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Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Kojo Nantambu Challenges Charlotte's Scared Black "Leaders" On Racism & Willie Lynch Syndrome!



















Kojo Nantambu, Prez. Of Charlotte's NAACP Chapter Used To Be A Scared Figurehead Just Like Charlotte's Other Scared Black Leaders. (Charlotte, NC Is A Very Racist City Despite Having A Black Mayor.) Well Thank God Kojo Has Finally Awakened From The Coma He Was In & Now He's Speaking Up! He's Protesting, Writing Letters, Filing Civil Rights Lawsuits & Challenging Other Black Leaders To Join Him In The Struggle. YEAH!! Its About Time!! He Has My Support.


Letter From Charlotte's NAACP Prez. Kojo Nantambu Lashes Out At Some Blacks


Local NAACP President Kojo Nantambu has written a strongly worded letter criticizing members of the black community.

In the letter published Monday by Observer news partner Qcitymetro.com, Nantambu charges that some in the African-American community are diminishing Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s crusade and losing sight of the injustices against minorities in education and housing.

Nantambu came under fire last month after protests he led over Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools' decision to hold a snow makeup day on the MLK holiday. Nantambu called Charlotte "a racist bastion" and called for a drive to keep the CIAA basketball tournament and other events from coming to Charlotte.

In his letter titled "Letter from off the plantation," Nantambu cites King and the 1963 bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala., to counter his critics and to question the community's priorities.

"The only thing the Negroes in this community are concerned about is one week of fun and games and mammon and Massa," he wrote, referring to the weeklong CIAA basketball tournament. "Please let us not forget the four little girls blown up in the church; that's shared sacrifice nothing comparable to what we've asked of you, here in Charlotte..."

In a second letter sent to media outlets Tuesday providing more context, Nantambu cites disparities in the lack of government contracts given to minority contractors, the widening achievement gap for students, and the lack of affordable housing for minorities as evidence of Charlotte's problems.

Reaction from community members has ranged from criticism that Nantambu is out of touch to applause for raising issues so many are afraid to speak to. Some leaders, however, are concerned that the valid points Nantambu is trying to make are getting lost in his rhetoric.

"The whole demeanor of the piece is 'I get it. You don't. And let me tell you what it is you don't get,'" said Democratic state Rep. Kelly Alexander Jr., a former state and local NAACP president.

Alexander said Nantambu raises real concerns about the achievement gap and the lack of affordable housing for minorities. But he said some people might feel insulted by the style of Nantambu's letter and could resent how they're being spoken to. If that happens, he said, they'll simply ignore the message.

Alexander, however, said it's healthy to hear from people like Nantambu, whose views represent a segment of the community.

"Whether you like it or not, it contributes to the discussion of the dialogue. And I think ultimately it's a good thing."

The Africana Studies department at UNC Charlotte plans a roundtable forum on April 14 to discuss the issues Nantambu raised. Department chair Akin Ogundiran said he hears frustration in Nantambu's message and may feel that people don't understand his goals. But he sees Nantambu's style of "admonishing the people" as counterproductive.

"You can't attack the community you lead," he said. "You cannot say that you just don't get it. There is something wrong with that kind of leadership."

Colette Forrest, a former NAACP board member, said she doesn't want to read the letter. She's heard excerpts and feels the language will only hurt the community.

"We don't need any more divisions because basically black folks, white folks, we all need jobs," she said. "All this racial rhetoric, conquer and divide, is not solving these problems. We need economic vitality."

Reached at Green Oak Missionary Baptist Church, where he is the pastor, Nantambu said he realizes some people are not going to like his words.

"I just want people to pay attention to what's going on in Charlotte," he said. "I've always been taught that you will be persecuted for righteousness... You'll never get people to change if you don't address them honestly and forthrightly."





