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As Protests Rage, Obama Has Urged Trump to Reach Out By Hazel Trice Edney

 

Nov. 15, 2016

As Protests Rage, Obama Has Urged Trump to Reach Out 
By Hazel Trice Edney

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President Obama holds post-election press conference at the White House. PHOTO: Cheriss May/HUNS

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - President Barack Obama, in his first press conference following the election of Donald Trump as president, declined to assess President-Elect Trump in the same manner as he did during the campaign. As protests continue around the country Obama has advised Trump to now reach out to racial minorities and women.

“I did say to him, as I've said publicly, that because of the nature of the campaigns, and the bitterness and ferocity of the campaigns, that it's really important to try to send some signals of unity, and to reach out to minority groups or women or others that were concerned about the tenor of the campaign,” Obama told the packed White House Press Room. “And I think that's something that he will want to do.  But this is all happening real fast.  He's got commitments to supporters that helped to get him here, and he's going to have to balance those.”

After months of railing that Trump was “unfit to be president” Obama now indicates what’s most important is the peaceful transfer of power.

“Look, the people have spoken.  Donald Trump will be the next President, the 45th President of the United States,” he said. “And it will be up to him to set up a team that he thinks will serve him well and reflect his policies.  And those who didn’t vote for him have to recognize that that's how democracy works.  That's how this system operates.”

Trump’s vitriolic manner of speaking and acting appeared to immediately change after the election. In his victory speech, he promised to be president for “all of America.” Despite the ugliness of the campaign between him and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, he praised her for a hard-fought race; then said America owes her a “debt of gratitude” for many years of service to the country.

In a White House meeting with President Obama last week – the first time the two had met in person – Trump called Obama a “very good man” and said he even looks forward to receiving counsel from him.

Obama was not as flattering, but was clear that he intends to do everything possible to insure Trump’s success. He also expressed confidence that Trump intends to govern fairly despite his campaign antics that insulted women, Blacks, handicapped people, and veterans among others. But, Obama said he believes the Donald Trump that America saw on the campaign trail will not be the same Donald Trump in the White House.

“And my advice, as I said, to the President-elect when we had our discussions was that campaigning is different from governing.  I think he recognizes that.  I think he's sincere in wanting to be a successful President and moving this country forward,” Obama said. “And I don’t think any President ever comes in saying to themselves, I want to figure out how to make people angry or alienate half the country.  I think he's going to try as best he can to make sure that he delivers, not only for the people who voted for him, but for the people at large.  And the good thing is, is that there are going to be elections coming up, so there's a built-in incentive for him to try to do that.”

Some are not as convinced as Obama. The NAACP, the day after the election, reflected on Trump’s hateful words during the election and vowed to watch and hold Trump accountable.

“The 2016 campaign has made racism regular, anti-Semitism standard, xenophobia unexceptional, and misogyny mainstream,” said NAACP President Cornell Brooks in a statement. “Now, we must do everything within our power as a movement to prevent these social poisons from tearing our country apart. During this critical period of transition, we are calling upon President-elect Donald J. Trump to speak and act with the moral clarity necessary to silence the dog-whistle racial politics that have characterized recent months and have left many of our fellow citizens snarling at one another in anger and even whimpering in fear.”

The statement concluded, “We are ready and willing to work with a new administration to protect and advance civil and human rights for all Americans. We are also prepared to fight any attempt to roll back the progress we've been working toward for more than a century.”

Trump has sent mixed messages in his initial appointments. On one hand, he has appointed Republican Chairman Reince Priebus as his chief of staff. On the other hand he has appointed Stephen Bannon, the head of the racist and White supremacist website, Breitbart, for nearly a decade. Bannon had run Trump’s campaign during the final months. At the end of the campaign, the racist campaign remarks had gotten so bad that even the official newspaper of the Ku Klux Klan endorsed Trump.

