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After Charlottesville, Push for Real Reform By Jesse Jackson

August 20, 2017

After Charlottesville, Push for Real Reform
By Jesse Jackson

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Racism, exposed once more in the terror visited on Charlottesville, Va., still scars America. Hundreds of neo-Nazis, white supremacists, klansmen and other fervid racists gathered — some armed with assault rifles, wearing camouflage. They marched with lit torches, yelling Nazi slogans, looking for trouble. They provoked the violence, terrorized a city, and took the life of Heather Heyer and injured many more. In the reaction to those horrors, character is revealed.

For Heather Heyer, the neo-Nazi assault revealed her passion for justice. She died standing for what she believed in, and her sacrifice helps to redeem an America that is far better than the haters.

She joined a peaceful demonstration against the neo-Nazis, standing with African Americans and people of conscience unwilling to be intimidated by the mob. She was crossing an intersection when a 20-year-old man plowed his car into the peaceful demonstrators and took her life, injuring 19 others. She now joins the blessed martyrs of America’s long struggle for equal rights. She stands with other angels who sacrificed their lives: Viola Liuzzo in Selma, Ala. in 1965; James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner near Philadelphia, Miss. in 1964; the four little girls — Addie Mae Collins, Cynthia Wesley, Carole Robinson and Denise McNair — blown up in the Birmingham, Ala. church bombing in 1963.

As Heyer’s mother stated, “Heather’s life was about — passionately about — fairness and equality and caring, and that’s what we want people to take away from this.”

Donald Trump’s reaction to Charlottesville will be etched in infamy. He refused to condemn the neo-Nazis and white nationalists, choosing only to decry the “egregious display of hatred, bigotry and violence on many sides.” The haters heard his message. The Daily Stormer, a white supremacist website, exulted that Trump “did not attack us. … No condemnation at all.” His campaign for the presidency purposefully stoked the forces of bigotry and intolerance. Now, as president, he has failed a test of simple decency. He shames a nation that is far better than that.

Some Republicans showed they know better. Conservative Sen. Orrin Hatch tweeted simply, “My brother didn’t give his life fighting Hitler for Nazi ideas to go unchallenged here at home.” Sen. Marco Rubio spoke forcefully against the haters. Some Republicans even rebuked the president for his failure.

Decrying racism is necessary. Words are important, but actions are needed. Dr. Martin Luther King always warned against being satisfied with words: “Loose and easy language about equality, resonant resolutions about brotherhood fall pleasantly on the ear, but for the Negro, there is a credibility gap he cannot overlook. He remembers that with each modest advance the white population promptly raises the argument that the Negro has come far enough. Each step forward accents an ever-present tendency to backlash.”

The terrible church bombing in Birmingham was denounced, but King pushed us to keep our eyes on the demand for civil rights reform. The hoses and clubs of Selma were decried, but King kept his focus on pushing for the Voting Rights Act. Denouncing hatred is important, but we need to focus on who is prepared to act.

Gov. Terry McAuliffe of Virginia denounced the haters that terrorized Charlottesville, and did so with a record of action. As governor of a Southern state, he pushed for voting rights reforms. He called on his legislature to accept the expansion of Medicaid under Obamacare that would have provided health care to poor working people of all races. He personally signed some 200,000 clemency grants of those who had served their sentences so that they could regain the right to vote and be reintegrated into the political community. His denunciation was important; his actions even more so.

We applaud Republicans who, unlike Trump, call out the neo-Nazis and the Klansmen. But the measure of their sincerity is how they act. The Trump Department of Justice, under former Alabama Sen. Jefferson Beauregard Sessions, has moved consistently to reverse and weaken civil rights. He’s turned away from reforming discriminatory practices of police departments, even as Trump has celebrated police brutality. He’s turned civil rights laws on their head, gearing up to investigate university affirmative action programs that allegedly discriminate against whites. He’s backed off enforcement of the Voting Rights Act, which he has called “intrusive,” opening the door to more efforts to suppress the vote.