First Letter From Kojo Nantambu


Letter from off the plantation

(21st century letter from the Birmingham Jail)

In the past two weeks there has been an enormous amount of clamor, incrimination and condemnation by members of the community who were angry about the decision to protest the racism bigotry and hypocrisy evident throughout Charlotte. Even more atrocious is the disservice to the memory of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. illustrated by the myopic revisionist plantation ravings about Dr. King as to who he was and what he would do.

The sad part about it is many of you really don’t know anything about Dr. King and his righteous crusade to end racial injustice and discrimination to end segregation and separation of the masses for such reason as race, religion, color or creed. All you know is what "Massa" promotes and what "Masssa" prefers. King was a very bold courageous and God filled man, determined to fight the evil of racism in this country. Those of you espousing all of this sad and erroneous commentary about Dr. King have not a clue to the infinite dimensions of the man.

Though, relative to this incident I've never uttered the word boycott which was a(sensational fabrication) by the media and it is unbelievable how ignorant you are about Dr. King's beginnings.

The first official act by Dr. King and his supporters, that hurled him into world history was the "Montgomery Bus Boycott" yes "Boycott" get it boycott. Dr. King wasn't trying to make friends or please Massa he was trying to show the economic strength and effectiveness of African-American minorities when they come together in unity, remember Psalm 133. He was trying to demonstrate that we all must share in the sacrifice of self to receive the reward of freedom for the many".

The "Montgomery Bus Boycott” (remember boycott) lasted a year not a week, a year. People lost their jobs their homes there cars. They lost white friends and black friends some lost their lives but they won the battle. They weren't concerned about the loss of a week of fun and games and mammon or Massa unlike some contemporary Negroes, the people of Montgomery were concerned about justice.

Some of our community; Negroes included have lied and said that Dr. King would not want our children to stay out of school for any reason because he loved education. Yes you are right Dr. King was definitely for education but he was against racist, separate, segregated so-called "neighborhood school" education. Do any of you remember Birmingham, Alabama, the children walked out of schools for days went to jail by the hundreds for weeks (missing school) and enjoyed going to jail so much so often they over filled the jails. And as soon as they got out they went right back to marching and going back to jail saying "I'm going to jail for my freedom." They understood the need for personal and group sacrifice not like some of these Negro elected officials and modern Massa's.

Martin was there, he knew what was going on. Did you know some of those children not only missed school but were beaten by police, bitten by dogs, had their clothes torn off by fire hoses under full pressure as they were tossed into brick walls on sidewalks rolled up and down asphalt streets. And the only thing the Negroes in this community are concerned about is one week of fun and games and mammon and Massa. Please let us not forget the four little girls blown up in the church; that's shared sacrifice nothing comparable to what we've asked of you, here in Charlotte, write a letter!

Not only was Dr. King in Birmingham he was on the frontline in all his marches, boycotts, pickets, protest and anything he did. Martin Luther King had guts he didn't hide behind his title of scurry off like a little rat like a lot of his contemporaries and modern preachers or so-called Negro Leaders who wouldn't stand up to a "junebug" not to mention this racist city. Dr. King stood up to George Wallace, Lester Maddox, Bull Connors and many others because he wasn't afraid of controversy he said "The measure of a man is not where he stands during the time of comfort and convenience but where he stands during conflict and confusion."

Do not any of you realize or recall that Dr. King faced death everyday. Everyday he lived he stood up in a time where black men were killed for speaking out are speaking up. He not only spoke out he stood up and stood out. During the era in which Dr. King began his involvement Black men were killed for even looking at white women, remember Emmett Till or the Scottsborough Boys. Dr. King understood and lived the Word of God that said give your body as a willing sacrifice holy unto God and he did that, willingly and knowingly twenty four seven. Don't you remember the call at midnight they said to him in substance 'Nigggaahh we're tired of your mess now, if you're not out-of-town in three days we gonna blow your brains out and we gonna blow up your house." He did not try to run he did not try to hide, he didn't back down.