Meanwhile, Trump has already back away from or softened at least three of his hardline campaign promises. Instead of completely repealing the entire Affordable Health Care plan, better known as “Obamacare”, he now says he hopes to keep key parts of it; instead of a mass deportation force for illegal immigrants; he now says he will initially look to deport only criminals. He has also backed away from his threat to appoint a special prosecutor and have Hillary Clinton investigated and possibly jailed. He said in a CBS interview that the Clintons are “good people” and “I don’t want to hurt them.”

Continuing in his conciliatory tone, Obama explained how he perceived Trump’s politics.

“So given that President-elect Trump is now trying to balance what he said in the campaign and the commitments he made to his supporters with working with those who disagreed with him, and members of Congress, and reaching out to constituencies that didn’t vote for him, I think it's important for us to let him make his decisions,” Obama said. “And I think the American people will judge over the course of the next couple of years whether they like what they see, and whether these are the kinds of policies and this is the direction that they want to see the country go in.”

Ignorance, Bigotry, Misogyny and Hatred Trumps a “Post-Racial” America by Dr. Wilmer J. Leon, III

Nov. 14, 2016

Ignorance, Bigotry, Misogyny and Hatred Trumps a “Post-Racial” America
By Dr. Wilmer J. Leon, III

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - "When Mexico sends it people, they're not sending their best. They're not sending you. They're sending people that have lots of problems, and they're bringing those problems with us. They're bringing drugs. They're bringing crime. They're rapists. And some, I assume, are good people…" Donald Trump

I don’t even wait…And when you’re a star they let you do it…You can do anything…Grab them by the p8$$y…You can do anything.” Donald Trump

Contrary to the pundits and pollsters believing that Trump’s politics of bigotry, misogyny and hatred would prove to be his downfall; America elected Donald Trump as its 45th president.  Trump’s total lack of understanding of the geopolitical landscape seemed to, like Sarah Palin before him, ingratiate him with his supporters.

In an interview with ABC's George Stephanopoulos Trump proved his ignorance of the geopolitical landscape by saying, "He's (Putin) not going into Ukraine, OK, just so you understand. He's not going to go into Ukraine, all right? You can mark it down…" even though Putin took Crimea from Ukraine in early 2014.

President Obama was correct in saying, "What I think is scary is a president who doesn't know their stuff and doesn't seem to have an interest in learning what they don't know."  President Obama also said, “This choice actually is pretty clear…even though a bunch of them (Republicans) knew they shouldn’t nominate him—the guy they nominated who many of the Republicans he is running against said was a con-artist and a know-nothing and wasn’t qualified to hold this office—this guy is temperamentally unfit to be commander in chief and he is not equipped to be president…”

According to CNN exit polls, 53 percent of white women voted for Trump while 94 percent of Black women and 68 percent of Latino women supported Clinton.  According to Edison Research exit polls, college educated White women voted 51 percent to 45 percent Clinton over Trump while Non-college educated White women voted 62 percent to 34 percent Trump over Clinton.  White men overwhelmingly supported Trump.  College educated White men voted 54 percent to 39 percent Trump and non-college educated White men voted 72 percent to 23 percent Trump.

What motivated White women to vote overwhelmingly for a misogynist who objectified his own daughter?  They were born into the world of white privilege. They voted as White over their being women.

On August 6, 2008, The New York Times published an article by Matt Bai entitled "Is Obama the End of Black Politics?" The premise of the article was that in 2008, 60 years after Strom Thurmond left the Democratic Party over the issue of integrating the armed forces and 45 years after Dr. King's "I Have a Dream" speech, the Democratic Party delivered its nomination for the nation's highest office to an African-American, and this somehow signaled the end of black politics.

