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Sharpton Eulogizes George Curry: 'I Have Fought a Good Fight, I Have Finished My Course, I Have Kept the Faith!' by Hazel Trice Edney

August 30, 2016

Sharpton Eulogizes George Curry: 'I Have Fought a Good Fight, I Have Finished My Course, I Have Kept the Faith!'
Admonishes Black Press to 'Keep Telling the Story!'

By Hazel Trice Edney

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Rev. Al Sharpton gives eulogy of lengendary journalist George Curry. PHOTO: Charles W. Cherry II/Florida Courier 

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Black journalists and publishers were seated in a reserved first two rows in honor of Curry. PHOTO: PJ Fischer/Tennessee Tribune

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (TriceEdneyWire.com)  - One minute the congregation was somber and in tears; the next minute they were rocking to choir music in the pews; the next minute they were laughing in fond memory; and then they were shouting and applauding on their feet.

That was the range of emotions that marked the packed house during the “Celebration of Life” for legendary journalist George Curry at Weeping Mary Baptist Church in Tuscaloosa, Ala., August. 27.

The Rev. Al Sharpton gave a eulogy of the Black press journalist, columnist, commentator and editor that soared from a touching and sometimes humorous tribute to a fiery sermon that shook the sanctuary. Stately Black journalists and publishers were among those moved by the Spirit as Sharpton’s message pointed largely to how they must now escalate their voices as they continue telling the story.

“There were many Black writers that have gone mainstream. But George Curry made mainstream go Black,” said Sharpton to applause. “He was smart enough to play the game and stay in certain newsrooms. But he chose not to do that because he chose the path of why Black Press started in the first place.”

Sharpton was eluding to the first Black Press editorial, published in the 1827 inaugural edition of Freedom’s Journal. That editorial stated, “We wish to plead our own cause. For too long have others spoken for us.”

Curry, who died of heart failure August 20, started his career at Sports Illustrated, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and the Chicago Tribune. But he died as a hero, having found his calling in the Black Press. He was editor-in-chief of his beloved Emerge Magazine for seven years until it went defunct. Then he took up the banner becoming editor-in-chief of the National Newspaper Publishers Association News Service (NNPA), the Black Press of America. When he died, he had founded Emergenewsonline.com, a digital version of the hard copy magazine, which he never gave up hope to revive.

“If we love him, we will keep Emerge News Online going,” Sharpton said. “I don’t know what it will cost. I don’t know what it will be, but I want to be the first to help Ann keep that work going…I’m going to write the first check.”

Curry’s fiancée, Elizabeth “Ann” Ragland, looked on from the audience. Earlier, she had spoken, saying, how much Curry loved and valued his family, especially his mother, Mrs. Martha Brownlee and she reflected on his contagious sense of humor. Then, recalling his final moments, she said, “On last Saturday, my voice was the last person that George heard as I tried to keep him here with us. But there was a voice much stronger than mine, a voice that no person can say no to, a voice that even George Curry could not say no to…That voice is going to speak to us all.”

Curry’s death hit the journalistic community particularly hard as it came amidst one of the most controversial and heated presidential elections in history. Sharpton made clear where the Black Press must go from here.

“George Curry left us in a critical time in history,” Sharpton said. “In five months will be the first time in American history that we will see a White succeed a Black president. We’ve never been here before…which means those of us who write the story are going to have to follow a script that’s never been written before. If we ever needed a strong independent, but ethical Black Press, we’re going to need it now,” he said.

Dozens of Black publishers, writers, photographers, former interns and mentees, mostly from NNPA, took up the first two pews of the church. The sanctuary was also packed with hundreds of people, including his family and Tuscaloosa residents who came to say farewell to their hometown hero.

Sharpton attended the funeral despite a march against violence in Washington that he was monitoring by phone. “I said I would be here because no matter what he was doing, George was always here – not just for me – but for all of us.”

Reflecting on his friendship with Curry, who appeared on the last hour of his daily radio show every Friday – including the day before he died – Sharpton said, “George never knew that he was much more of a minister to me than I was to him.”

He said among the encouraging principles that Curry taught him was, “It’s not what everybody else thinks of you. It’s about what you think of yourself. And if you grab a hold to what your calling is and believe what you think you can be, everybody else’s judgement won’t matter.”