No, he was emboldened he said "I've seen the lightening flash, I've heard the thunder roll, I've felt sin breakers dashing against my soul but I heard the voice of Jesus saying "Martin Luther King Jr. stand up for truth, stand up for justice, stand up for righteousness and low I will be with you even until the end of the world"! Not only did Dr. King here it and say it,he lived it. I know most of you Negro readers don't remember it probably never heard it and Massa doesn’t want you to know it. Dr. King lived in fear constantly, being faced with the possibility of his own death daily and here we are today worried, mad, sick. not about the loss of life or liberty but worried about a week of fun and games, mammon and Massa.

It is obvious the only thing this country and the daily media want you to remember is his dream. But if you decide to live in his dream that means as is evident by the way some of you act - you're still asleep or even worse, dead. Because his dream has not come true yet; We have more poverty than ever, the schools in Charlotte are just as segregated as they were 40 years ago, banks still won't give minority businesses any help, they won't modify mortgages for low / middle income families and there is still enormous gaps in housing with disgusting pockets of poverty and excessive pockets of affluence no add mixture of mixed and affordable housing hardly anywhere recognizable, Jerry Orr still wants to get rid of 144 minority cabbies, for one white cabbie. That's not promoting small-business. Though we have had many successes, the current state of Charlotte, the state and nation is upsetting.

Congress threatening to challenge the 14th amendment, most of the 'Civil rights Bills"; the General Assembly threatening to use voter ID, challenge the voting rights bill and health care, makes the "Dream" sound more like we're living in a continuous relooping "Nightmare"

So people need to hone in on the first 16 lines of that speech Dr. King wasn't dreaming, he was dealing with reality the reality of the awful, abhorring, depressing and godless conditions in which we were living. Exposing this supposed land of freedom, justice and equality as one big diabolical contradiction.

Please make sure you study his discourse or speech on the Vietnam War. Many told him that the speech would be his death knell. But he was not worried are deterred. Remember he said “If a man has not found something he is willing to die for, he is not fit to live!” So I would guess many of you in Charlotte are willing to die for a basketball game, but are not as zealously inclined to fight for your children, who are being permanently, emotionally and academically scarred as they suffer in this racist school system!

During his long 13 year journey, Dr. King lost many friends, acquaintances and allies but he understood it was a small price to pay when looking at the bigger picture. He gave the Vietnam war speech on April 4, 1967 at the Riverside Church in New York, lambasting the heresy, hypocrisy, racism and bigotry of America for the Vietnam War delineating all the money wasted in that war when the money could have been better used for schools and education, we had growing expanding ghettos, and a rapidly growing underclass, sounds familiar.

After King's speech Pres. Lyndon Johnson who had become a good friend who signed the civil rights bill, the voting rights act and other such legislation, never spoke to Dr. King again. King was killed on Thursday evening, April 4, 1968 exactly one year after the Vietnam speech, quite interesting.

Dr. King was truly a man's man he didn't talk about putting on the armor of God then hide behind the pulpit. He put on the armor of God and went to war.

It's so sad that we have forgotten how great Dr. King really was and all he really is spiritually. He has been reduced to a very ineffective monolithic sound bite, year after year after year. The masses really not caring to explore the real man which has left us with some glaring realities that the tactics and teaching of Mr. Willie Lynch are alive and well and Mr. Lynch is probably dancing in hell, rejoicing in the fact that after 300 years, his plan is working perfectly and that many of Charlotte’s Negroes are the manifest personification of the Willie Lynch Proto type.

In the last three weeks I've come to realize some of our Negroes have earned their PhD in the WILLIE LYNCH SYNDROME. Thank God, King was more than talk more than show.

He lived what he said. Most of you keep running off at the mouth like you new the man. You heard his word, you saw all his deeds but you still failed to capture his essence, his heart. I don’t have his demeanor nor do I have his tact but I do have his courage and heart and understand the ”moral and spiritual constitution” that drove the man, not politrics. Thank you and To God be the Glory. Na'Maste'

Reverend Brother Kojo Nantambu




Second Letter From Nantambu


Open Letter to the Elected Officials of Charlotte


Of course this letter is to the members of the NAACP as well as the greater Charlotte community. First, we would like to say thank you to the many parents, students, and other individuals who joined with us for the MLK Day March and visits to the Levine Museum and the Harvey Gantt Center.

