Tuesday night during an “Alternate State of the Union’ gathering.

As Trump delivered his first State of the Union Address at the U. S. Capital, Barber described him as the end-product of more than 100 years of attempts by White extremists to blunt any progress made by African-Americans and progressives in the U. S.

“We’re witnessing a fundamental changing of our demographics around the world,” said Barber, a national activist, former president of the North Carolina NAACP and president and senior lecturer of Repairers of the Breach. “We see extremist policies in America today and it’s driven by the growing blackening and browning of America and a fusion of every creed, color and class.”

He continued, “Those who embrace the Make America Great Again slogan are willing to work hard and cheat to undermine what is evolving in America. This is White hegemony and White nationalism strengthened by enormous wealth.”

Rev. Barber’s analysis of Trump’s cynical attacks on non-whites, Barber’s deconstruction of America’s racial malady and his exhortation for African-Americans, progressives and other allies to join the movement against extremism, wrapped up a more than two-hour panel discussion involving leading political and Civil Rights activists, organizers educators, and thinkers in the black and Latino communities.

The event, arranged and moderated by former News One anchor and news personality Roland Martin, was co-sponsored by the NAACP and titled, The Real State of Our Union,’. It was one of dozens of progressive alternatives arranged around the country to counter Trump’s first State of the Union before a joint session of Congress.

Rev. Barber, well known as an unapologetic voice of resistance to this administration’s hard move to the right, told an audience of several hundred people at Shiloh Baptist Church in Washington, DC that America is in the midst of a Third Reconstruction.

“Our discussion aims to put a spotlight on a variety of issues that are vital to our community, and that we are sure will be overlooked in his State of the Union address on Tuesday,” said Martin in a statement released to the press.

Hot topics ranged from attaining economic self-sufficiency, voter mobilization, the rightward tilt of judicial appointments, political and election strategy, organizing and the administration’s attacks against immigrants, the LGBTQ community and anyone not White, heterosexual and male.

“His words, actions and appointments and all we’ve seen is a policy of division,” said Kristen Clarke, president and executive director of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. “He has taken us back decades. We’ve seen a spike in hate crimes, Charlottesville, and his inability to condemn Neo-Nazis … it’s hard not to trace ugly hate and animus to this White House.”

Clarke, Melanie Campbell of the Black Women’s Roundtable, NAACP President Derrick Johnson and other panelists warned about the danger posed to African-Americans, other people of color, the poor and the most vulnerable by Trump’s judicial appointments. In his first year, Trump, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and the Republican leadership have rammed through nominations to federal, district and circuit courts after eight years of holding up or blocking former President Barack Obama’s nominees.

“This is a huge issue,” Clarke explained. There are 140 vacancies in federal courts. The judiciary has always mattered to Black people because it is a place of last resort. Ninety-nine percent of cases are heard in federal and district courts. Ninety-one percent of those Trump is putting forward are White and male and they are the fringe. He’s turning back the clock to the Jim Crow era.”

A panel of millennials spoke with great passion about the failings of the two-party system, their general disdain for both parties and their desire to build infrastructures and institutions for, with and about Black people.

NAACP President Derrick Johnson set the table with his insistence that Black people use their vote wisely. If 28,000 Black voters had not skipped choosing one of the candidates at the top of the ballot, Trump would not have won the election, he said.

“We need to stop being emotional and focus on outcomes,” Johnson said. “We need to understand the political landscape because we seem to have forgotten. In a democracy, the vote is our currency. It’s nation-building time. We have to build it within the rules of building power.”

Dayvon Love, director of Research and Public Policy at Leaders of a Beautiful Struggle, focused on the importance of developing opportunities and a pipeline into politics for African-Americans and holding Democrats’ feet to the fire to force them to do right by Black people.

“We’ve had an exploitative relationship with Democrats,” he said. “We need political infrastructures. If the political infrastructure is outside of your community, you’re beholden to people outside.”

Dr. Greg Carr, chair of Howard University’s History Department, offered caustic comments about Trump and the environment that he and his administration have fostered.

“They’re extremists, there’s no such thing as the United States of America and Mike Pence is a Christian fundamentalist … Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan are wholly-owned subsidiaries of corporations and the Koch Brothers. Steven Miller has proposed cutting immigration. These people don’t give a damn. We’re appealing to a morality these people have never had.”

Johnson and Campbell stressed the importance of Black people flexing their electoral muscles in the upcoming midterms and the 2020 general elections.

“We have to increase our collective consciousness and lean in at least for the next five years,” said Johnson. “There are 88 legislative bodies up for election and we have to vote in all these races. Redistricting and the midterms are on the horizon. Folks, we have to lean into our collective consciousness and turn out to vote. Nothing else matters.”

Campbell agreed.

“We’re mad as heck, but we’re being more strategic with our politics,” she said. “We will not have anyone take our vote for granted. We’re seeing a power shift. Black women all over the country are starting political organizations, running and challenging the Democratic Party. More and more Black people don’t think the Democratic Party represents their interests.”

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