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Vol. 14 No. 38…Dedicated to the Dialogue on
Race…September 19, 2011
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Poverty and
By John Burl Smith
Americans
proudly say "The United States is the richest country in the world."
In reality, the number of poor people in the United States (US) continues to
grow each year. This fact is not only an increasing problem for those who must
deal with dwindling survival resources but also for President Barack Obama, who
is in the amidst of a challenging re-election campaign. Looking back at the
2008
election
victory, one would never have suspected that the constituency that gave him the
highest percentage of their votes would be causing tremors in the White House,
much like the earthquake that shook the Capitol over a month ago.
The
ground moving beneath Mr. Obama's feet has it epicenter in the black community
and the source of the tectonic shift in his support lies in his refusal to use
the power of the office of the president and its bully pulpit to address the
needs of his most loyal supporters. Mr. Obama's campaign gurus made a
calculated decision to ignore the seismic activity in the black community,
which began as complaints from the Congressional Black Caucus, because they
were convinced that adopting the Bush war strategy of increased militarism,
trickle down economics and tax cuts would gain enough support among
conservatives to offset loses among black voters.
Metaphorically
reminiscent of the earthquake and subsequent tsunami in
Those
on the other side, such as
Smiley's
Poverty Bus Tour,
Accordingly,
the Census Bureau poverty statistics for 2010 show another 2.6 million people
slipped into poverty in the
This
report revealed alarming new signs of distress among the middle class. Median
household income for the bottom tenth of the income spectrum fell by 12% from a
1999 peak ($53,252), while the top 90th percentile dropped by just 1.5%, and
overall, median household income declined by 2.3% in 2010 from $49,445 in 2009.
This indicates that the gap between the very rich and very poor widened.
The
"American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan" has ended, and left most
urban areas untouched by the rescue plan. With state and local governments
enacting deep cuts to staff and social programs, economically fragile families
are being crushed as the tectonic plates of unemployment and raising prices
collide. Minorities are being hit hardest as the rich continue to slide over
the top. Blacks experienced the highest poverty rate at 27%, up from 25% in
2009; the rate for Hispanics rose to 26% from 25%. However, only 9.9% of whites
live in poverty, which was up only .5% from 2009.
The
Brookings Institution estimated that the recession will add nearly 10 million
people to the ranks of the poor by 2015. Joblessness is the main culprit
pushing more Americans into poverty. Blacks who are historically "the last
hired and the first fired" are experiencing unemployment rates above 15%
while whites are just above 9%. Trudi Renwick, a Census official said,
"Last year, about 48 million people ages 18 to 64 did not work even one
week out of the year, which was up from 45 million in 2009."
Median income fell across all working-age categories, but the sharpest drop was
among young working Americans - ages 15 to 24 - that experienced a decline of
9%. This means young blacks whose unemployment rates hover around 45% is
actually above 50%. However, the quaking weight of poverty has come to rest
heaviest on children. Swelling to 16.4 million last year, children in poverty
reached their highest level since 1962, according to William Frey, senior
demographer at Brookings. That means 22% of
Arloc Sherman, a senior researcher at the Center on Budget and Policy
Priorities, said that the period from 2001 to 2007 (the Bush years) was the
first recovery on record where the level of poverty was deeper, and median
income of working-age people was lower, at the end than at the beginning. Seismically,
the impact of such statistics on a community would be a 10 on the Richter
scale, which is the point of the Poverty Bus Tour. West and Smiley are not
engaged in a vendetta to bring Mr. Obama down, and to misrepresent their
efforts as such is a disservice to the black community.
The
"middle class," facing stagnant wages, depression era unemployment,
foreclosures, maxed-out credit cards and adult children still living with their
parents, white and black, is struggling, while the rich in the
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By Robert Johnson
Doug
Hardman wakes up every morning with a song in his head--a vague memory of his
days on stage.
Inside
his tepee in the woods outside
After
battling with the city for years to have access to the public land here,
Brigham found a
The
attorney, Jeff Wild, argued that the homeless population is part of the public
and should therefore have access to public lands. Rather than take the case to
court, Lakewood City Council settled, and Brigham signed an agreement to put up
no more shelters and allow no more than 70 people to stay.
But
last winter the community put up three wooden structures to house everyone and
keep them warm. "We didn't lose anybody last year," Brigham says,
"and nobody got sick."
This
year could be different. After City Council members saw the shelters on TV,
they sent demolition crews in. The walls were torn down around whatever was
inside, and meager furnishings were left to the elements.