Other pundits developed the narrative that with the election of Senator Barak Obama as Americas 44th President, America had truly become a post-racial melting pot. Performers like Pharrell Williams were mistakenly talking about “The New Black”.  A fictional world where “The New Black dreams and realizes that it’s not pigmentation: it’s a mentality, and it’s either going to work for you or it’s going to work against you. And you’ve got to pick the side you’re going to be on…”

The election of Donald Trump makes it clear that the politics of ignorance, bigotry, misogyny and hatred played well in a fictitious “Post-Racial” America.  Trump’s racist, xenophobic rhetoric resonated with his white working-class and college educated supporters because racism has been a tenet of the conservative narrative. It has been the covert sub-text to mainstream Republican dialogue, particularly since the election of President Obama.  Trump took the Republican covert sub-text and made it overt presidential racist and misogynistic politics.

As members of the Tea Party spat on Congressman Emanuel Cleaver (D-MO), called Congressman John Lewis (D-GA) an nigger and Congressman Barney Frank (D-Mass) a faggot, members of Republican leadership such as Mitch McConnell (R-KY), Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and former Congressman Eric Cantor (R-VA) did not tell the Tea Party that there’s no place in the American political dialogue for such bigotry and hatred.  Why? Because they did not want to risk alienating those voters.  Those voters took control of the party and are now celebrating President-elect Trump.

Trump called for surveillance against mosques and said that he was open to establishing a database for all Muslims living in the U.S.  His presumptive nominee for Attorney General, Rudy Giuliani has called the Black Lives Matter movement "inherently racist."  Giuliani was also the architect of the Stop and Frisk program. In New York police officers were empowered to detain and search people for often-vague or non-existent pretexts. The program was eventually held by the court to be unconstitutional.  Giuliani has promised, "What I did for New York, Donald Trump will do for America…"  That will not bode well for people of color.

Trump’s presumptive nominee for Secretary of State Newt Gingrich is the same person who called President Obama a Mau Mau in the White House, “What if (Obama) is so outside our comprehension, that only if you understand Kenyan anticolonial behavior can you begin to piece together (his actions)?”  Gingrich went on to call President Obama a conman, “This is a person who is fundamentally out of touch with how the world works, who happened to have played a wonderful con, as a result of which he is now president.”

This recent election was as much a repudiation of the “Obama legacy” as a rejection of Hilary Clinton. After eight years of an African American man in the White House 53% of White women and 63% of White men decided they wanted their country back.  To take it back they voted for a man who according to Tony Schwartz, ghostwriter of Trump’s The Art of the Deal, “…just couldn’t stay focused for more than a few minutes at a time.”

In a representative democracy, why would so many Americans vote for an ignorant, bigoted, misogynistic, hate-filled man to represent them?  Simply put, because in this fictional “post-racial” America, too many Americans are ignorant, hate-filled, misogynistic bigots. The Civil War is still being waged.

Dr. Wilmer Leon is the Producer/ Host of the nationally broadcast call-in talk radio program “Inside the Issues with Leon,” on SiriusXM Satellite radio channel 126. Go to www.wilmerleon.com or email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. www.twitter.com/drwleon and Dr. Leon’s Prescription at Facebook.com

© 2016 InfoWave Communications, LLC

Mortgage Officials Sentenced to Federal Prison and Fined for Fraud By Charlene Crowell

Nov. 14, 2016

 

Mortgage Officials Sentenced to Federal Prison and Fined for Fraud

By Charlene Crowell

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Perpetrators in a mortgage fraud scheme that targeted Black consumers in the Los Angeles area have been sentenced to federal prison and fined.  On October 24, United States District Judge S. James Otero sentenced Paul Ryan, a former mortgage loan officer and mortgage broker Chester Peggese for illegal activities that operated from early 2007 until March 2010.

 

The sentencing concludes a multi-agency investigation that combined efforts and resources from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Internal Revenue Service’s Criminal Investigation Division, Office of the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (SIGTARP), and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s Office of Inspector General.

 

As a result, Peggese was ordered to pay $4.2 million in restitution to Broadway Federal Bank and serve one year and one day in federal prison. Ryan will pay $353,925 in restitution to Broadway Federal Bank and serve 18 months. Two years ago, Ryan pleaded guilty to one count of receiving bribes and rewards as a bank employee.

