Perspectives
The Fourteenth Amendment (Section 1): "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and the state wherein they reside.
"No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any persons within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws."
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The Milwaukee NAACP branch must refocus on community’s challenges
By now, some of us are getting used to seeing footage of the horrific earthquake in Haiti. But there’s more than one reason we shouldn’t let ourselves become numb to those haunting images.
Not only do they remind us that there’s work to be done to rebuild for millions of Haiti’s survivors, but they remind us that it’s time to be grateful for what we have.
Our struggles with the economy in recent months have been real -- but they also could have been a lot worse. Most Americans are in debt and millions are unemployed, in danger of losing their homes to foreclosure or both. That’s no picnic, to be sure.
But the truth is, most of us will go home to a hot meal and running water tonight. Most of us will have a roof over our head, whether we own or rent.
And most of us will go home to our families. Most Haitians can’t say the same.
I know getting out of debt is no easy task. If it was, we’d all be rich – or at least financially stable. But unlike the weather or geography, debt is something within our control.
The more of our debt we pay off each month, the less we’ll owe in the future.
Not sure where to get the money to put towards your debt? It’s probably easier than you think.
Nearly all of us have some hidden costs, whether it’s the DVD rental service we don’t really use or the fancy coffee drinks we buy. By making simple changes like buying generic brands, eating out less or cutting out some cable channels, you might save enough to start making a dent in your debt. If you can’t bear to completely cut anything out, try reducing your consumption.
These past couple years have been rough economically, but it’s nothing from which we can’t recover. Some of us can afford to donate part of our paycheck – however small – to help the Haitian people.
For those of us who can’t, though, maybe the best we can do is to take care of our own finances so that in the future, we’ll be better able to help ourselves – and others.
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Campaign organized to sponsor essay response on braid cutting incident

by Taki S. Raton
The committee formed on Friday, Jan. 1 to address the reported Nov. 30, 2009 Lamya Cammon braid cutting incident at Congress Elementary School has evolved again into what is now an organized initiative.
“Our Children-Our Future” themes an emerging campaign designed, according to organizers, as a concerted effort to “rescue and reclaim the dignity of culture, the honor of Blackness and restoration of an African ascendant enternity.”
Starting this Black History Month, the Our Children-Our Future initiative is sponsoring an essay drive designed on this occassion to structure a platform for a broad range of local and national reponses to this apparent assault on young Lamya.
As reported in previous editions of the MCJ, upon calling the student to her desk on the promise of candy, the first grade teacher instead used scissors to cut three inces off one of Lamya’s braids because she would not stop twirling with her hair. She then threw the cut braid into the trash can and sent her back to her seat in tear while classmates laughed at the seven-year-old.
The teacher was issued a mere $175 for disorderly conduct. Discipinary action may continue to ensue through progressive stages.
Over 50 people signed on at the Imani observance held the last day of Kwanzaa on January 1 at the Wisconsin African American Women’s Center, 3020 W. Vliet, to monitor the disciplinary process of the then Congress Elementary School teacher. A presentation dharing details of the braid cutting incident was presented at this gathering.
Current reports indicate that the teacher is no longer at Congress but has been transferred to another MPS teaching locations yet to be disclosed.
The essay drive is divided into three topical categories: Children, parents, and the Black community membership.
Teachers and parent are asked during this Black history month to encourage their students or children to respond to the question: “How would you feel if a teacher cut off one of your braids or a portion of your hair with a scissors? What should happen to the teacher?
The broad field Black community membership is asked to adress the question: “How do you think a Black girld-child would be affected short and long term psychologically if a white teacher cut off one of her braids in the classroom in front of her classmates?”
Slementarhy school grades first through fifth is the criteria for the children’s category. Essays will be collected and shared with the Our Children-Our Future membership and additionally organized and prepared to be given to the appropriate Milwaukee public School district office overseeing the discipline stages of the teacher. Select essays wil also be identified for publiation.
One to no more than two pages are recommended. Essays should be sent during this Black History Month to braidessay@gmail.com.
“This teacher, who happens to be White, not only assaulted and disrespected our young sista-girl Lamya, but she also assaulted and disrespected our culture and our ancestry,” says Our Children-Our Future campaign member and spokesperson Kelly Thurman.
The retired school teacher now living in the Milwaukee area adds that this seven-yer-old was “traumatized, humiliated and embarrassed at her very young age. She will have this memory for the rest of her life.”