Trump has pushed for a selective ban on Muslim travelers to the U.S., and he continues to prey on immigrants and posture on his “wall.” The Republican Congress, with its push to strip millions of health insurance to pay for tax breaks for millionaires, and its budget plans to cut top-end taxes while gutting funding for education and for food and housing programs that support the most vulnerable, only adds to our entrenched injustice. The Republicans’ actions speak much louder than their words.

America has come a long way from the horrors of slavery and segregation. We are a better people and a better country for that struggle. Yet, as Charlottesville revealed once more, hatred and racism still fester. Unprincipled politicians can still play on race and intolerance for their own purposes. Violent hate groups are literally on the march.

These must be denounced, even as we celebrate Heather Heyer and the forces of conscience. We must also act. A good response to Charlottesville would be a massive voting coalition to drive out the forces of division and push for a new era of reform. We must act, change the institutionalization of bias, protect and extend the right to vote, and fight to ensure equal justice and opportunity for all.

The Right Side of Charlottesville By Marc H. Morial

To Be Equal 

The Right Side of Charlottesville
By Marc H. Morial
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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - “We must take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented. Sometimes we must interfere. When human lives are endangered, when human dignity is in jeopardy, national borders and sensitivities become irrelevant. Wherever men and women are persecuted because of their race, religion, or political views, that place must - at that moment - become the center of the universe.”  — Elie Wiesel, Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech, December 10, 1986

President Donald Trump usually is quick to share his immediate response to any event – usually on his preferred platform, Twitter.  And he usually is reluctant to back down, once he’s made a statement. So it was significant from the start not only that his initial response to the racially motivated violence that took place at a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville was slow to come but also that it was revised several times. And none of the versions have been satisfactory.

In his eagerness to remain neutral and build a bridge of equivalence between hate spewing white nationalists and counter-protestors united against the cancer of racism metastasizing in our country, President Trump—whether through callousness or political calculus—has emboldened white supremacists and signaled tacit, if not clear support, to hate mongers.

Let’s be clear. There were not “many sides” in Charlottesville.

There were alt-right adherents, nationalists, neo-Nazis, and whatever new-school euphemisms are out there to describe devotees of old-school racist ideology. And you can put them all on one side—or if you prefer—a basket of deplorables. There were also people there who put their lives on the line, including 32-year-old Heather Heyer, who lost her life while fighting for civil rights, human dignity and the promise of a better America for all its citizens.

Trump’s refusal to denounce the side that advocates terror and violence and came to Charlottesville armed to the teeth to provoke hostilities is a colossal failure of leadership. It is a dangerous, precedent setting green light to hate groups and an open door to the return and re-legitimization of white supremacy.

Though the rising tide of disappointment over Trump’s muted response rightfully continues to swell, there are those encouraged his words. And as you might have guessed, they are white supremacists. The Daily Stormer, a neo-Nazi website, released a statement praising Trump’s response as “good,” adding, “He didn’t attack us. When asked to condemn, he just walked out of the room. Really, really good. God bless him.”

Former Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard David Duke made an appearance at the rally before the violence erupted and explained the event’s significance by saying it “represents a turning point for the people of this country. We are determined to take our country back. We’re gonna fulfill the promises of Donald Trump. That’s what we believed in. That’s why we voted for Donald Trump, because he said he’s gonna take our country back, and that’s what we gotta do.”

Rule of thumb: when hate groups, and KKK grand wizards, former or otherwise, support your words and actions, recognize that you are doing something entirely wrong. And you must know now, if you didn’t know then, that you are absolutely not on the side of right and need to make your way there sooner rather than later.

Horrifying expressions of white supremacy and Nazi sympathies are not novel to our nation or the 21st century. What is shocking, however, is that these kinds of demonstrations and displays of naked hatred can happen on American soil without clear condemnation from the highest levels of government. Trump has not lost his power to communicate clearly and quickly. When Merck CEO Ken Frazier resigned from Trump’s business council after the president failed to unequivocally denounce white supremacists, it took Trump less than an hour to hop on Twitter and clearly denounce the pharmaceutical company’s African-American CEO. Compare that to the near 48 hours it took for Trump to release any statement that condemned white supremacy after Charlottesville.