Still, Curry held even his political and civil rights friends accountable.

“He never let his friendship interview with his journalism. He would write against us and praise us the next week if we earned it,” Sharpton said. “At the end of the day the ones that really respect you are the ones that respect you enough to correct you because they don’t give you a cheap way out. And that’s what George would do.”

Sharpton said it was Curry’s courage that marked his unique style of reporting and column writing.

“Progress has never been as a result of people who didn’t take risks. George knew he wasn’t going to benefit by telling Kemba’s story. He knew he’d lose advertisers. He knew he wouldn’t be on “Face the Nation” if he put a handkerchief on Clarence Thomas’ head.”

The audience applauded vigorously at the recognition of both - the Kemba Smith and Clarence Thomas stories, which appeared on the cover of Emerge.

“But he told the truth. He chose his integrity. He chose the roots he got in Tuscaloosa rather than getting a pat on the back from folk that’s going to fire you anyway…George was a man’s man. And a proud man. That’s why George mattered.”

Smith, who called Curry her “hero”, was among the speakers, which also included journalists Ed Gordon and Roland Martin. NNPA President/CEO Dr. Benjamin Chavis and SCLC President/CEO Dr. Charles Steele also spoke. A childhood friend and Tuscaloosa native, Steele also presided at the funeral and the memorial service the night before, where the keynote speaker was the Rev. Jesse Jackson.

Driving home his point, Sharpton humorously rebuked journalists and activists who claim they have a new way of covering or protesting injustices, giving a scenario of one person who tried to convince him that the times had changed and there are new strategies for speaking truth to power.

He told of one person who said this, yet could not answer when asked what new strategies? Dismissing the person’s excuse for not taking a stand, Sharpton said he answered the question for him:

“If you don’t have a strategy, don’t act like you’ve got a different plan,” he said. “If you’re scared, say you’re scared!...And sit down and shut up and let somebody that’s not scared say what needs to be said.”

Ultimately, it was the Biblical text of the eulogy that brought the congregation to their feet at the end of the three-hour service.

 Sharpton preached from II Timothy 4:6-7, 11-13 when Paul, knowing his death was near, said, “I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith!”

But, then Paul told Timothy to bring certain things to the jail, including “parchments”, which interpreted, means his writings.

“Bring my books and bring my papers because I did what the rest of the Apostles didn’t do. I wrote the story. And the story would be distorted unless we that lived the story, wrote the story!” Sharpton preached.

He admonished Black journalists and publishers, “Keep telling the story…George never stopped. Until the very end, he never backed up and he never compromised. And he never negotiated his dignity for a contract or for a favor. That’s why when we say ‘so-long’, we’ve lost something that we’ll never see that way again. George Curry was part of a long tradition. But he was one of a kind.’”

Mrs. Martha Brownlee, Curry's beloved mother, who had wept in mourning for her only son as she visited the casket, ended the service dancing in his honor as Sharpton preached and the organ punctuated his message:

“I come to Tuscaloosa to tell you that George won’t be laying in the cemetery. George has got to go through the cemetery. But, George is on his way home now. He fought a good fight! He kept the faith! He finished his course!”

As a final reflection and recognition of the continued struggle at hand, the congregation locked arms and sang the Civil rights anthem, “We Shall Overcome.”

Full Text of Rev. Jesse Jackson's Reflection on George E. Curry

 

August 30, 2016

SHARPTON EULOGY STORY WILL BE POSTED SEPARATELY BY 10 AM (EST)

 

 

 

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PHOTO: PJ Fischer/Tennessee Tribune


“Sometimes Genius is Found in the Cracks” 

Prepared text of the Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr. in keynote remarks during “A Time of Reflection” for

George Edward Curry on Friday, August 26 at Elizabeth Baptist Church, Tuscaloosa, Ala.

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - If when you give the best of your service he will say ‘well done’. Job said when my worst fears come upon me I know my redeemer lives because he lives in my soul.  And ‘though you slay me ye will I trust you’.  Death cannot break the bonds between George and God and his family and those who came to know and love him.