And to the many leaders of Charlotte let me say, we respect every opinion given regarding the NAACP’s decision to put Charlotte in the National spotlight. Our call was a call for a letter writing campaign not a boycott, a call to various groups such as CIAA, NCAA, PGA, to reveal the consistent growing racial disparities in our schools, our neighborhoods, against small businesses, against our parents, but most importantly against our children.

In the last ten (10) years, several research studies have shown the many disparities within this community:

We wanted to bring attention to the deplorable disparity of jobs through government contracts for our minority contractors. We are about 30% of this community yet we get less than 1% of all contracts, this is unacceptable. Many contractors in Charlotte have had to go out of business because of this fact and a lot of large construction companies are very crafty in getting around the utilization of minority contractors.

We need to highlight Jerry Orr’s attempt (Charlotte Douglass Airport) through City Council to put 144 small businesses out of business. Mr. Orr wants to replace 144 independent minority cab drivers with one major white cab company called Yellow Cab (I’m sure you’ve heard of it). He wants to make these men go to work for Yellow Cab, that’s tantamount to making them share croppers or tenant farmers and they will never get anywhere financially, probably die owing Yellow Cab for the cabs they already own.

Our members and citizens should be aware of the reports done by Crossroads Charlotte whose research about the relations in this city showing Charlotte headed toward four possible outcomes as a community, the one they fear most seems as though it is the one that it is rapidly becoming (Fortress Charlotte). Think about it!

The University of North Carolina Center for Civil Rights, headed by Attorney Julius Chambers, did a study on education and housing in Charlotte and completed the study in 2005. The study clearly showed the Board of Education that the direction it was going and the policies it was making were actually widening the achievement gap creating despair and disenchantment with minority students, forcing a higher failure rate. The report warns CMS that the continuation on this course would destroy communities and get progressively worse. The report proposed alternatives but CMS has refused to use any of them. Once you read the report you realize that the CMS Board seems to be doing everything the EXACT opposite of what was recommended. During this same period Judge Manning, a white republican judge stated that what’s happening in the Charlotte school system is nothing but “Academic Genocide.” What do you think?

In October of 2010, Johnson C. Smith University’s School of Business released a report that graphically illustrates “Though Charlotte maybe the second largest financial center in this country, minority businesses here (Black and/or Hispanic) get less help from the financial industry than in any other city in America. No help jump starting minority businesses, not enough if any joint, corporate/community training programs, no special small business seed programs. And let’s not forget minority home owners in Charlotte are getting little to No Help on restructuring their mortgages. We should remember how Bob Johnson, a very wealthy American and former owner of the Charlotte Bobcats expressed in an exit interview his disappointment with Charlotte and it’s resistance to work with young black entrepreneurs. He found it just as hard to do business here for himself.

First Century Foundation has completed a study in Montgomery County, MD that shows that diversity in housing and socio/economic diversity in the schools has shown to unequivocally increase academic performance of minorities and is closing the gap by 2, 3 and in some cases 8 points a year. The study also shows that neighborhoods and the people in those communities get along much better with much more harmony than before. Over 100 school districts across the nation have adopted this model. CMS refuses to accept the report, and the Charlotte City Council seems reluctant to or is too inept to enforce a mandate for mixed and affordable housing anywhere.

An impact study done by the Charlotte Housing Authority and additional study by members of the Northwest Corridor shows a great disparity in mixed and affordable housing in the city. There is a need for at least fourteen thousand (14,000) more units of mixed/affordable housing throughout the city. Less than 35% of possible affordable housing even exists in the NW corridor though space is available. The study shows the continued devaluation of property in the corridor which effects schools, businesses, and neighborhoods but plans for upgrading the corridor seems to be slow in coming. There is no Lynx and now due to the economic downturn maybe no trolley.