During Trump’s inauguration speech, he promised to be a president for all Americans, yet almost six months into his presidency, that promise has not been realized for vast swaths of people. The presidency is not a parochial endeavor. True leadership cannot be realized when the next election and pleasing your slice of American supporters animate your decisions and policies. True leadership would not demonize Americans who put their lives on the line for equal rights and racial justice for all, and it would not cast these people as the equivalents of white supremacists and neo-Nazis. There should be no room for this brand of vicious hate in our society. This requires a leader who unequivocally stands against the surging tide of hate, not one who steps aside and allows the detritus to wash ashore.

Making Racism Bad for Business By Dr. E. Faye Williams

August 20, 2017

Making Racism Bad for Business
By Dr. E. Faye Williams

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) In 2015, CNN reported that 49 percent of Americans thought that racism was a big problem in the United States.  Not surprisingly, people of color and whites had significantly differing views regarding the subject.  66 percent of Blacks and 64 percent of Hispanics thought that racism was a big problem, while only 43 percent of whites saw it that way.

In reflection, two thoughts come to mind.  The first - the oppressor and the oppressed rarely see oppression in the same light.  The second - logic and deduction suggest that, with the events of the past several years, the percentages of the population considering racism as a big problem have increased.  The recent circumstances of Charlottesville, VA seem to support my second assumption.

Sadly, the person who most Americans have come to expect to shepherd our nation through situations of racial strife and division (the President of the United States) has proven himself impotent in the matter and incapable of making cogent decisions regarding the nature of human/race relations.  Although I consider him completely lacking, I won't attempt to debate #45's general fitness for office.  I will, however, state that I unequivocally consider him completely unfit to render reasoned judgment in race-based matters.

We're reminded that Maya Angelou stated, "When someone shows you who they are, believe them the first time."  #45 has given us an ample number of opportunities  to assess who he is:

In 1973, the Trump organization was charged with Federal housing discrimination. In 1989, when five Black and Latino youth were coerced into admitting rape, #45 was conspicuous in his condemnation.  In 2016, after DNA testing exonerated them, #45 still called for their execution.  And then there was the seven-year 'Birther' attack on President Obama.  Few details remain undisclosed about that except that it provides great insight into the racial animus inherent in #45.  That's why, when #45 tried to justify the actions of the KKK, neo-Nazis and Alt-Right in Charlottesville, I was not surprised.

What surprised me was the swift, almost immediate resignation of Merck CEO, Ken Frazier, from #45's Manufacturing Jobs Initiative Council.  His bold and principled resignation demonstrated his refusal to turn a blind eye to racism and hatred, and led to further CEO defections.  This ultimately led to dissolution of both the Manufacturing Jobs Initiative and Strategy and Policy Forum.  This series of events was a catastrophic defeat for #45's administration, political agenda and, more importantly, his fragile ego.

Although I will not question the altruism of Mr. Frazier's decision or those of any of the other CEOs, one lesson is clear.  Racism and hatred are not good for business.  They may satisfy the needs and ignorance of small, petty minds, but are  counter-productive in business.

Collectively, the annual buying power of Blacks and Hispanics exceeds 3 TRILLION Dollars, and this does not include any of the other groups targeted by the hate groups in Charlottesville.  The facts of OUR economic power does not go unnoticed to business or stockholders.  Legitimate business leaders recognize that their businesses cannot thrive in an environment that supports discrimination and division.  Moreover, they realize that violence and the lack of social order are destructive to their businesses and our nation's future.

The greater lesson taught by this experience is that OUR DOLLARS MATTER.  Next to our votes, our dollars matter most.  Our challenge is learning how to best leverage political, public or corporate opinion and action with our economic power.  You've heard it before, but it's worth repeating - we must support those businesses that support our interests AND we must let them know why we support them.  While not solving all of the social ills we face, our effective control of our resources will take us a long way in that direction.