Tonight George’s life has called forth an unplanned family reunion. We are not here because he died.  We are here because he lived and injected life into us.  The reality we face tonight is that life is uncertain, and death is certain.  With our tools we negotiate life’s challenges and hardships.  We finally have run out of negotiating space.

George was born in radical racial segregation.  At a time when we could use the hotel, the motel, the library, public park benches.   George was born when we could not aspire to attend the University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa, while living and raised in Tuscaloosa.  He was born in segregation, but did not internalize it.

He was born in a town with two birds:  the eagle flew on one side of town with the power to fly high seemingly without limitations and looking at the noon day sun.  On his side of town Jim Crow, the crow flew.  He did not bite Jim Crow and its presence did not scare him.

He mastered his environment.  He was an odds buster and a dream maker.  You have no choice as to where you are born, nor to whom you are born, or the conditions under which you are born.  You have to negotiate with what you have to work with.  He was born having to play baseball with a short stick.

Somewhere the eagles fly inherit home runs.  They are born with scores before they ever go to bat.  Some are born on third base, as if they hit a triple.  A few are denied the bat, denied the spikes, denied the equipment and play on rocky fields, but still score.  They are dream makers and odds busters.

Born behind the high walls of segregation before Rosa Parks sat in, Dr. King proclaimed, before Autherine Lucy was escorted into University of Alabama by the military.  He was born with a low ceiling, by law could not stand upright, or dream upright or hope upright; somehow George blossomed in the cracks.

One  day while taking a morning walk down the sidewalk two blocks of cement that barely pulled apart, in the cracks, which was supposed to be covered, there was grass growing in the cracks.  The soil was supposed have been covered by the cement; but in the crack was just enough fertile soil and water for this seed to blossom into grass and flower.

Life finds a way, sometimes genius is found in the cracks.  Not far from here Willie Mays, Hank Aaron, Bo Jackson came out of the cracks and became the best at their chosen profession.  As you come into consciousness realize tight space and adjust.  Rationalize that this is your plight and develop a cracked complex.

You can resent and become embittered, survive, but never change the limits of your potential.  Or you can resist.  Something within you can ordain you to make crooked ways straight.  It is said that the arc of the universe bends towards justice, but you must have the will to grab the arc and bend it.  If the door of justice is too big for you to get open, you should at least leave some footprints or some fist prints showing that you tried to open it with what you had to work with.

In George’s formative years before he was a teenager, he heard the stories of the 5,000 lynchings…He heard the stories of the Scottsboro boys. But in George’s crack was a mother and parents who hovered over their little eaglet whispered in his ear that he was neither row nor buzzard, that he was an eagle.  That he could fly high.

Nurtured at home, cultivated at Knoxville College, the school of Vernon Jarret and Michael Dyson.  George was maladjusted and restless with indignity.  He learned that literacy was the key to liberation.  In the shadows of the University of Alabama, he was the rejected stone, but at Knoxville College he became a cornerstone of hope and possibility.  What a mind.

I met George in 1980 when we were conducting a boycott on Budweiser opening up the beverage industry.  George was writer and interpreter, researcher of that struggle which we finally won.  In the 84 campaign his ability, integrity, capacity and convictions were expressed with white reporters confronted him and Sylvester Monroe and Jack White and Ken Walker about the quality of their journalism, the confrontation did not last long and never happen again.

He was a part of that first wave of black journalists on my 84 campaign who interpreted the new day, understood the rule changes and helped to make the case for the new day.  We saw his special genius in Emerge magazine, or as an interpreter on BET or as a columnist in NNPA.

What made George different?  What do we gather from his genius?  He didn’t walk around as a nerd, or a certain kind of unicorn.  Genius it is often said should be hard work dressed up in work clothes.  The qualities that elevated him from the cracks:

  1. He had a good mind.  Strong minds break strong chains.  His mind outlived his body. He died with his shoes on.
  2. He was physically strong to work long hours, do research, travel around the world.  We went to Japan, Morocco, South Africa, France and Britain together.  He was able.
  3. He had the courage of his courage of his convictions.  He did not just follow opinion polls, or the politics of his publisher, he had a point of view and molded the culture.
  4. His mission was greater than his job.  When the walls closed in he knew how to move.  He had scientific objectivity.  He could see other people as they were not as we would have them to be.
  5. He had confidence in black people.  Our progress delighted him.  It never surprised him.  He knew with Olympic rules we could get the gold medal.  He knew that President Barak would overcome a broken home, climb to higher heights and become of source of healing for the nation and world.
  6. He left the world better than he found it.