Some say “Charlotte can not be a bastion of racism, look at all the African Americans that are elected officials.” I say “We have a black president now and I have seen more racism and hatred in America, in the streets and in Congress than anytime over the last 40 years and Charlotte’s no exception.”

These are the reasons for our protest, not to mention the total resegregation of our schools, putting all of the predominantly black schools in a special separate zone by themselves and the closing of the ten schools in the Black or minority community.

These are the reasons for our reasonable and rational discontent and we are determined to do more, to bring national attention to this city and the glooming racial disparities that exist here. Everything we’ve mentioned is a glowing sign of injustice to the minority and poor in this city. Injustice, discrimination, and racial hatred are the fundamental causes for which all NAACP battles have been fought for over 102 years. And we won’t stop now, “Forward Ever, Backward Never, On ward Forever.”

Reverend Brother Kojo Nantambu



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Sources: McClatchy Newspapers, Qcity Metro, WCNC, Google Maps

Bloody Sunday: Civil Rights March In Selma: March 7, 1965











BLOODY SUNDAY: March 7, 1965!

I Wasn't There On That Awesome, Painful Day But I Can't Forget! In Fact I Refuse To Forget! Perhaps This Day Means NOTHING To Prez. Obama But Just Watching Video Clips Of What Happened On That Day Brings Tears To My Eyes. Men Like Dr. King Died For My Right To Vote! I Won't Dishonor Their Struggle By Being A STUPID Black Voter, Expecting Little From My Leaders. What About You??



Bloody Sunday: March 7, 1965: Selma To Montgomery Marches


The Selma to Montgomery marches were three marches in 1965 that marked the political and emotional peak of the American civil rights movement. They grew out of the voting rights movement in Selma, Alabama, launched by local African-Americans who formed the Dallas County Voters League (DCVL). In 1963, the DCVL and organizers from the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) began voter-registration work.

When white resistance to Black voter registration proved intractable, the DCVL requested the assistance of Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, who brought many prominent civil rights and civic leaders to support voting rights.

The first march took place on March 7, 1965 — "Bloody Sunday" — when 600 civil rights marchers were attacked by state and local police with billy clubs and tear gas. The second march took place on March 9. Only the third march, which began on March 21 and lasted five days, made it to Montgomery, 51 miles (82 km) away.

The marchers averaged 10 miles (16 km) a day along U.S. Route 80, known in Alabama as the "Jefferson Davis Highway". Protected by 2,000 soldiers of the U.S. Army, 1,900 members of the Alabama National Guard under Federal command, and many FBI agents and Federal Marshals, they arrived in Montgomery on March 24, and at the Alabama Capitol building on March 25.

The route is memorialized as the Selma To Montgomery Voting Rights Trail, a U.S. National Historic Trail.



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Sources: Wikipedia, Youtube, Google Maps

Black Voters Are Stupid!! Expect Too Little From Obama!













Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. & Malcolm X Are Probably Turning Over In Their Graves Right About Now. Why?

Because America's BLACK Voters Are Stupid!!

Which Groups Of Voters Expect Much From Their Political Candidates & Leaders? White Men & Women (ALL Ages), Hispanics, Asians, Gays. Which Group Expects The Least From Their Political Candidates & Leaders? Slave-Minded BLACK VOTERS (ALL Ages)! Perhaps This Explains Why Even Our Nation's 1st BLACK Prez. Thinks Its Ok To Forget Black Folks After His Election. Oy Vey!

"Forget You!" This Is What Pres. Barack Obama Is Now Saying To America's Black Voters. Why? Because Black Voters Are STUPID!! The Majority Of Us Have Low Expectations When It Comes To Our Politicians & Leaders. Sadly Enough Most Black Voters Will Continue To Support Their Leaders Regardless Of How Poorly They're Treated. It Must Be That Slave Mentality Thing. Pitiful!!

