George Zimmerman Trial Livestream

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Running the Numbers- Bookies and gamblers bailed out blacks during The Depression. Who will save us now?



By Robert E. Weems Jr.

Despite its failure in the House yesterday, a massive taxpayer-financed bailout of the nation's various financial institutions remains a near certainty.

Black taxpayers in particular, who have been disproportionately affected by the housing crisis, have reason to be anxious about how they will fare in the rescue scenario. If only numbers runners held the kind of clout today that they did during the Great Depression.

In the 1930s, at the height of the Depression, black gamblers rescued the Negro Baseball Leagues from going under—an action that would have repercussions for years to come.

African-American workers, always the "last hired, first fired," were vulnerable during the Depression. Black-owned businesses, which depended exclusively on black consumer support, also suffered mightily. High black unemployment rates associated with the Depression meant fewer sales and profits for African-American enterprises. In 1929, aggregate sales for black America's 24,969 retail stores was $98.6 million. Six years later, in 1935, there were 22,756 black-owned retail stores, and their aggregate sales had plummeted to $47.9 million.

At the same time that black-owned retail outlets, banks and manufacturing concerns were either closing or losing money across the country, the "numbers racket," or "policy" (an off-the-books lottery run by private individuals), took off. In fact, numbers rapidly eclipsed legitimate black businesses as the primary economic force in Depression-era black communities.

Although the numbers racket targeted working-class and poor communities, and were unregulated and untaxed by the local governments, there was little, if any, stigma among blacks to being involved with policy. Numbers bosses nevertheless sought respectability by investing gambling profits in legitimate businesses. During the 1930s, black baseball attracted a great deal of this money.

Running the Numbers....

WEAR BLUE FOR OBAMA DAY


OBAMA BLUE DAY!!!September 30, 2008 Its time to REPRESENT!!!!! This election season has remained too close for comfort and to close to call! We have 100,000s of unregistered and millions who remain on the fence! Its time for us to come together, voice our unity, and make a difference! Tuesday September 30, 20008 everyone is asked to do two things 1) WEAR BLUE 2) REGISTER TWO VOTERS! (If you can't register two voters talk to two people who may be on the fence/ or a McCain supporter and sway them to become a Obama Supporter).

Monday, September 29, 2008

Commentary: Wondering Why McCain Couldn’t Look Obama in the Eye Friday Night? He Was Ashamed


By: Deborah Mathis

It says something that Barack Obama was so well-acquitted in the first presidential debate on Friday, that many a conservative commentator acknowledged his poise and presidential stature without hesitation.

It says that Obama was so good that even those who normally champ at the bit to diminish him had to concede that he dispelled any lingering doubts about his readiness.

It says Obama must have been twice as good as the pundits attest, because only such an utter triumph can bring the partisans to bow.

It also says that John McCain is a goner. The man we once respected as the maverick, iconoclast, independently spirited, tell-it-like-it-is rebel, is no more. The senator who was once upon a time so beguiling that, in a moment of weakness many years ago, got a diehard liberal like me to say to his face that if he ever ran for president, I might work for him -- that man is vapor.

COMMENTARY....

Obama’s Post-Debate Strategy: Energizing His Volunteers, Winning Over the Undecided



By: Michael H. Cottman and Jackie Jones

With just over a month to go before Election Day, Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama is taking his message on the road this week as he works to connect with undecided voters, energize the faithful and mobilize an army of volunteers.

In the polls, Obama continues to maintain his lead by an average of five points. Following Friday’s debate with Republican rival John McCain, a CBS News survey indicated 39 percent of uncommitted debate watchers felt Obama won the debate, 34 percent said McCain won, and another 37 percent thought it was a tie. Nearly half of those uncommitted voters said their image of Obama changed for the better.

“The energy is continuing to build in the community because, unfortunately, people are very anxious about what is happening in our country, and they appreciate more than ever the need for change,” Corey Ealons, an Obama campaign spokesman, told BlackAmericaWeb.com. “They are also realizing the unique moment in history we're living in and how they can play a part in it by voting on Nov. 4th.”