Lastly, George had a faith, shaped by his mother and his family in God.  He had a faith in God as the righteous judge of the universe, not the Alabama judge limited by the state and culture.  He told our story.  He told us what we didn’t know.  He made us feel better about what we did know.  In George we lost a lot, but he left us with a lot.

His heart wore out because he used it so much.  It was bigger than normal.  I think he may have had an aneurism because he used his brain so much.  It has been said a mind is a terrible thing to waste, it is even worse that a mind go unused… We were in Central Africa one night talking about when the time comes, what we want people to say over you. And George said, ‘Stand over me and say, ‘He’s getting up.’…. He will get up one day.

Rinkins Report: Single Mom Turns Catastrophes and Chicken Wings Into Cold, Hard Cash By Zach Rinkins

Aug. 28, 2016

Rinkins Report: Single Mom Turns Catastrophes and Chicken Wings Into Cold, Hard Cash
By Zach Rinkins 

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Tina Howell is not one to allow divorce, single motherhood, or anything else stand in the way of feeding her three kids. For Howell, business ownership is not just a good thing. It’s a way of life and a means to a prosperous end. Like many people, she dealt with significant personal and financial catastrophes. She decided to transform them into cold, hard cash.

“I went through a divorce. So I was in a position where I had to financially provide for myself and my children,” Howell confesses. “It is my nature to not be dependent on anything or anyone.”

With that attitude, Howell launched her first business, Virtual Home Care Inc. It has grown into one of the largest minority-owned home health agencies in Dallas, Texas. In 2012, she expanded her empire to South Florida.

“We are who we believe we are. We can accomplish what we believe we can accomplish. What we think is powerful, and what we believe to be true is important,” Howell asserts. “Activities that promote personal growth and development are at the top of my to-do list. I realize that I am not perfect. But, I accept all parts of the process, as I error, grow and learn."

Howell purchased her first franchise in 2004 when she identified a need and went on to become the first Wingstop restaurant owner in Miami-Dade County. After earning the coveted Wingstop Million Dollar Store Award, the Miami-native successfully opened a total of four Wingstop franchises. She later divested interest in two of the locations. Tina’s two franchises employ more than 30 employees and gross nearly $3 million annually. 

“I was excited to create jobs and mentor the young men and women I hired. I pay them a little more than minimum wage so we have a high attrition rate,” she explains. “I try to invest in them personally before they leave me and go to greater opportunities.”

In honor of National Entrepreneurship Month, Howell wants to see more people realize their entrepreneurial dream. She offers these five “Tina’s Perspectives,” for business success.

Save Your Money: “It takes money to start or invest in a business. You have to save your money and stop spending on unnecessary things. And, think of ways you can save money like living with a relative, selling a car, or getting an additional job.  Do whatever you have to do to accomplish your goals.”

Don’t Re-Invent the Wheel: “With franchisees, I liked that I didn’t have to re-invent the wheel. I didn’t have to come up with the name, product, design, or system. They provided people to help me with the process. All I had to do was make sure the business ran smoothly and profitably.”

Location: “Before you create a business, you must secure the right location. If not, don’t do the business. You must have the right visibility, density, demographics, and foot traffic to be successful.”

Appreciate and Support Your Customers: “Make sure you invest in the community where your business is located. It could be the optimist program or local schools. You have to let people that you are a part of the community and not just making money for yourself.”

Prioritize Customer Service: “Be polite. Communicate with customers, and cater to their needs. Also, pay attention to their preferences. In my more Hispanic locations, I tell my team to fry the chicken softer because that is what they prefer. In my Black locations, they prefer chicken that is fried harder. In business, you have to deliver a superior product.”

Keeping employees empowered, creating a high-performance environment, and managing costs are the hallmarks of Howell’s business philosophy. The customer-centric mogul is in the process of expanding her presence in South Florida by developing two additional Wingstop locations.