According to court documents, Peggese acted as a “consultant” who targeted Los Angeles-area churches with promises of new mortgages to purchase property or refinanced mortgages from Broadway Federal Bank. Between 2007 and 2009, Peggese met with representatives of churches and obtained financial information required for the loan applications.

 

Others involved manipulated financial information to make it appear the churches were more financially sound than they actually were. Peggese caused these false loan applications to be submitted to Broadway Federal Bank.

 

During the time that Ryan worked as a loan officer, Broadway Federal Bank paid rebates to brokers who brought loans applications to the bank. Ryan also “demanded from the brokers that all or part of that rebate amount be paid to him...intending to be rewarded and influenced in his processing and approval of these church loans,” according to the sentencing memorandum filed with the court.

 

Ryan worked with brokers and provided a template for presenting financial information for the churches that ensured the loan applications would be approved. Based on the false information concerning the financial status of the churches, Broadway Federal Bank issued loans to the churches.

 

“This bank insider accepted hundreds of thousands of dollars in a scheme that led his employer to suffer millions of dollars in losses,” said United States Attorney Eileen M. Decker. “After investigators began looking into the scheme, Ryan encouraged another bank employee to lie about the fraudulent loan applications, which further complicated but did not deter this investigation.”

 

“Banker Paul Ryan abused his position of trust and caused losses at TARP recipient Broadway Federal Bank by knowingly allowing borrowers to use inflated financial information in loan applications,” said Christy Goldsmith Romero, Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (SIGTARP).

 

“In this mortgage scheme aimed at predominately African-American churches, he demanded more than $350,000 in bribes from brokers,” continued Goldsmith Romero. “When investigators closed in Ryan tried to cover up his crimes by telling a conspirator to lie on his behalf. Broadway Federal, which received and has not yet paid back $15 million in TARP funds, suffered more than $5 million in losses as a result of this scheme. SIGTARP stands united with our law enforcement partners to bring justice to bank officials and their conspirators who commit crime.”

 

With all due respect to participating law enforcement officials, Black America is also due its fair share of financial justice too. Across a range of financial markets and predatory products designed to rob families of their earnings, mortgage fraud has the largest effect on our quality of life and our ability to build wealth.

 

This recent case of mortgage fraud illustrates the inequities that Black California consumers and others across the country continue to face. Recent research on mortgage lending in California by the Center for Responsible Lending revealed even more financial obstacles:

 

  • Nearly half – 49 percent -- of Black borrowers had incomes greater than 120 percent of their area median income or AMI;

 

  • Black borrowers received approximately 3 percent of home purchase loans in California that were first-lien and owner-occupied; and

 

  • From 2001-2012, the number of home purchase loans dropped 54 percent.

 

"The communities that lack access to mortgages post-crisis are the very same communities that were disproportionately affected by foreclosures and lost wealth during the housing crisis," said Sarah Wolff, senior CRL researcher and the report’s author.

 

Mortgage fraud only worsens an already disheartening Black experience in seeking the ‘American Dream’. The strong likelihood is that this same scenario is repeated across the country with other consumers of color.

 

And so -- our collective struggle for financial justice must continue.

 

Flu Season is Here by Glenn Ellis

Nov. 14, 2016

Flu Season is Here
By Glenn Ellis

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Our flu season is around the corner. And while the timing varies in different parts of the country, most flu activity — influenza-like illness, hospitalizations, and sadly even deaths – will occur between October 2016 and run into May 2017.

A highly contagious illness caused by influenza viruses. Similar to the common cold, the flu affects the respiratory system — nose, throa, and lungs—and can cause a runny nose, cough and sore throat. But unlike the common cold, the flu also attacks the entire body — a fever of 100oF or higher, headaches, cough, body aches, chills, fatigue, and nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea (more common in children). The flu is a serious disease and can lead to complications, hospitalization, and even death.

We all get information or reminders to get a Flu shot. But, most of us are either suspicious or just down right don’t think it’s that big a deal.