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

Confederate Statues are Falling, Not Economic Racism By Julianne Malveaux

August 20, 2017


Confederate Statues are Falling, Not Economic Racism
By Julianne Malveaux

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Cheers to New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu, one of the first mayors to take Confederate statues down and to make the strong point that these statues represent nothing but oppression.  (Watch his May speech at http://www.marketwatch.com/story/watch-new-orleans-mayor-mitch-landrieu-defend-removal-of-monuments-to-heroes-of-a-four-year-historical-aberration-2017-08-15) More cheers to Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh who had statues removed in the dead of night to avoid Charlottesville-type confrontations between racist white supremacists (also known as “good people” according to 45) and those who oppose them. 

And though he does little that I agree with, in the interest of equal praise, I must lift up Maryland Governor Larry Hogan, who had the statue of Roger Taney removed from the Maryland state house.  Taney was an especially vile racist who authored the Dred Scott decision in 1857.  He wrote that Black people had no rights that whites were bound to respect, and provided justification for enslavement even as many in the rest of the nation were clamoring against the unjust institution.

As the statues are falling, economic racism is not fading.  African Americans still earn just 60 percent of what whites earn.  We have just 7 percent of the wealth that whites have.  We have double the unemployment rates.  Even with equal incomes, we find it more challenging to get mortgages or other access to capital.  And our economic rights are being challenged every day.

It is important to note that these statues were not erected immediately after the Civil War.  Of course the South – a bunch of losers – was too broke to build statues.  They were still trying to recover from the devastation of the Civil War.  How did they plan to recover?  They needed a captive labor force to work their fields, just as enslaved people had before the war.  So they ensured quasi-captivity through intimidation.  That need was partially responsible for the emergence of the KKK.  They inspired fear, suppressed resistance, and, through Black Codes and Jim Crow, engineered the near-re-enslavement of Black people.

Black people who wanted to leave the South after the end of Reconstruction had to do it in the dead of night.  Black people who had land were often forced to concede it or be killed.  The Emergency Land Fund, a now-defunct organization that documented the Black loss of land, indicated as Black folks lost as much as 90 percent of their accumulated land by 1970, at least partially due to trickery and intimidation.

The origins of the wealth gap lie in this loss of land, and in the intimidation that kept African American people in near-slave status in the South.  Confederate statues, flags, and Klan activity appeared whenever there was resistance – during and after the reconstructions, in the 1920s after the Red Summer of 1919 and the return of Black men from World War I, men who were men, men disinclined to step off sidewalks or defer to white people.  Again, we saw the rise of this activity, these statues and these flags, in the 1950s as the Civil Rights Movement pushed hard for equality.  When people talk about taking “their” streets back, what they really mean is they want Black people (and other people of color) in their place, in their economic place.  And that place, for them, is subordinate.

So while Confederate statues are falling (not quickly enough – there are more than 700 of these odious symbols still standing), and Confederate flags are waving less frequently, the economic racism the Confederacy established is alive and well.  Just ask the young Black couple redlined away from a banking opportunity, or the innocent arrested person who can’t pay bail.  Ask the Black student whose loan burden is nearly twice that of her white counterpart, or the Black woman who pays more, and at a higher interest rate, for a car loan.

Sure, we have come a long way since those ugly days of enslavement or stark segregation, but some power comes from the Benjamins.  And, according to some estimates, it will take more than 200 years to close the wealth gap.  The statues may be falling, but economic racism is alive and well.

While I commend Republicans Lindsey Graham, Tim Scott, John McCain and so many others for condemning their President for his abject and ugly racism, I wonder if any of them would be so forceful in condemning economic racism, or in advocating for reparations.  Absent their willingness to do that, they are making very important stylistic points, but they do not seem prepared to change the harsh realities of Black life in our country today.

I challenge those who would tear down the statues and take down the flags to show equal zeal in turning down the walls of economic racism.