When Barack H. Obama Was Elected Prez In 2008 I Don't Believe Black Voters Expected Him To Focus Solely On America's Black Community Or To "Fix" The Black Community. However Since He Labels Himself As A Black Man, We Did Expect Him To Demonstrate More Fairness Towards Our Plight. Other Ethnic Groups Expect More From Their Politicians. Why Not Black Voters? Only Stupid Voters Don't Expect A Return On Their Investment!

"Excuses Are The Tools That Incompetent People Use To Build Monuments Of Nothing!"
Please STOP Making Excuses For Prez. Obama Or Any Other Slack Black Leader! The Right For Black Folk To Vote In This Country Did NOT Come Easy. It Was Earned Via Blood, Sweat & Tears! No Other Ethnic Group Had To Fight Like We Did. So Why Shouldn't We Expect More From Our Leaders? Other Voters Do!


Here's The PDF Link To Prez. Obama's Official 2012 Budget.

How Will His 2012 Budget Hurt Black Voters?

CUTS: Pell Grants For Summer College Classes, LIHEAP (Help For Heating Bills), Small Biz Programs. REQUESTS: $$$ For Public Schools & To Build More Prisons.

Never Thought I Live To See The Day When A Black Leader Would Support Building More Prisons.

Aren't There Enough Black Men Already In Prison??



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Sources: CBM Group, Youtube, Google Maps

Obama Tells Black Voters: "Forget You!" In His 2012 Budget










"Forget You!" This Is What Pres. Barack Obama Is Now Saying To America's Black Voters. Why? Because Black Voters Are STUPID!! The Majority Of Us Have Low Expectations When It Comes To Our Politicians & Leaders. Sadly Enough Most Black Voters Will Continue To Support Their Leaders Regardless Of How Poorly They're Treated. It Must Be That Slave Mentality Thing. Pitiful!!

Here's The PDF Link To Prez. Obama's Official 2012 Budget.


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Sources: Elecktra Records, MSNBC, Youtube, Google Maps

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Obama Breaks Small Biz Loans 2008 Campaign Promise: 2012 Budget Cuts












Here's The PDF Link To Prez. Obama's Official 2012 Budget.

Small Biz Programs On Chopping Block In 2012 Budget


Like the rest of the federal government, the Small Business Administration is going to get the squeeze in 2012, according to President Obama's budget proposal released Monday.

The SBA -- and, most critically, the lending programs it backs -- got some pretty hefty government subsidies through the Great Recession as the White House tried desperately to get capital flowing to small businesses. That stimulus cash vanishes in the government's 2012 fiscal year, which begins in October 2011.

"We have to tighten our belt, too, and we have to make tough choices," SBA Adminstrator Karen Mills said in a conference call with reporters.

In the 2010 fiscal year, the SBA received a whopping $963 million in supplemental appropriations, more than doubling its $824 million core budget for the year. Most of that cash went toward a very popular series of deal sweetners that helped entice banks to step up their government-backed small business lending.

The deal sweetners worked. In a time when lending to small businesses overall contracted by $43 billion, SBA-backed lending rose in the 2010 fiscal year to $12.6 billion, after plunging 27% in 2009 to $9.3 billion.

But as the economy moves toward recovery and spending has become a battleground in Washington, those stimulus efforts were discontinued on Dec. 31.

"We actually saw a big rush right at the end of the year," Mills said, as borrowers raced tried to get a loan locked with lower borrowing costs and higher government gurantees against default.

Now, borrowers and lenders are readjusting to the SBA's traditional loan terms. "We expected to see a lull, but we have started to see the volume come back," Mills said.

The guaranteed loan program has grown more costly as default rates jumped, especially on loans made between 2004 and 2008. Therefore, the SBA requested that it be given the authority to adjust the program's fees as it sees fit. The idea is to get the loan guarantee program as close to "self-sustaining" as possible, the budget proposal said. The adjustments in fees would become effective in 2013.
0:00 /8:30Who feels the pain in Obama's budget

President Obama's 2012 budget proposals calls for SBA funding of $985 million, down slightly from the $993 million proposed for fiscal year 2011. The 2012 proposal is an increase from the $824 million core budget the SBA had in 2010, but a sharp 45% drop from the $1.8 billion the SBA actually got in 2010, thanks to its supplemental allocations.