Zach Rinkins is an Associated Press award-winning journalist, professional speaker, and the author of the upcoming book Black Students Are College Material. You can connect with Zach on Facebook and Twitter at @ZachRinkins or www.ZachRinkins.com

 

Black Voters Have Plenty to Lose With Trump By Jesse Jackson

August 30, 2016

Black Voters Have Plenty to Lose With Trump
By Jesse Jackson

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Race — always a subtext in American politics — has moved center stage in this year’s presidential campaign.

Republican Donald Trump called Democrat Hillary Clinton a “bigot.” Clinton responded by using Trump’s words of racial offense against him.

History suggests both parties have fallen short on racial justice. Jefferson Davis Democrats were slave owners, Confederates, against Reconstruction and members of the violent Citizens Councils and the KKK. They supported legal segregation, and Southern Dixiecrats opposed the Civil Rights Movement.

After the Civil Rights Act was signed July 2, 1964, Democratic Sen. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina turned Republican in September and began the campaign to convert white Dixiecrats to Republicans. Many of today’s Republicans are old Jeff Davis Democrats!

In 1968 Nixon adopted this Southern Strategy as a road to the White House.

Reagan launched his 1980 campaign with a racial message of “states’ rights” in Philadelphia, Miss., where Michael Schwerner, Andrew Goodman and James Chaney were murdered for registering black voters.

In 1988, George H.W. Bush introduced us to Willie Horton.

After Barack Obama became president, Republicans introduced 395 new voter restrictions targeting blacks.

Trump continues this tradition not by using “dog whistles” but a foghorn of racism, religious bigotry, sexism and xenophobia.

Trump’s personal history of racial bigotry includes a federal housing discrimination lawsuit; an ad calling for the death penalty of innocent young black males in the Central Park Five rape case; an attempt to discredit Obama’s presidency with the “birther” issue; innuendo suggesting Obama became editor of Harvard’s Law Review because of his race; a campaign demanding Obama’s educational transcripts, implying his admission to colleges rested on something other than intellectual merit; complaints that a judge was unable to treat him fairly in court because of his Hispanic heritage; and promoting false and stereotypical information about the black community.

What do blacks have to lose by electing Trump? He will appoint Supreme Court justices who do not support black interests. He will support racially discriminatory voting laws like North Carolina’s. He will not fix the damage done by the Shelby court decision to the Voting Rights Act. And he will not support a $15 minimum wage.

Blaming black and Democratic officials, this is how Trump addressed their constituents: “You’re living in your poverty, your schools are no good, you have no jobs, 58 percent of your youth is unemployed.”

Who can deny there are many unmet needs and problems in urban areas, but that’s not primarily the result of black or Democratic will, ideas or leadership, but of Republican policies!

Democratic and black mayors find themselves governing “the hole” in the donut. The donut’s substance and sugar — the money for these cities — is controlled by congressional Republicans, governors and state legislatures dominated by rural and suburban constituencies.

Failing cities are not the result of liberal and progressive policies. Democratic ideas and programs that were working have been gutted and purposefully discredited, defunded and attacked ideologically by the very Republicans who did the gutting.

Conservative privatization and states’ rights ideologies undercut any ideas or programs that advanced the public good or made us a more perfect union.

There are more black elected officials, but their actual power has been weakened through redistricting schemes of stacking and packing. Policy and budget resources are controlled by Republicans, not Democratic and black mayors!

Blacks haven’t given “blind support” to either party; rather, they have supported both parties when they’ve earned it.

Lincoln and the Radical Republicans earned black support. Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, won the Civil War and ended slavery. Radical Republicans supported the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments and Reconstruction.

When Republicans wearied of advancing black interests, less-than-perfect Democrats began earning black support with better opportunities under FDR’s New Deal. Today’s Democrats are more like Lincoln’s Republicans.

Truman desegregated the military; LBJ signed the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act, launched a War on Poverty and passed Medicare and Medicaid.

Blacks aren’t giving Democrats “blind loyalty” and don’t have permanent friends or enemies, only permanent interests. Blacks support those who support them, as all intelligent voters do.

Blacks, in coalition, will demand that a Clinton administration more fully address the interests of those most in need as we work to make America greater.