I’m not going to attempt to convince you one way or the other, I just want to make sure that whatever decision you make is an informed decision. So here’s a little information that may prove helpful.

First of all, let’s begin with what is the Flu?

The Flu is a highly contagious illness caused by influenza viruses. Similar to the common cold, the flu affects the respiratory system - nose, throat, and lungs - and can cause a runny nose, cough and sore throat. But unlike the common cold, the flu also attacks the entire body - a fever of 100oF or higher, headaches, cough, body aches, chills, fatigue, and nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea (more common in children). The flu is a serious disease and can lead to complications, hospitalization, and even death.

The influenza virus is most commonly spread via aerosolized droplets that can travel up to 6 feet. It is important to stay away from people who are coughing and sneezing. The virus can also survive on surfaces or objects and infect a person if they touch their mouth or nose.

Most people who get the flu improve within a week (though they may have a lingering cough and get tired easily long after a week passes); however, the flu can cause serious complications.

If you're young and healthy, influenza usually isn't serious. Although you may feel miserable while you have it, the flu usually goes away with no lasting effects.

You can have flu complications if you get a bacterial infection, which can cause pneumonia in your weakened lungs. The flu virus itself also can cause pneumonia. Flu complications, such as pneumonia, usually appear after the patient starts to feel better.

Pneumonia can be a very serious and sometimes life-threatening condition. If you have any of these symptoms, you should contact your health care provider immediately to get the appropriate treatment.

Pneumonia is the major serious complication of influenza and can be very serious. It can develop about 5 days after viral influenza. More than 90% of the deaths caused by influenza and pneumonia occur among older adults.

Now, when it comes to the flu shot, it is an inactivated vaccine (containing killed virus) that is given with a needle, usually in the arm. Because the viruses are inactive, they cannot cause infections. The vaccine preparation is based on the strains of the flu viruses that are in circulation at the time and includes A and B viruses expected to circulate the following winter. Viruses for the flu shot are grown in eggs. The flu shot is approved for use in persons older than 6 months, including healthy persons and those with chronic medical conditions.
When the "match" between vaccine and circulating strains is close, the flu shot prevents influenza in about 70 percent to 90 percent of healthy persons younger than 65 years.

Among elderly persons living outside chronic-care facilities and those persons with chronic medical conditions, the flu shot is 30 percent to 70 percent effective in preventing hospitalization for pneumonia and influenza. Among elderly nursing home residents, the flu shot is most effective in preventing severe illness, secondary complications, and deaths related to the flu. In this population, the shot can be 50 percent to 60 percent effective in preventing hospitalization or pneumonia and 80% effective in preventing death from the flu.

Experts must pick which viruses to include in the vaccine many months in advance in order for vaccine to be produced and delivered on time. And flu viruses change constantly (called drift); they can change from one season to the next or they can even change within the course of one flu season. Because of these factors, there is always the possibility of a less than optimal match between circulating viruses and the viruses in the vaccine.

In spite of the controversy and difficulty many are having over whether to take the vaccine, there are a few things you should know in regards to vaccines and the flu.

The lingering question and debate among scientists and regular folks like us remains, “Does getting a vaccination really make a difference”?

It is possible to get sick with flu even if you have been vaccinated (although you won’t know for sure unless you get a flu test and it is positive).

Protection provided by flu vaccination can vary widely, based in part on health and age factors of the person getting vaccinated. In general, the flu vaccine works best among young healthy adults and older children. Some older people and people with certain chronic illnesses may develop less immunity after vaccination. While vaccination offers the best protection against flu infection, it's still possible that some people may become ill after being vaccinated.

Flu vaccination is not a perfect tool, but it is the best tool currently at our disposal to prevent flu.

Remember, I’m not a doctor. I just sound like one. Take good care of yourself and live the best life possible!