The agency will have to cut back to meet those targets. Funding for SBA salaries and expenses dropped by $7 million compared to 2010, and the agency will have to trim $5 million from its budget for managing its main loan programs.

What is getting whacked: The SBA warned that funding for its nationwide network of Small Business Development Centers will have to decrease by $10 million. Small Business Development Centers are mentoring centers run by the SBA in a partnership with colleges and universities throughout the country.

The SBA plans to come up with another $8 million in savings by reducing the core staff for its disaster loan program. The reserve staff that is "on-call" for emergencies will not be reduced.

Like other government agencies, the SBA has the unenviable task of trying to plan its 2012 spending while still battling uncertainly about its budget for the current year. Congress hasn't yet approved President Obama's proposed budget for the 2011 fiscal year -- which began five months ago. The government has been keeping the lights on with a so-called "continuing resolution." That's a month-by-month stopgap funding measure that keeps the agencies funded at their 2010 budget levels.



Sources: CNN, Huffington Post, MSNBC, Politico, SBA, Youtube

2011 Presidential Medal Of Freedom Recipients: George H.W. Bush, Maya Angelou, John Lewis, Bill Russell; Congrats!











Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy





Obama Lauds Medal of Freedom Recipients


President Barack Obama recognized a former president, a basketball legend and a civil rights hero Tuesday among the 15 recipients of the Medal of Freedom.

During a ceremony at the White House, Obama said the recipients represent, "the best of who we are and who we aspire to be."

The Medal of Freedom is the nation's highest civilian honor, and is presented to people who have made important contributions to U.S. national security, world peace, culture or other significant public or private endeavors.

Among the recipients honored Tuesday were former President George H.W. Bush, former basketball star Bill Russell, businessman Warren Buffett and civil rights activist Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga.

Obama praised Bush for his more than 70 years of service to his country, saying his life is a testament to the belief that public service is a noble calling.

"His humility and his decency reflects the very best of the American spirit," Obama said.

The 2010 Medal of Freedom recipients were announced in November.

Other winners include:

— Angela Merkel, German Chancellor

— John H. Adams, co-founder of Natural Resources Defense Council

— Maya Angelou, poet and author

— Jasper Johns, artist

— Gerda Weissmann Klein, Holocaust survivor and author

— Dr. Tom Little (posthumous), optometrist murdered on humanitarian mission in Afghanistan

— Sylvia Mendez, civil rights activist of Mexican and Puerto Rican descent

— Stan Musial, Hall of Fame baseball player

— Bill Russell, professional basketball player and first African American to coach in the NBA

— Jean Kennedy Smith, founder of VSA, a non-profit organization that promotes the artistic talents of people with disabilities

— John J. Sweeney, President Emeritus of the AFL-CIO.



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Sources: MSNBC, The Grio, Google Maps

Obama's 2012 Budget Hurts Black Voters; Gives More $$$ For Prisons???























































Here's A Warning (Retaliation) From Pres. Obama To The American Black Community For Low Voter Turnout In Nov. 2010. Fewer Black Votes = Less Money To Black Communities. During This Morning's Press Conference He Revealed His 2012 Budget. CUTS: Pell Grants For Summer College Classes, LIHEAP (Help For Heating Bills), Small Biz Programs. REQUESTS: $$$ For Public Schools & To Build More Prisons.

When Barack H. Obama Was Elected Prez In 2008 I Don't Believe Black Voters Expected Him To Focus Solely On America's Black Community Or To "Fix" The Black Community. However Since He Labels Himself As A Black Man, We Did Expect Him To Demonstrate More Fairness Towards Our Plight. Other Ethnic Groups Expect More From Their Politicians. Why Not Black Voters? Only Stupid Voters Don't Expect A Return On Their Investment!