This year, the tent city's residents will have to put wood-stoves in tents and
plastic shanties, increasing fire risk. Brigham says the town is making it
impossible to survive there, hoping to get the homeless out, and he's concerned
it will end up killing people this year.
More
than 700,000 people are currently homeless in the
A recent UN report says the way the
Brigham
can relate. He started the camp five years ago and more people show up every
year. Some stay, some find part-time work where they can, move on, and wind up
coming back.
"There's a real glut of low-skilled manual labor in the area," he
says. "There's just nothing for people to do."
Brigham
works as a high-voltage electrical contractor on the bridges and tunnels around
"I found this spot that had no underbrush, which is very unusual," he
says, "and this community's become a living protest."
I
ask him what he means, and he says, "We're protesting the insincerity of
the political system. It's supposed to be for the people and its not."
Reverend Steve Brigham can be reached at
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Speaking Truth to Power
By Cornel West
I
want to begin by thanking Reverend Phelps for this space in this prophetic
church. I want to thank Sister Sarah Kunstler for her vision of bringing us
together. We shall never forget
our
dear brother William Kunstler, his love, his courage, his vision, his
sacrifice. And any time I get a chance to set my eyes on the artistic genius
and literary jazzman Amiri Baraka, it just extends years to my life. It's a
blessing to have you here. And for the brothers who spoke so eloquently, whose
voices consecrated this evening, resilience, resistance. And when I saw you
take the picture together, I could see Nat Turner and John Brown. Oh, yes. I
could see the workers' movement in the 1890s. I could see the brothers and
sisters on the corner in Watts 1965, in Detroit in '67, in Newark in '67, and
212 rebellions the night Brother Martin Luther King was shot down like a dog
one year after he gave his "Beyond Vietnam" speech to bring poor
people together, bring a critique to bear on the viciousness of American
imperialism. That's what we're talking about here.
So,
40 years later, we come back to commemorate this struggle against the
historical backdrop of a people who have been so terrorized and traumatized and
stigmatized that we have been taught to be scared, intimidated, always afraid,
distrustful of one another, and disrespectful of one another. But the
Any
time you look the terror in the face and you deal with the trauma, even if
maybe all you could do is sing a song -- and let us never forget the summer of
1971, the number one album in
We live in revolutionary times, but the counterrevolution is winning. The
greedy oligarchs and plutocrats are winning. One out of four corporations doesn't
pay taxes, but gobble up billions of dollars. And yet, not just 21 percent of
our children are living in poverty, of all colors, each one precious, 42
percent of
And
yet, we see the same brothers in the 1950s and '60s who were coming out of
socially neglected and economically abandoned spaces, called "the
ghetto" by Donny Hathaway. When Hathaway said "ghetto," that
wasn't demeaning. If you're from the ghetto, the way he talked about it, you
straightened your back up. You got your mind together. You had love in your
heart for your brother and sister on the block. And it started on the chocolate
side of town, but it spilled over to the vanilla side and the red side and the
yellow side and the brown side, too. The unity that we had in
And
the young people are hungry and thirsty, but the young people are thirsty for
truth. Oh, yes. They're hungry for truth. And the problem is that most of our
leaders have either sold out, caved in, given up. They don't want to tell the
truth. They're too concerned about their careers. They're too concerned about
success. They're too concerned about just winning the next election for their
status.
In 1971, the
But
the sad thing is, the kind of courage that these brothers had in 1971 is in
short supply. Because when you bring together the national security state and
the military-industrial complex, when you bring together the prison-industrial
complex and all the profits that flow from it, when you bring together the
corporate media multiplex that don't allow for serious dialogue--unless we got
Sister Amy or Brother Tavis and some others--and then, when you bring together
the Wall Street oligarchs and the corporate plutocrats, and they tell any
person or any group, "If you speak the truth, we'll shoot you down like a
dog and dehumanize you the way we dehumanized the brothers in Attica," the
only thing that will keep you going is you better have some love in your heart
for the people. That's the only thing that will keep you going - the only
reason Baraka is a long-distance runner. I don't care if you agree with them
ideologically or not. It doesn't make any difference. They got enough love for
the people in their heart to still tell the truth about poverty, about
suffering, about struggle, and be able to look--not just presidents, because by
presidents you're just talking about the placeholder of the oligarchs and the
plutocrats--I don't care what color they are--to tell that truth. And most
people, they hold off on that. They say, "No, I got one life, one life. I
saw what they did. I saw what they done."
We're
going to have a new wave. We're going to have a new wave of truth telling.