Obama’s Post-Debate Strategy: Energizing His Volunteers, Winning Over the Undecided....

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Last Suspect in Sex, Torture Case Pleads Guilty


A prosecutor says a final defendant pleaded guilty on Friday to his role in the kidnapping and torture of a young black woman in West Virginia.

Friday, September 26, 2008

Miracle at St. Anna - Trailer


A French Kiss for Spike- Will the Paris retrospective of Spike Lee's work force the French to deal with their own attitudes on race?



By Miles Marshall Lewis

From skin-privilege arguments, girlfriends greasing dry scalps, 1970s street games and more, race is inarguably the thread connecting all the films in Spike Lee's 20-year-plus career. This month, the famed Cinémathèque Française is running a Spike Lee retrospective in Paris, topped with Lee's appearance at a preview screening of his latest, Miracle at St. Anna, which opens nationwide today in the U.S.

It is an interesting time to open up an exploration of race in the city of Paris, whose reputation is by turns colorblind and friendly to the black American soldiers of the world wars yet racist toward its native French-African immigrants. A fellow expatriate recently remarked that France would take another century to produce its own Barack Obama, and his sentiment is correct. Despite its creed of "liberty, equality and fraternity" for all, social developments like the November 2005 riots have inscribed ethnicity into the general consciousness here like never before. Thirteen years after the homegrown, race-instructive film, La Haine, the city could use some of the enlightened elements of Lee's work right about now.

Evidence of interest in the Spike Lee film festival is found all over the City of Light. The Cinémathèque Française took the rare promotional route of plastering posters in the métro stations. Lee showed up at Fnac, France's major entertainment retail chain, signing autographs and fielding translated questions. It was a media tour de force.

A French Kiss for Spike....

Mississippi, Proud of its Racial Progress, Happy to Shine in the Spotlight Brought by Debate



By: Sherrel Wheeler Stewart

Few places conjure up images of segregation that compare to Mississippi.

It’s a place where, in the 1960s, three civil rights workers -- one black, one Jewish and one white -- were murdered by a mob, then buried in makeshift graves.

It’s a place where voting rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer was beaten and jailed because she wanted to register black voters.

And it’s a place where Air Force veteran James Meredith was met by rioting mobs of white people as he enrolled in the fall of 1962 at the state’s flagship college, the University of Mississippi.

But at that same institution on Friday, a black man and a white man who both are vying for the presidency of the United States are scheduled to face off in the first formal nationally-televised debate between the Democratic and Republican nominees.

Mississippi residents -- and especially campus leaders -- are hoping America sees how the state has transformed since its racially-turbulent days and how that alone exemplifies change in America.

“Ole Miss really wanted this,” said Rose Flenorl, who on Saturday will become the first black president of the university’s alumni association. “When we applied for this debate, who knew that the first African-American to be the nominee of a national party would come to Ole Miss, with our history?”

GOP Official Quits Over Remarks About Blacks




By: Melanie Dabovich

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. - The chairman of the Republican Party in New Mexico's most populous county resigned Thursday, nearly a week after saying "Hispanics consider themselves above blacks" and won't vote for Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama.

Fernando C de Baca's resignation as GOP chairman in Bernalillo County was announced by state GOP Chairman Allen Weh, one of several top New Mexico Republicans who had called for him to step down.

"Mr. C de Baca has worked hard on behalf of the party, and his contributions should be appropriately recognized," Weh said. "We are glad this matter has been resolved and wish him well."

GOP Official Quits Over Remarks About Blacks....

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Bill: McCain not ‘afraid’ of Obama debate



By

Former President Bill Clinton believes John McCain’s move to suspend his campaign and push back Friday’s scheduled debate was made in “good faith” and not “because he’s afraid” to debate Barack Obama.