The 2016 Olympic Games: Diversity Wins Gold in Rio by Marc H. Morial

August 28, 2016

To Be Equal 
The 2016 Olympic Games: Diversity Wins Gold in Rio
By Marc H. Morial

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) “Team USA reminds the world why America always sets the gold standard: We’re a nation of immigrants that finds strength in our diversity and unity in our national pride…In a season of intense politics, let’s cherish this opportunity to come together around one flag.  In a time of challenge around the world, let’s appreciate the peaceful competition and sportsmanship we’ll see…between rivals who know we share a common humanity.  Let’s honor the courage it takes, not only to cross the finish line first, but merely to stand in the starting blocks.  And let’s see in ourselves the example they set – proving that no matter where you’re from, with determination and discipline, there’s nothing you can’t achieve.” — President Barack Obama, Weekly Address, August 6, 2016

For 16 days, the eyes and the attention of the world were trained on the drama of victory and defeat in Rio de Janeiro. At a time when intolerance, conflict and division invade our headlines on a daily basis, the greatest athletes from 206 countries gathered at the Games—held for the first time in a South American country—and reminded us that tolerance, peace and unity are real ambitions that can be achieved, even in the heat of intense competition. 

Team USA set a gold standard for diversity in Rio. From the balance beam to the swimming lanes, our country’s 555 athletes represented the gender, ethnic and religious diversity that has always made America great. Team USA featured more women athletes than male athletes (292 to 263). Ibtihaj Muhammed, a Muslim-American fencer who went on to win a bronze medal, became the first Olympian to compete while wearing a hijab. Our women’s gymnastics team—also known as the “Final Five”—was the most racially and ethnically diverse in the team’s history. A Kenyan-born American, who is a sergeant in the United States Army and has a brother serving in Afghanistan, competed for our nation in the 3,000-meter steeplechase. American lightweight boxer Carlos Balderas scored an emotional victory in Rio, representing our country all the way to the quarter-finals. The 19-year-old, a first generation Mexican-American, dedicated his victory to his grandfather and uncles who came to America and labored in California’s strawberry fields to achieve a better life for their family. 

Team USA’s 121 medals are the most ever for a U.S. team in a non-boycotted Games, and individual achievement was everywhere to be seen. Winning five gold medals and a silver in Rio, swimmer Michael Phelps became the most decorated Olympian of all time with a total of 28, and holds the record for most Olympic gold medals, with 23. The two gold medals she earned in Rio made runner Allyson Felix the only female track and field athlete to win six Olympic gold medals. And Simone Biles, the most decorated American gymnast of all time, set a new American record for most gold medals in women’s gymnastics at a single Olympics. She was the first gymnast since 1984 to win four gold medals at a single games.

These stories, these achievements—some of them historic—these athletes, who train night and day and sacrifice everything for the love of their sport and our nation, could not exist in an America that builds walls. Many of the inspirational stories we’ve watched unfold—and most importantly, our children can now take for granted—could not exist in an America that bars people from our country based on their religious belief. The winning mosaic of America we all watched walk in the Opening Ceremony’s parade of nations could not exist in an America that shuns diversity and prizes above all the forced and inevitable homogeneity of ideological screen tests. 

I believe the power of our Olympic victory lies in its representation of what we as a nation are constantly striving to be: inclusive, tolerant, peaceful, united under one flag and committed to excellence at home and abroad. There are real problems and concerns we face as a nation and we must remain committed to solving them and keeping our country safe, but tolerance, diversity and camaraderie are not problems, and if the Olympics are any indication, they are, in fact, our strengths. 

Our athletes are back now and they should now how proud we are of them—all of them. Team USA returns with 121 medals: 46 gold, 37 silver and 38 bronze, the most medals of any nation, and the most it has ever won at any Summer Games since 1984. President Barack Obama, our nation’s first Black president, can add this factoid to his legacy: with a total of 289 medals under both his terms, Team USA brought home more Olympic medals during his presidency than any other presidency. The president with the second highest tally of Olympic medals is Ronald Regan with 282 medals. 

There are many lessons to be learned from the Summer Olympics, and my hope is that one of them will be that America is great and always wins when we embrace, nurture and support the talent and skills of all Americans in all arenas.

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