We're going to have a new wave of witness bearing. And we're going to teach the
younger generation that these brothers didn't struggle in vain, just like John
Brown and Nat Turner and Marcus Garvey and Martin King and Myles Horton and the
others didn't. And we shall see what happens. We might get crushed, too. But
you know what? Then you just go down swinging, like Ella Fitzgerald and
Muhammad Ali.
About Me:
Worse Than You Think
Michael
Thornton, who has been writing for the past two years about unemployment and
workplace issues, recently penned 11 Reasons the Unemployment Crisis is Even
Worse than You Think; it should be require
reading.
Below are excerpts from his article.
"President Obama recently addressed the nation during a joint session of
Congress and the main theme of that address was the need to create jobs, lots
of jobs, millions of jobs. The Great Recession has cost US workers millions of
jobs and those jobs have not come back as quickly as they disappeared and in
many cases those jobs will never return. According to the Economic Policy
Institute, "In total, there are 6.9 million fewer jobs today than there
were in December 2007."
That
is only a small part of the jobs-hole story, a story that is often ignored,
overlooked and oversimplified by mass media. The media have failed to present
the unemployment problem, with all its associated economically devastating
consequences, in the manner it deserves. It's possible that unemployment facts
and figures don't translate well for advertisers, or they are too cumbersome to
present in a two-minute segment. Whatever the reason, the mass media seem to
avoid unemployment details as they would avoid describing and filming fresh road
kill during a dinnertime newscast.
The
unemployment rate remained at 9.1 percent for August. Unemployment to the mass
media centers on that single point within the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
monthly employment report. There is passing mention of discouraged workers and
the underemployed, but the true scale of the jobs crisis is given scant
attention considering the magnitude of the problem."
In
addition to the jobs deficit, there are the business birth/death model, the job
openings labor turnover survey, the labor-force participation rate, the issue
of marginally attached workers, the underemployed, the not-unemployed
unemployed, the long-term unemployed and the99ers.
"What message can be taken from this list of realistic and discomforting
unemployment figures? The bottom line is that unemployment is much worse than
the 9.1 percent unemployment figure pushed by the media and many lawmakers; in
fact it's considerably worse.
Mass media's inability to communicate the depth of the jobs crisis is one
reason the response to it has been weak and ineffectual. If the media mute the
crisis, lawmakers and corporations will continue to act slowly and impotently,
forcing millions of American families to suffer needlessly.
Unemployment and jobs creation are national emergencies demanding focused
attention with a wide-ranging and rapid response. This American jobs disaster
will not vanish if neglected, but what will vanish are the hopes, dreams and
financial well-being of millions of hard-working Americans.
Many
pundits and some GOP lawmakers excoriate all unemployed for being lazy and
enjoying life on the dole. Sen. Jim DeMint (R-SC) recently said, "People
are gaming the system and refusing to take jobs because they get unemployment
benefits and food stamps." That naïve and cruel assessment disparages
all unemployed, but it's particularly insulting to the majority of unemployed
who aren't eligible to collect or have exhausted unemployment benefits. If Sen.
DeMint and his ilk want to see where the system is being gamed, he may want to
look at Wall Street instead of
Read
the article in its entirety at
www.alternet.org/story/152401/11_reasons_why_the_unemployment_crsis_is_even_worse_than_you_think.
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Hood Notes
Poverty, Foreclosures
and Doubling Up
Since
the 2008 financial collapse, the government has spent billions of dollars trying
to extricate borrowers from high-cost loans, aid delinquent homeowners, and
stabilize neighborhoods. The results have been disappointing.
Currently, the
on
government-backed mortgages. That is nearly a third of the nation's 800,000
repossessed homes, making the
While
the federal government contemplates the disposal of its residential inventory,
millions of families are homeless; others are 'doubling up' with more than one
generation occupying a single residence. According to the US Census Bureau, the
number of multi-generational households increased more than 30 percent to about
5.1 million in 2010 from 3.9 million in 2000.
There are a number of reasons for the increase in multi-generational
households. One important factor is an increase in the number of young adults
moving back home with their parents. This trend has been on the rise since many
college graduates have been unable to find jobs. Another group comprises those
18 to 29 that have simply failed to launch or become fully independent, which
may or may not be economics related.
Other factors are ethnicity, immigration and longevity. Multi-generational
households are more common among Hispanic and Asian families.
The
single most important factor is the rise in poverty. According to the Census
Bureau, the number of impoverished Americans rose to a record 46.2 million,
while US incomes fell.