“I presume he did that in good faith,” Clinton said on Good Morning America, recalling that McCain had “asked for more debates to go all around the country.”

“I don't think we ought to overly parse that. Just let's deal with this issue,” the former president said. “We know he didn't do it because he's afraid, because Senator McCain wanted more debates.”

Bill: McCain not ‘afraid’ of Obama debate....

Commentary: In the Wake of Potential Thievery on Wall Street, Should We Be Profiling Rich White Men?


By: Gregory Kane

Maybe this racial profiling stuff isn’t a bad idea. Maybe we should take another look at it.

And let’s get it right this time. Let’s get more races in the racial profiling mix. Or, as the old joke goes, let’s make sure everybody gets a turn in the barrel.

For the past week, we’ve all heard the news about the greatest financial crisis to hit Wall Street in nearly 80 years. The economy is in near meltdown. Congress will have to pass legislation to bail out several industries and businesses faced with ruin. And who’s responsible?

Rich white guys, according to a journalism colleague of mine, who’s a middle-aged, conservative white guy himself. But he’s not rich; in fact, one of his pet peeves is the stuff that rich white guys get away with. He’s the one who wants to expand the racial profiling pool.

“If police see four white guys in suits in an expensive car,” he told me, “the cops should stop that car and arrest ‘em. We can be sure they stole something.”

COMMENTARY....


Obama Rebuffs McCain on Delaying Debate, Plans to Meet with President on Bailout Deal



By: Associated Press and BlackAmericaWeb.com

President Bush on Wednesday warned Americans and lawmakers reluctant to pass a $700 billion financial rescue plan that failing to act fast risks wiping out retirement savings, rising foreclosures, lost jobs, closed businesses and even “a long and painful recession.”

His warning followed extraordinary invitations he issued to presidential nominees Barack Obama and John McCain, and key congressional leaders, to attend a meeting at the White House on Thursday in hopes of working out a compromise.

Meanwhile, raw politics threatened to derail the first presidential debate as McCain suspended his campaign and challenged Obama to delay their first debate, scheduled for Friday in Mississippi, and join forces to help Washington deal with the financial mess. Obama quickly rebuffed his GOP rival, saying the debate should go forward and the next president needs to “deal with more than one thing at once.”

Obama Rebuffs McCain on Delaying Debate, Plans to Meet with President on Bailout Deal
....

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Commentary: Here’s a Slogan I Want to See Emblazoned on a T-Shirt -- 'Annoy a Racist, Get an Education'

















By: Tonyaa Weathersbee

Barack Obama’s historic presidential candidacy seems to have brought out the creativity in a lot of folks.

It has inspired songs and poems, T-shirts and posters, books and buttons. One T-shirt, emblazoned with the slogan, “The Real Deal,” has Obama and his wife, Michelle, doing the fist bump -- complete with definitions of “giving dap” on the back.

A button says, “He’s Black and I’m Proud.” Another button, with images of Obama and Martin Luther King Jr., proclaims them as keepers of a legacy.

To that end, I’ve come up with my own Obamatized slogan -- one that would fit well on a button or T-shirt. My buttons and T-shirts would have an image of Obama and Michelle.

And the words splashed across it would read: “Annoy a racist. Get an education.“

These items I would sell in every corner of black America where far too many young black people, especially young black males, have been duped into believing that the way to assert themselves in a society that marginalizes them is to reject education and embrace pathology.

COMMENTARY....

Rock the Vote Poll Underscores How Many Young Blacks Feel Empowered by Obama’s Run



By: Sherrel Wheeler Stewart

Young black voters have the greatest sense of empowerment in the upcoming presidential election and the greatest appreciation of its historical significance, according to survey results released Tuesday by Rock the Vote.

The poll also showed that Democratic nominee Sen. Barack Obama is the first choice of young people because they are attracted to his campaign theme of change. But his GOP rival, Sen. John McCain, holds the advantage on experience and has narrowed the gap on some other traits, the survey showed.