Sonya Griffin, a parent in Detroit responding to the MCJ on line version of the January 13 published article by this writer titled, “Please Fight for Me! Cries out our Children,” positions in her forwarded email that “I cannot understand why it is taking so long for the school district to appropriately discipline this teacher and wny the Black community in Milwaukee is not up in arms over this teacher cutting this child’s braid?
“In any other school districts in this country, and especially if the teacher was of color, the parent of the child, school parents and their community would demand that she be fired.”
From the Ghanaian Adinkra system, the selected icon of Our Children, Our Future, according to Thurman, is the “Pempamsie” symbol which literally means to “sew in readiness.”
The “Adinkra Dictionary” amplifies this meaning to underscore readiness, steadfastness, hardness. The graphic resembles, notes the text, “the links of a chain and implies strength through unity as well as the importance of being prepared.
“This symbol was chosen to inspire and strengthen the role of African American parents, adults and the collective Black community to work in unity towards and for our children and towards and for future,” says Thurman.”Our Classical African Kemitic (Egyptians) ancestors lived and built for eternity. As a people reflectingg this proud legacy, we as parents, adults, educators and community should look beyond our personal tomorrows towards the restoration of a dignified, unified and honored African ascended eternity for ourselves, for our children and for African American generations to come,” she adds.
Additional activities envisioned under the Our Children-Our Future banner underscoring the status and circumstance of African American children and youth in Milwaukee and nationally include published articles, theme panel presentation, guest lectures, an Internet blog, and scheduled membership meetings.
For any additional information on the Our Children-Our Future campaign or on the essay drive, please contact this writer at blydendelany@yahoo.com. |
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Bail Out Could Cost Taxpayers Thirty Times more than Reported

by Earl Ofari Hutchinson
In 2008 and 2009, 50 separate Federal programs offered $23 trillion in loans, grants, or asset guarantees to the financial sector.
Huh! This item was buried in paragraph 11 of 12 paragraphs in a joint statement that California Senator Barbara Boxer and Virginia Senator Jim Webb issued demanding taxing TARP monies executives used to compensate themselves.
That’s more than 30 times more than the official $700 billion that Congress authorized to bail out the big banks and failed Wall Street financial houses.
The $700 billion figure tossed out quickly became etched in financial stone.
Then President Bush, President Obama, Congress, and the Wall Street and banking industry and every financial pundit cited the $700 billion payout as the maximum that taxpayers would be stuck with.
Now almost as an afterthought, Webb and Boxer casually toss out the $23 trillion number.
Boxer and Webb made mention of it in a press statement to bolster their call for passage of the Taxpayer Fairness Act.
This would levy a one time 50 percent surtax on bonuses on amounts over $400,000 in compensation and bonuses that the big banks and firms ladled out to their executives.
Don’t hold your breath on this one, though. Boxer, Webb and the Senate was unwilling to impose this tax on the obscene bonuses that the big bank execs paid each other as a condition of getting the TARP money.
The only thing that’s changed since then is that public fury at the non-stop record bonuses they pay each other has risen to fever pitch. And even if there was a congressional epiphany and payment required, the big banks that got the taxpayer cash will argue as they have every time a squawk is made about their obscene money that they’ve paid the money back.
Boxer and Webb’s move smacks of yet another empty gesture by two Senators feeling election heat to tap into popular rage at the bankers by appearing to be anti-Wall Street crusaders.
The outrage, though, should be over whether Boxer, Webb, the White House and Congress have come clean over how much the banks and financial houses dinged taxpayers for.
One, two, or three federal agencies involved in the fed giveaway is one thing but fifty different agencies is another.
The agencies that may have shoved more money to the banks and houses were known as early as April, 2009.
In testimony before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Tarp’s Inspector General listed the agencies and the projected dollar amounts.
Federal Reserve 6.8 trillion
Treasury –Non-Tarp 4.4 trillion
National Credit Union, Veterans
Affairs, the Government National Mortgage Assn, the Federal Housing Administration,
Federal Housing
Finance Agency
7.2 trillion
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp
(FDIC) 2.3 Trillion
US Treasury 7.4 trillion
Several house reps screamed loud then that the treasury was mute silent or had stonewalled every effort made to find out exactly how much of the cash that the treasury actually doled out to the banks and financial houses. Nearly a year later they still really don’t know. The issue from the beginning has been transparency or the absence of it by the treasury.