Julianne Malveaux is an economist, author, and Founder of Economic Education. Her podcast, “It’s Personal with Dr. J” is available on iTunes. Her latest book “Are We Better Off: Race, Obama and public policy is available via amazon.com

Trump Forced to Denounce KKK, White Supremacy, and neo-Nazi Groups By Hazel Trice Edney

August 15, 2017

Trump Forced to Denounce KKK, White Supremacy, and neo-Nazi Groups - Then Changes His Mind
 President appeared reluctant to do so even after domestic terrorist attack in Charlottesville
By Hazel Trice Edney

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This widely circulated photo shows the moment of the terrorist attack. CREDIT: Ryan J. Kelly/Daily Progess

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Murder suspect James Alex Fields Jr., 20

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Heather Heyer, 32, was killed by an alleged neo-Nazi sympathizer as she protested against hate August 12.

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Editor's Note: Since the posting of this story, President Donald Trump has again reversed his position on the White supremacist violence in Charlottesville on Saturday, August 12. In a Trump Tower press conference on Tuesday, August 15, he stunned Republicans, Democrats and people across the nation by leaning back toward his original stance, also blaming anti-hate protestors for the violence during the march in which White supremacists chanted slogans against Black and Jewish people. His reversal has gained a note of thanks from former KKK Grand Dragon David Duke who earlier warned that the hate marchers represented Trump's base.

President Donald Trump, under pressure from civil rights leaders and his Republican colleagues, finally denounced racist White supremacists after a Neo Nazi march that resulted in the death of a 32-year-old woman in Charlottesville, Va. Aug. 12.

Chanting hateful slogans and attempting to converge on Black neighborhoods in the hometown of the University of Virginia, race hate groups claim to be riled over the Charlottesville City Council’s decision to remove a statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee from the city’s Downtown. The Aug. 12 rally followed a July 8 Ku Klux Klan rally, also in Charlottesville. Observers say the hate groups are only using the statue removal as an opportunity to spread their White supremacist messages and recruit.

Heather Heyer, known for her activism and standing for issues of social, economic, gender and racial equality, was among hundreds of anti-hate protestors when a speeding car, driven by alleged Neo-Nazi enthusiast James Alex Fields Jr., 20, plummeted through the crowd. More than 19 people were injured. Heyer was killed. Two Virginia state troopers, H. Jay Cullen, 48, and Berke Bates, who would have turned 41 on Sunday, were also killed when their helicopter crashed as they did surveillance work during the rally.

"Racism is evil. And those who cause violence in its name are criminals and thugs, including the KKK, neo-Nazis, white supremacists, and other hate groups that are repugnant to everything we hold dear as Americans,” Trump told reporters at a White House Press Conference Aug. 14. “We are a nation founded on the truth that all of us are created equal. We are equal in the eyes of our Creator. We are equal under the law. And we are equal under our Constitution. Those who spread violence in the name of bigotry strike at the very core of America.”

As strong as that statement may sound, it came two days after the terrorist attack - far too long for a President who tweets daily attacks against political foes. Trump had issued an earlier, far weaker statement:

"We condemn in the strongest possible terms this egregious display of hatred, bigotry and violence on many sides, on many sides," Trump said during a short statement from his private golf club in New Jersey on August 12, the day of the attack. "It has been going on for a long time in our country - not Donald Trump, not Barack Obama. It has been going on for a long, long time. It has no place in America."

Trump’s second statement - calling out the names of the groups - came only after pressures and demands from civil rights leaders, his family and fellow Republicans who – either by example or direct urging – told him his first statement was not nearly enough.

Among the strongest Republican statements, Sen. John McCain tweeted: “The Nazis, the KKK, and white supremacists are repulsive and evil, and all of us have a moral obligation to speak out against the lies, bigotry, anti-Semitism, and hatred that they propagate. Having watched the horrifying video of the car deliberately crashing into a crowd of protesters, I urge the Department of Justice to immediately investigate and prosecute this grotesque act of domestic terrorism. These bigots want to tear our country apart, but they will fail. America is far better than this.”