The results from the survey reflect the energy seen throughout the country among voters 18 to 29, said Stephanie Young, a spokeswoman for Rock the Vote.

“We’ve always had faith in young voters. They have energy and they want their voices to be heard,” Young told BlackAmericaWeb.com.

Rock the Vote Poll Underscores How Many Young Blacks Feel Empowered by Obama’s Run....

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Commentary: Who are the Hypocrites When it Comes to the Sanctity of Life? Start with Sen. Joe Biden


By: Joseph C. Phillips

A poster that used to hang on my mother’s office wall proclaimed, “If you can’t dazzle ‘em with brilliance, baffle ‘em with baloney.” Or something to that effect. It is an adage apparently taken to heart by Democratic vice presidential nominee Sen. Joseph Biden.

During a campaign stop in Columbus, Missouri, Biden took a swipe at his Republican Party counterpart, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and suggested that Republicans are not seriously concerned with special needs children because they do not support stem cell research. Palin is the mother of a child with Down’s Syndrome.

Said Biden: “I hear all this talk about how the Republicans are going to work in dealing with parents who have both the joy -- because there’s joy to it as well -- the joy and the difficulty of raising a child who has a developmental disability, who was born with a birth defect. Well, guess what, folks? If you care about it, why don’t you support stem cell research?”

COMMENTARY....

Echoing AP Poll, Anti-Racism Activist Says Obama ‘Faces Huge Barrier’ with Many Whites



By: Michael H. Cottman and Jackie Jones

A leading anti-racism activist says Sen. Barack Obama could lose the presidential election in November because many whites will never vote to put a black man in the White House -- even if they tell pollsters and friends they are color blind.

“Senator Obama faces a huge racial barrier,” Dr. Joe Feagin, a sociology professor at Texas A&M University and author of more than 20 books on race and racism issues, told BlackAmericaWeb.com Monday.

“Whites have learned to hide their feelings about African-Americans,” he said. “Race for whites is a highly emotional concept in our minds. There is so much hidden racism in this country.”

Feagin, who is white, said his research indicates that many whites are not truthful in polls about how they feel about blacks. They still maintain racist, age-old stereotypes about blacks and “in the privacy of the voting booth” probably won’t support Obama.

The notion that many whites say they are “color blind” -- whether Democrat or Republican -- is a farce, he said.

“Whites don’t want to look racist when asked about Obama [in polls] but if they vote for Obama, they would have to lie to their friends and say they voted for McCain,” said Feagin, an Obama supporter.

Echoing AP Poll, Anti-Racism Activist Says Obama ‘Faces Huge Barrier’ with Many Whites....

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Will Prejudice Trump Economy For Voters? New AP-Yahoo Poll Suggests Obama May Lose Votes Of Dems, Independents Harboring Negative Views Of Blacks



(CBS/AP) How America votes could come down to the economy, and that could be especially true in many of the so-called battleground states where voters have been hit hard economically.

But a new AP-Yahoo News poll shows that race could also play a big role in how some voters make their choice - and this may not bode well for Barack Obama.

According to the poll released Saturday, a little over one-third of white Democrats and independents agreed with at least one negative adjective about blacks, and they are less likely to vote for Obama than those who don't hold such views.

"There are a lot fewer bigots than there were 50 years ago, but that doesn't mean there's only a few bigots," said Stanford University political scientist Paul Sniderman, who helped analyze the exhaustive survey.

The pollsters set out to determine why Obama is locked in such a close race with Republican presidential candidate John McCain even as the political landscape seems to favor Democrats; President George W. Bush's unpopularity, the Iraq war, and a national sense of economic hard times cut against Republican candidates, as does the fact that Democratic voters outnumber Republicans.

Lots of Republicans harbor prejudices, too, but the survey found they weren't voting against Obama because of his race. Most Republicans wouldn't vote for any Democrat for president - white, black or brown.

Will Prejudice Trump Economy For Voters?....