Congress has failed to force the federal agencies to tell what they have spent, and how they spent it.
At the time of his congressional testimony last April, the Tarp inspector general had 35 criminal and civil investigations of banks and financial houses for accounting fraud, securities fraud, insider trading, mortgage service misconduct, mortgage fraud and public corruption false statement and tax investigations going.
This wasn’t enough to trigger bells and whistles that treasury had grossly low balled the figures on the bailout.
Boxer and Webb had ample opportunity to demand and fight that the treasury and other federal agencies fully open their books on the amounts that were being spent.
The White House and Congress have repeatedly publicly assured that bail out money ladled out came in way under the official $700 billion that Congress authorized, and that much of the money has been repaid.
That still doesn’t tell what other help the big banks and financial houses got in the form of loans, grants, insurance or asset guarantees, and what federal agencies were involved. Boxer and Webb haven’t told us that either.
Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. His new book is, How Obama Governed: The Year of Crisis and Challenge (Middle Passage Press). |
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Busting the bubble of “His-story!”

by Mikel Kwaku Osei Holt
“Those who do not learn from history are destined to repeat it.”
How do you get White folks interested in Black History Month? To some, the point is moot; to others it would be a giant step toward racial conciliation.
Still others see White acceptance of history from our perspective—true history versus ‘His-story’—is crucial to a nationalistic cultural cleansing that would open the door for a true racial dialogue, a conversation that will unshackle Whites from their ignorance, and Black Americans from their deeply entrenched ignorance and feelings of ethnic inferiority. (Don’t buy the hype that we’re Black and proud, most of us are lack(ing) and scowled.)
Whatever your take, true Black history has the power to finally remove us from under the cloud of a psychological slavery, and White Americans from their misguided and universally harmful belief that they are guiltless in our predicament and the various sins of this country, from the annihilation of Native Americans to the exploitation of third world nations.
If history is truly the interpretation of the author, and not necessarily fact, American history as offered and defended is a major culprit of our self-destructive behavior and inferiority complex.
. As ironic as it may seem, force feeding White America ‘our’ history may open their eyes to the truth and thereby redirect their path to one that is more in tune with teachings of the New Covenant, as well as the tenets of the constitution they hold so dearly.
Thus, our history lights the road to universal brotherhood, but only if we can somehow get White America to accept another interpretation of history, an unbiased version that is not corrupted by hidden agendas.
In contrast, Black History without examining the role and agenda of those with the power to shape our world, is at best disingenuous, perpetrating the big lie that we are an genetically and culturally inferior people, even though a handful of us rise above our status and exhibit exceptional intelligence and unique talents aside from dancing, singing and running faster than the speed of light.
Adding footnotes to our history within the context of the larger American culture would not only clarify what and why, but just as beneficially, force an accounting, and eventually lead to a rewriting of the fantasy we currently accept as American History.
Obviously, White America is comfortable with the lies and half-truths that dominate their history books (if for no other reason than it justifies their actions and validates their conquests). It empowers them, fueling the ‘theology’ that they are in fact the superior ethnic group, God’s chosen, directed through manifest destiny to rule the world, by any means necessary.
Few question the authenticity of their ‘His story,’ and as a result are complicit in a sham that has enslaved us to repeat history, over and over again.
But anyone with common sense, sound research skills and an inquisitive nature can bring the truth to light. The task is to force feed the truth to the majority. And as the saying goes, the truth will set them free to prosper and enjoy themselves alongside their brothers of another color.
Part of the problem in achieving this Herculean task is that while White American are ignorant of the truth, Black people are victimized by our stupidity and clouded by the veil of lies.
Maybe we need a neutral third party to rewrite history. Someone of creditability who can shift through distortions and hidden agendas to write a history book based on true facts, with a chapter or two on the ramifications of scripted behavior.
As it currently stands, His-story perpetuates the lie, and Black History, as taught in our ‘public’ indoctrination chambers—aka schools--perpetuates the lies, maintaining the natural order of things.
As provided today, Black History is sanitized, and thus complicit. It has become commercialized by corporate America, and sanitized by the schools. It has become superficial, focusing on a handful of accomplishments, a few extraordinary people of color who ‘achieved’ and an occasional hero who died, more likely to afford others freedoms and rights he himself could not obtain.
Sadly, few White ‘historians’ and theologians do not question the half-truths, nor do they link the lies to the agenda. Indeed many of them, like Pat Robertson who recently claimed the Haitian earthquake was God’s payback for disrupting the natural order of things (Black independence), take the lie to another level, using Christianity as their justification.