By The Way Great Question April Ryan! (American Urban Radio Networks)

Here's The PDF Link To Prez. Obama's Official 2012 Budget.

Please Check Out The Video Below Of Pres. Obama's Press Conference Today.



Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy





Why Are Blacks Always The Biggest Targets Of Budget Cuts?


Why are African-American interests such an easy target for budget cuts?

One reason is a failure to develop what Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. called permanent units of political power. King once said "the civil rights movement will have to engage in the task of organizing people into permanent groups to protect their own interests and produce change in their behalf."

Also, there are not enough African-American lobbyists on Capitol Hill calling attention to the fact that African-Americans can not be asked to share equally in budget cuts to social programs when they entered this recession as Dr. Ronald Walters wrote, "suffering from double the rate of unemployment, triple the rate of incarceration, nearly double the lack of home ownership, and serious gaps with whites in almost every category of life."

Even within the administration itself, the White House Office on Urban Policy has not been at the forefront of advocating for substantive policies to help address the issues effecting urban America.

In an attempt to run a race neutral administration based upon a deracialized political strategy the Obama administration has failed to pay significant attention or provide targeted assistance to the African-American community. The rising tide won't lift all boats equally if some boats as indicated above are not seaworthy.

After more than 30 years of former President Ronald Regan's conservative ideologues impacting domestic policy, the country is experiencing what Dr. Walters called the "politics of resentment" or what Dr. King called "white backlash...the surfacing of old prejudices, hostilities and ambivalences that have always been there."

Socrates introduced the concept of "social worth". In today's context, one can determine the values of a society based upon the manner in which it allocates its limited resources. In the "guns versus butter" model, America continues to value its investment in defense over the real needs of its civil society making it easy for African-American interests in social programs to become easy targets for budget cuts.

This past Monday President Obama unveiled his FY 2012 budget submission.

In his proposed $3.7 trillion spending plan the president seeks to trim or eliminate 200 federal programs, pledging $1.1 trillion in deficit savings over the next decade. The proposed reductions, which average just over $100 billion each year, will disproportionately impact already cash-strapped social programs.

Understanding that the president's submission is the first salvo in a long budget battle many are asking why start with such steep cuts to much needed social programs.

Why start the negotiation process with programs that represent such a small fraction of the federal budget and will disproportionately impact African-Americans?

These proposed cuts come less than two months after the president signed tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans into law, increasing the deficit by $858 billion dollars. According to David Bradley, director of the National Community Action Foundation, "Once the Obama administration throws a poverty program in the water, it starts a feeding frenzy...the White House has thrown chum into the waters swirling around the budget-cut debate" setting the stage for Republicans to propose even deeper cuts to the same programs.

A few examples of the programs that are on the chopping block:

1. The president proposes to cut roughly 50 percent or $2.5 billion from the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program. The National Energy Assistance Directors' Association director Mark Wolfe said the administration's proposal would cut off 3.5 million households.

2. $405 million from community service block grants and $300 million of Community Development Block Grant dollars.

3. According to the Huffington Post, The Food Research and Action Center estimated that a family of four will receive $59 less per month starting in November 2013 as a result of the $2.2-billion budget cut in the food-stamp program.

4. The president is planning on slashing billions in education over the next decade saving the government over $60 billion in next decade -- interest on graduate school loans will begin building up while students are still in school under Obama's new plan. Currently, interest does not begin compiling until after students graduate.

Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-MO) and Chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus released a statement that says in part, "Rebuilding our economy on the backs of the most vulnerable Americans is something that I simply can not accept.

For example, the President's recommendations to slash Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) funding that ensures economic growth in our communities is troubling. Moreover, the recommendations to consolidate programs in the Department of Education that overwhelmingly support the educational development of our children, and to freeze salaries of federal workers who in many instances-in communities of color-are disproportionately the primary bread winners in their homes is equally problematic."



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Sources: American Urban Radio Networks, CBC, Huffington, MSNBC, The Grio, White House, Wikipedia, Google Maps

Sunday, February 13, 2011

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