Former technical inspector issues discrimination complaint against NASCAR




DOVER, Delaware — A black former technical inspector filed a complaint against NASCAR with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, alleging racial discrimination, a hostile work environment and wrongful termination.

Dean Duckett said discrimination started in May 2001 and lasted until NASCAR fired him from his job in the Sprint Cup series on Nov. 14, 2007.

Duckett told The Associated Press on Saturday that he would consider a lawsuit if NASCAR offered him his old job back.

"I'm looking for something. Even if NASCAR was to offer me my job back, I would do that," he said. "If they wasn't going to offer me my job back, I'm shooting for a lawsuit."

Duckett said his problems started last Nov. 10 when he got into a heated argument with another official the night before the Phoenix race.

"I said to him, 'I ought to cut you.' I don't carry no blades or nothing like that," Duckett said. "It basically came out in the heat of the moment. We got into each other's faces but nothing happened. My roommate pulled me away and said, 'C'mon guys leave it alone,' and we left."

Duckett said he apologized, made up with the official and thought the incident was squashed. Instead, he said he was called the next day to NASCAR's at-track office and was sent home. Duckett said he was fired by Cup Series director John Darby and human resources director Star George.

"They took my life away," he said. "I loved my job. I put everything into my job. I feel they took away from my family."

NASCAR spokesman Ramsey Poston said on Saturday the stock car series was aware of the complaint.

Former technical inspector issues discrimination complaint against NASCAR....

Commentary: If We Can Bail Out Multi-Million Dollar Companies, We Can Do More for the Unemployed


By: Judge Greg Mathis

The federal government has spent billions of taxpayer dollars bailing out or assisting in the bailouts of some of the country's largest corporations. Insisting its support was intended to stop a complete collapse of the nation's financial market, the feds dipped into its reserves, despite criticism from experts that the bailouts were only prolonging the inevitable.

Where, then, is the federal government's support of the average American? In these tough economic times, people in this country are greatly in need of assistance. It is time for our nation's leaders to stop acting on behalf of corporate interests and work for those individuals who drive our economy.

COMMENTARY....

Kilpatrick Officially Leaves Office, Setting the Stage for New Mayor, New Start for Detroit



By: Jackie Jones

Embattled Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick left office officially at 11:59 p.m. Thursday, spending part of the day preparing a statement thanking and saying goodbye to his supporters.

“Being elected Mayor of Detroit, my hometown, was an honor and a privilege,” said the 38-year-old Kilpatrick, who spent seven years in office. “I want to thank everyone who supported me through the years. I am proud of the fact that we, as a community, were able to accomplish so much in such a short period of time.”

Kilpatrick encouraged citizens to support incoming Mayor Ken Cockrel, Jr., with whom he concluded transition meetings on Wednesday.

Kilpatrick announced his resignation two weeks ago as part of a plea deal on federal perjury charges stemming from a text-messaging scandal that consumed the city for months.

The Detroit Free Press said that before the texting scandal erupted, Kilpatrick had tamed the city’s budget, cutting nearly $300 million in annual costs, continued the downtown development trend that started under his predecessor, Dennis Archer, and was beginning to focus on decaying neighborhoods in the city.

“His ability to lead wasn’t the issue; he just made some bad choices,” Robin Barnes, a Detroit realtor and a former Kilpatrick campaign volunteer, told BlackAmericaWeb.com.

Kilpatrick Officially Leaves Office, Setting the Stage for New Mayor....

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Commentary: Hey, Robin Thicke – Your Whiteness Isn’t the Reason You Didn’t Get That Magazine Cover


By: Gregory Kane

Dear Robin Thicke:

Caught the story ‘bout cha in the latest edition of Vibe magazine. You know, the one where you talked about the down side of being a blue-eyed soul brother. The one where you complained that you couldn’t get on the cover of Vibe because, well, you’re a white guy.