The information included in this column is for educational purposes only. It is not intended nor implied to be a substitute for professional medical advice. The reader should always consult his or her healthcare provider to determine the appropriateness of the information for their own situation or if they have any questions regarding a medical condition or treatment plan. Glenn Ellis, is a Health Advocacy Communications Specialist. He is the author of Which Doctor?, and Information is the Best Medicine. A health columnist and radio commentator who lectures, nationally and internationally on health related topics, Ellis is an active media contributor on Health Equity and Medical Ethics. Listen to Glenn, every Saturday at 9:00am (EST) on www.900amwurd.com, and Sundays at 8:30am (EST) on www.wdasfm.com. For more good health information, visit: www.glennellis.com

 

 

And the Struggle Continues! by Dr. E. Faye Williams, Esq.

Dec. 14, 2016

And the Struggle Continues!
By Dr. E. Faye Williams, Esq.

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) – As millions of other Americans, I was disappointed watching the gradual dissolution of a Hillary Clinton Presidency.  Although hopeful, I wasn't completely surprised by the election's outcome.  History – both past and recent – gives me little reason for total optimism.

Pundits suggest that America can survive any turmoil of a Trump presidency.  I am struck by the tepid, measured analysis they present.  Their election post-mortems steer clear of racial implications.  Some offer that Trump will now govern from a more centrist position.  I disagree and believe Trump will live up to as many of his promises as possible.  His professed views come from the core of his guiding value system.

In Trump's campaign, immigrants, refugees, women, Muslims, the disabled, and ethnic minorities have been victimized by the vitriol and demonization of the candidate.  Criticism or opposition to his positions drew psychotic responses and open calls for violence against adversaries.  Not surprisingly, his open hostility to criticism is teamed with an apparent obsessive compulsion for revenge and retaliation.  We, who are Trump outsiders, clearly recognize racism when we see it and realize that, left to his own devices, we have little hope for an optimistic future.

On day one, Trump promises the start of his wall.  If not successful with that, I expect the enactment of some type of draconian immigration policy that gives latitude to ban the immigration of Muslims and Hispanics into this country.  Although antithetical to the Constitution, I can see the concoction of a 'cover' rationale to ban the immigration of Muslims based on religion.  I can envision the round-up and deportation of many undocumented immigrants, and the break-up and destruction of their families justified as "the will of the American people."

I fully expect that Trump and his congressional allies will begin to dismantle every accomplishment of President Obama and effectively strip his historical legacy.  They've stolen a Supreme Court appointment that, rightfully, belongs to President Obama and will, in future appointments, stack the court with conservative appointments that will alter the country's direction for generations.  We can expect Republican repeal of Obamacare and, that done, millions of uninsured again at the mercy of  the insurance industry.

Trump promises to appoint Supreme Court Justices who will reverse Roe v. Wade making abortion illegal.  That single act will eliminate the right of women’s reproductive autonomy and suggests a return to a time of back-alley abortions.

Like many, I have long understood the euphemism "Making America Great Again."  It reassures white racists and whites who disavow racism, but are 'insecure' with the "browning" of America, that their racial superiority will be reestablished.  It's the foundation of a campaign that believed American racism - overt and covert - was sufficient to engender success.  The effect is on-going and immediate.  We've seen the ugly racism emerge throughout Trump's campaign and it's reported that in Virginia on Wednesday, some white students gathered in a school hallway chanting, "Build That Wall!  Build That Wall!"  Minority students are described as "disturbed, frightened and confused."

With the exception of those maligned or threatened by him, few seem to understand or care about the resurgence or impact of racism generated by Trump and his campaign.  Although I see  nothing funny about our present circumstance, humorist Shel Silverstein's poem, Point of View, sums it up:

Oh how I once loved tuna salad
Pork and lobsters, lamb chops too
'Til I stopped and looked at dinner
From the dinner's point of view.

I urge Trump to look objectively at the hate-filled, divisive environment he has created and work for reconciliation.  Lacking leadership that disavows past and current patterns of racism, this nation faces a future filled with turmoil from which we may never fully recover.

Let's Struggle On!!!!

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

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