Moreover, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD), which tracks the world's most developed countries, the
Without
a variety of government programs, including Social Security, food stamps and
extended unemployment compensation, the number living below the poverty level
of $22,314 for a family of four would be even greater. Since the recession
began in 2007, the number of households receiving food stamps has nearly
doubled to 21.4 million. (Sources: www.msnbc.msn.com and
www.chicagotribune.com)
'AWOL' on Mortgage Crisis
By Mike Lillis
Leading
House Democrats are accusing the Obama administration of ignoring the lingering
mortgage crisis and threatening tens-of-millions of Americans with foreclosure
in the process.
"I
couldn't wait to get Obama in office because I was sure a Democrat would do a
better job," Rep. Dennis Cardoza (D-CA) said, referring to the
foreclosure-relief efforts under the Bush administration. "And, frankly,
nothing's happened. The programs that were put in place were abysmal
failures."
The
lawmakers - encouraged by Obama's mention of mortgage-relief in his address to
Congress last week - were quickly deflated just days later when their efforts
to learn the details of the White House plan proved unsuccessful.
"The
administration has been AWOL on this issue," charged Rep. Cardoza (D-CA),
"and the American people are suffering because of the mismanagement."
He added, "In my entire political career, I've never seen anything this
irresponsible."
Democrats
were fired up after the administration declined their request for a briefing with
Edward DeMarco, the acting director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency
(FHFA), on the specifics of the plan.
Instead, said Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-MD), "they [FHFA] sent us some
career employees, and they were not able to answer the questions that we were
most concerned about."
"We
need to have [DeMarco] here to address the questions," said Cummings, the
senior Democrat on the Oversight and Government Reform Committee. "He's
the person who answers directly to the president."
Cardoza
said that, during a June 2 Democratic Caucus meeting with Obama at the White
House, the president vowed to propose "a very significant housing
initiative in September."
"Today
we just heard that they don't know anything about it at the FHFA," Cardoza
said.
Hours
later, Cummings and Cardoza spearheaded a letter to DeMarco requesting a
face-to-face meeting. Twenty-eight other House Democrats and one Republican -
Oversight Committee Chairman Darrell Issa (R-CA) - endorsed the letter.
Cummings said he expects such a meeting in the next two or three weeks.
Cardoza
said there's a growing sense the administration is stone-walling. "They're
giving us the same speech they'd given us months before. We've seen this
dog-and-pony show before. It's nothing new. That's the frustration. DeMarco
either needs to do something, or he needs to get out of the way," Cardoza
added
Addressing the joint session of Congress, Obama dedicated two sentences to the
ongoing foreclosure crisis, vowing to bolster his efforts to help struggling
homeowners. "We're going to work with federal housing agencies to help
more people refinance their mortgages at interest rates that are now near 4
percent," Obama said. "That's a step that can put more than $2,000 a
year in a family's pocket, and give a lift to an economy still burdened by the
drop in housing prices."
From
the audience, Cardoza - who represents one of the districts hit hardest by the
foreclosure crisis - shot to his feet in applause. (Source:
www.commondreams.org/headline/2011/09/16
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Disgruntled feels: Apprehensive!
The state of
of
Pardons and Parole and letters have been written to Gov. Nathan Deal and
President Barack Obama urging them to issue a pardon to save a life. There is
certainly reasonable doubt as seven of the nine eyewitnesses that testified
against
Disgruntled wants to know: This week the United
Nations will meet in
is
scheduled to address the world body, is expected to request statehood
recognition of
Disgruntled says: I received the video link
below to a radio broadcast from the Steve Harvey Show criticizing Tavis Smiley
and Cornel West for their Poverty Bus Tour, which is supposed to raise
awareness of the deepening poverty that exists across this country.
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Mailbox: E-Mails, Faxes and
Telephone Calls
Email
www.freep.com...101-year-old
southwest
Email
www.huffingtonpost.com...Pat Robertson: Alzheimer's Justifies Divorce...By Tom
Breen...Religious
broadcaster Pat Robertson told his "700 Club" viewers that divorcing
a spouse with Alzheimer's is justifiable because the disease is "a kind of
death." During the portion of the show where the one-time Republican
presidential candidate takes questions from viewers, Robertson was asked what
advice a man should give to a friend who began seeing another woman after his
wife started suffering from the incurable neurological disorder. "I know
it sounds cruel, but if he's going to do something, he should divorce her and
start all over again, but make sure she has custodial care and somebody looking
after her," Robertson said. The chairman of the Christian Broadcasting
Network, said he wouldn't "put a guilt trip" on anyone who divorces a
spouse who suffers from the illness, but added, "Get some ethicist besides
me to give you the answer."