Others appealed directly to Trump: “Mr. President — we must call evil by its name,” tweeted Senator Cory Gardner (R-Colo.), overseer of the National Republican Senatorial Committee. “These were white supremacists and this was domestic terrorism.”

Sen. Lindsey Graham told Fox News: “He missed an opportunity to be very explicit here…These groups seem to believe they have a friend in Donald Trump in the White House. I don’t know why they believe that, but they don’t see me as a friend in the Senate and I would urge the president to dissuade these groups that he’s their friend.”

Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) tweeted, “Very important for the nation to hear @potus describe events in #Charlottesville for what they are, a terror attack by #whitesupremacists”.

The responses amounted to one of the few times that leading Republicans and civil rights leaders and Democrats appeared to agree.

Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe, a Democrat, was clear: "I have a message for all the White supremists and all the Nazis that came into Charlottesville today. That message is plain and simple. Go home. You are not wanted in this great Commonwealth. Shame on you," he said. "You came here today to hurt people, and you did hurt people," McAuliffe said, adding. "But my message is clear. We are stronger than you."

The President appeared to be hit from all sides as Merck CEO Kenneth Frazier took a stand, resigning from Trump's American Manufacturing Council in protest of Trump's earlier remarks that did not go far enough. Two other executives followed suit, also resigning in protest.

Civil rights groups chimed in one after another.

“It is a sad state of affairs when it’s a news story that the President of the United States condemns racism and white supremacy,” said Vanita Gupta, president and CEO of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, which held a phone conference to criticize the President’s first response. “Two days after the fact, President Trump has at long last, directly and personally, condemned the white supremacist rallies and violent extremism that occurred in Charlottesville. While today’s delayed words are welcome, they should have been spoken on Saturday. This unconscionable delay has undermined his moral credibility as our nation’s leader.”

The Congressional Black Caucus was quick to point out the so-called “alt-right” (White Supremacist) connections in the Trump White House that may have influenced his tepid response.

“This is a president after all who has two white supremacists working for him in the White House – Steve Bannon and Stephen Miller,” wrote CBC Chairman Cedric Richmond (D-La.).  “Since the campaign, President Trump has encouraged and emboldened the type of racism and violence we saw today in Charlottesville, Va. This is a president after all who has two white supremacists working for him in the White House – Steve Bannon and Stephen Miller. For these reasons, we weren't surprised President Trump couldn't bring himself to say the words "white supremacy,” "white supremacists," and “domestic terrorism” when he addressed the nation this afternoon, and that he instead chose to use racially coded dog whistles like ‘law and order’ and false equivalencies like ‘many sides.’”

Trump’s second statement came after Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced he had opened a civil rights investigation into the killing of Heather Heyer. James Alex Fields Jr. will remain incarcerated without bond unless his court-appointed lawyer is able to convince the court otherwise.

Anti-hate rallies in support of Charlottesville popped up around the nation as news of the tragedy spread. More hate rallies are likely to occur as Confederate monuments to the cause of slavery and race hatred are being removed around the country. 

Meanwhile, the National Urban League and NAACP both concluded that the key answer is unified, non-violent action against hate.

“We in the Urban League Movement call upon everyone with a voice on our national stage to condemn these demonstrations and these racist sentiments in the strongest possible terms. This is not who we are as a society and as a nation,” said NUL President/CEO Marc Morial in a statement.

NAACP Interim President Derrick Johnson concluded, “This weekend, we once again saw the familiar faces of hate and bigotry. We saw white supremacists – brandishing torches, Swastikas, and Confederate flags - march through Charlottesville, one of our great American cities. And we felt a familiar frustration as those in our nation's highest office chose not to acknowledge the pain that these hateful symbols bring, but rather chose to blame individuals on “many sides…I say, we must stand strong, arm-in-arm with our neighbors, to speak out in one unified voice. We must use our time, our talents and our resources to assist and to caution against the repeated rhetoric that helps to fuel this climate of division and derision.”

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