You also came up with this gem: “I wouldn’t say my race has been a liability because that would be an unfair and unbalanced thing to say in American society. But what I will say is that doors are closed.”

Come again? “Doors are closed”?

COMMENTARY....

Obama Acknowledges Supporters’ Nervousness, Remains Confident – and Runs New Ads



By: Associated Press and BlackAmericaWeb.com

Worried Democrats want Barack Obama to get tougher, show more passion. Why is he so calm, supporters ask, so close to an election that looks so tight?

"Just keep steady," Obama tells the nervous Nellies. "I'm skinny but I'm tough. I'm from Chicago."

Obama hears the concern, from senior Democrats and big-money contributors, from columnists and supporters along the rope lines at campaign events. He heard it again as he stood in an hourlong receiving line in Hollywood to pose for pictures with donors who paid $28,500 to be with him Tuesday night.

"I know that a lot of you, just in conversations while we were in the photo lines, had all sorts of suggestions," Obama said. "And a lot of people have gotten nervous and concerned. 'Why is this as close as it is? And what's going on?'"

"We always knew this was going to be hard, and this is a leap for the American people," Obama said. "And we're running against somebody who has a formidable biography, a compelling biography. He's a genuine American hero, somebody who served in uniform and suffered through some things that very few of us can imagine."

Urging Democrats not to worry about his cool demeanor, Obama said, "The reason I'm calm is I have confidence in the American people."

And there has been considerably more bite in Obama's daily remarks.

Obama Acknowledges Supporters’ Nervousness, Remains Confident....

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Michigan Dems file lawsuit against Macomb Co. GOP



By KATHY BARKS HOFFMAN

LANSING, Mich. (AP) — Democrats in Michigan are trying to block what they call a Republican effort to deny voting rights to people facing foreclosure.

Barack Obama's presidential campaign, the Democratic National Committee and several voters filed Tuesday for an injunction to prohibit the GOP from challenging Michigan voters whose homes are on foreclosure lists. Republicans say they are doing no such thing.

Macomb County Republican Party Chairman James Carabelli denied last week that he had told a writer for the liberal Web site MichiganMessenger.com that he planned to make sure no one on a list of foreclosed homes voted in his county. "The story is not true," he said.

Michigan Democratic Party Chairman Mark Brewer said Republicans have tried in the past to discourage Democratic voters at polling stations and, "I simply do not believe his denial. This fits the pattern we've seen here in Michigan."


Michigan Dems file lawsuit against Macomb Co. GOP....

God Don't Like Ugly, It's not just the campaign that's getting nasty. It's you…okay, and me, too.


By Veronica Miller

I can't wait for Nov. 4.

It's not just because I'll finally be casting a ballot in my first presidential election (though, don't get me wrong, I'm pretty friggin' stoked about it). But really, I'm in tip-toe anticipation of that first Tuesday in November, because I'm hoping, hoping hard, that on Election Day, all the ugliness we've seen this past year and a half will finally begin to fade.

Who's being ugly? Everybody. The presidential campaigns, of course. Then there are the pundits. I suppose that's no surprise. The group I'm most worried about is the regular people around me.

My black male friend poking fun at Hillary Clinton. My older black relatives already conceding defeat on Barack Obama's behalf. My white feminist associates remaining uncomfortably quiet while racist and sexist remarks are hurled at Michelle Obama. My best female friend calling Sarah Palin a "bitch." Even me, likening John McCain's oft-repeated POW story to Chris Rock's rift on 50 Cent—"He got shot nine times!"

This campaign is bringing the ugly out of everybody. Me and you … your mama and your cousin, too.

Politics is always nasty. But perhaps the group of choices this time—a black man, a white Vietnam veteran, a powerful liberal woman and an energizing conservative one—has amounted to too much change to accept with civility.

God Don't Like Ugly....

Commentary: Sarah Palin’s Pick as V.P. Shows that the GOP’s Just Fine with Selective Affirmative Action


By: Tonyaa Weathersbe

It’s hard to look at the Sarah Palin craze and not see racial hypocrisy.

Especially if you happen to be black.

Since John McCain plucked the 44-year-old Palin from the Alaska tundra to be his vice-presidential running mate, the party that has spent much of the past two decades building part of its platform on the bones of affirmative action seems to be trying to resurrect it for her.

But only for her.

Palin has been governor of Alaska for less than two years. Before that, she was mayor of a town where fewer than 9,000 people lived -- and which she left in debt. It took her five years and four schools to finally get a college degree.

And she and her aides continue to intimate that being able to see Russia from Alaska’s islands somehow magically imbues her with foreign policy insight

COMMENTARY....

Monday, September 15, 2008

Black Male Suicide, Why are so many young men killing themselves?



By Henrie M. Treadwell

Not long ago, suicide and African Americans were almost never mentioned in the same breath. Despite confronting challenges from slavery to Jim Crow to structural racism, blacks rarely took their own lives. It was a positive health disparity. Until now.

There is alarming evidence that the suicide rate for young African-American men is escalating, and just as much evidence of how ill-equipped America's health-care system is to handle it.

From 1980 to 1995, the suicide rate for black adolescents rose from 5.6 per 100,000 of the population to 13 per 100,000, according to recent research by Clare Xanthos, a health services research specialist. For young black men, these changes represent a doubling of the suicide rate, making it the third leading cause of death among that demographic.

If the trend continues, it could ripple through black communities, increasing the number of children who grow up fatherless, further burdening African-American women who will have fewer partners to help them raise families. Clearly, it is a complex problem that is directly related to the life experiences of young African-American men. While the suicide rate for young black men has risen, the suicide rate for black women remains among the lowest of any demographic.

So why are young black men killing themselves?

Young black males live in some of the most-difficult circumstances in our society; the data show that black men go to jail, drop out of school and are victims of crime at rates far higher than their white counterparts. Moreover, young black males are more likely to live in more challenging family environments. Sixty-eight percent of all black households are single-parent households—pointing to an absence of male role models for young boys.

Black Male Suicide....

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Obama raises record $66 million in August



CHICAGO (Reuters) - Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama raised a record $66 million in August, a campaign spokesman said on Sunday.

The latest figures may bolster expectations of a money advantage that Obama could have over Republican candidate John McCain in the final two months of the election campaign.

Obama spokesman Bill Burton said the August figure was helped by 500,000 new donors. The tally for the latest month exceeded the $55 million for February, which marked a record for Obama and an all-time high for any presidential candidate during a primary.

After far surpassing McCain in private fundraising, earlier this year Obama opted against taking public funds for the final stretch of the campaign.

Obama raises record $66 million in August....

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Obama aide: McCain campaign 'sleaziest' in modern history




MANCHESTER, New Hampshire (CNN) -- Sen. Barack Obama's spokesman on Saturday accused Sen. John McCain of "cynically running the sleaziest and least honorable campaign in modern presidential campaign history."

Obama, speaking to a crowd Saturday in Manchester, New Hampshire, said, "John McCain wants to have a debate about national security; let's have that debate. I warned that going into Iraq would distract us from Afghanistan. John McCain cheerleaded for it. John McCain was wrong, and I was right."

"The McCain-[Sarah] Palin ticket, they don't want to debate the Obama-Biden ticket on issues because they are running on eight more years of what we've just seen. And they know it," the Democratic presidential nominee said. "As a consequence, what they're going to spend the next seven, eight weeks doing is trying to distract you.

"They're going to talk about pigs, and they're going to talk about lipstick; they're going to talk about Paris Hilton, they're going to talk about Britney Spears. They will try to distort my record, and they will try to undermine your trust in what the Democrats intend to do."

Asked why the campaign's tone was different from its tone during Hurricane Gustav, Obama senior strategist David Axelrod said, "We have enormous concern for people down there ... that's why we canceled 'Saturday Night Live' ... but these people also came out because they're really concerned about the future of the country, and he [Obama] wanted to talk about those issues."

McCain campaign spokesman Tucker Bounds criticized Obama for showing "zero restraint" given the storm and said the "attacks mark a new low from Barack Obama."

The Obama campaign's response was even tougher.

Obama aide: McCain campaign 'sleaziest' in modern history....

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Palin and McCain Dun Got 'Em, Boss: The GOP's race-baiting tactics have even Buckwheat and Kingfish shaking their heads.



By Jack White

I found Buckwheat staring into his laptop in the oak-paneled library of the Home for Retired Racial Stereotypes. He had a woeful look on his face.

"Why so sad?" I inquired.

The famous Our Gang character emitted a mournful squeak.

"Here I is, Brudder White, feelin' blue cuz dis here Prezeedent'ul campaign startin' to 'mind me of a line from dat ole Chubby Checker song, De Limbo Rock: how low kin you go?"

"I'm not sure I follow you," I interjected.

Palin and McCain Dun Got 'Em, Boss....

Slaughter the Pig: Team Obama needs to break out the knives and start rolling in the mud, too.



By Terence Samuel

So we wake up this morning to a Web ad from the McCain-Palin campaign accusing Barack Obama of sexism. It is a swift and superb effort and, from what we know about these things and the political climate in which we live, likely to be effective. It is a quick and dirty piece of television remarkable for the jaw-dropping, breath-taking, head-shaking dishonesty on which is it based.

The basic charge is that Obama called Sarah Palin a pig, and that is sexist. Nevermind that it never happened. It is now clear that the Republicans' strategy for victory is not to discredit Obama's views or his policy positions but to destroy the man himself.

Based on the current trajectory, what Obama may have coming will make the swift-boating of John Kerry look like a campfire song. And if Democrats are nervous and a little dispirited today it is because they have seen the effectiveness of this approach before. More importantly, they have seen it in combination with the complete inability of their own candidate to effectively respond. Obama's speech on charter schools and the importance of education in Dayton, Ohio yesterday did nothing to advance his candidacy. Instead, all the energy and resources of his campaign were spent explaining that the phrase "You can put lipstick on a pig, but it's still a pig," is an old English axiom meant to convey that deception has limits. Even McCain has used the phrase on occasion.

With undecided white women moving to McCain, the sexism ad will further monopolize Obama camp resources.

Obama's counterpunches so far, have sounded a little bit naïve, almost idiotic:

"…The American people aren't stupid. They are going to get it," he told MSNBC's Keith Olbermann early this week. "But we've got to make sure that we are being clear, not only that they [the Republicans] will not bring about change, but the very specific kinds of changes we want to bring, in terms of green technology jobs in America, investing in our education system, making college more affordable, making health care accessible to every American."

Slaughter the Pig....

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Commentary: Need a Name for McCain’s Obvious Move to Woo Women? Call it the Elvis Presley Strategy

















By: Tonyaa Weathersbee

Call it the Elvis strategy.

When Elvis Presley recorded one of his first hits, “Hound Dog,” in 1956, he was late to that party. Blues singer Big Mama Thornton had recorded it three years earlier.

Yet Thornton and many of the other black artists who Presley, as well as a number of other white artists, copied never acquired the fame that they amassed by putting a white face to the sounds they pilfered. Some died in obscurity.

When Presley died, he was dubbed King of Rock and Roll.

I bring all this up to talk about John McCain who, like Elvis, is now copying his election strategy from the black man he wants to beat out for president in November.

After months of being slightly behind Barack Obama in the polls, McCain apparently figured that the best way to get ahead was to steal some of the celebrity hood and the message that seemed to be benefiting his Democratic opponent.

And what better way to do that than find an attractive, 44-year-old white woman who, like Obama, had a story. Except that her story appeals to people who value her Americaness more than they value Obama’s.

Sadly, it seems as if a lot of them are out there.

COMMENTARY....