Obviously, Black ‘American’ history is shaped by a Eurocentric agenda, philosophy and even a false theology. While we focus much of February on Black accomplishments ‘in spite of,’ we often ignore how the ‘spite’ shaped and directed our actions.
For example, Rosa Parks’ orchestrated arrest after refusing to sit in the back of the bus was a result of racist laws and covenants that maintained a system of apartheid that was similar to what Americans criticized in South Africa. Our schools focus on her bravery, and not the system and agenda that sparked it.
So, is the real theme of Rosa Park’s actions about her courage, or the racist system of apartheid that prevailed in the south because of racism and a misinterpretation of Christianity?
What if our history books focused more on how and why White Southerners maintained the system, versus the battle to destroy it?
Why did the U.S. government feel comfortable conducting sphyhilis experiments on Black Americans in Tuskegee, Alabama? Research that fact and you can see through the veil to a mindset that is not only hyperbolic, but also contrary to the teachings of the religious tenets this country was supposedly founded upon.
Similarly, it’s nice to tell our children that Charles Drew invented a new mechanism to store blood, but shouldn’t we also tell students and their parents how and why he died, and the mindset of those who denied him access to his invention?
Imagine what would happen if this neutral third party wrote an unbiased history book that everyone was forced to read. If I was the publisher, I’d entitle it, “I hate to bust your bubble…” Or maybe: How the truth will set you free,’ with a subtitle, “how to get the monkey off your back so you can live a guilt-free life.”
My books would include a reexamination of such renowned figures as George Washington, the father of our country, and why he more accurately should be described as an atheistic bigot who represented a mindset that set America on the wrong course and made the declaration of independence a mockery. Big George was an interesting character, who has essentially been caricaturized by American historians.
He did not have wooden teeth, but instead was the recipient of implants taken forcibly from the mouths of his African slaves. No wonder he had a taste for greens.
George was a military genius, but historians admit that he probably could have won the revolutionary war six moths earlier if he had not opposed the induction of free Black Americans in the military. In fact, the only reason why he ultimately agreed, and then segregated them, was because the British offered freedom to any slave who joined their army. The British had seen the light and ended slavery decades earlier.
Thomas Jefferson was another of those so-called stepfathers of our nation. In many respects a brilliant man, but one who when put to the test succumbed to political pressure to bastardize the constitution and his principles. He supposedly detested slavery, but caved in for political expediency.
Jefferson wasn’t a Chrisitian, or his hypocrisy would have been an affront to Biblical teachings. Jefferson was a Deist, as were other framers of the constitution like Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Paine. Deism is a religion that acknowledged the exisitance of God, but essentially theorizes that the Supreme Being does not engage in the day-to-day actions of mankind.
It is based on logic and according to the Deist teachings, good and evil are both necessary to balance the universal order of things; everyone has a preordained role, a part in a play that concludes based on a script influenced by precepts beyond our understanding.
That said, Jefferson, a self-described abolitionist who owned slaves, allowed the dichotomy of his philosophy to forge a nation in his image and as defined by his religion.
Where would America be had Jefferson stood up to his principles? Could his tiny footsteps in the sand change the course of the mighty ocean? How could we have changed the world if Jefferson had done the right thing? How many wars would have been avoided?
Had America believed in the principles it fought the British over, Native Americans could have become the cultural and religious example for harmony and peace, instead of the victims of genocide.
African contributions to the world order would have been accepted, and the universal order would have been altered. Asian inventions like gunpowder would have been used for good, versus destruction. Far fetched. Not really.
An unbiased history book would pose the question of whether Jefferson was a patriot or a hypocrite.
Truth is, Jefferson believed Negroes were genetically inferior. He was a political pragmatist whose true ‘color’ was revealed when he refused to intervene in the Haitian slave revolt, which led that country down a path that contributed to the death of hundreds of thousands in last month’s tragedy.
Instead, Jefferson turned his back on the Haitians to appease Southern slave owners who feared supporting that uprising would reverberate in America and elsewhere. The course of the world was altered by his pragmatism.
President Abe Lincoln wasn’t the first to issue an emancipation proclamation. In fact, one of his generals did so two years earlier, but Lincoln rejected it. He also endorsed a plan to send Black freemen and slave back to Africa, and his writings included such descriptions of Black people as ‘niggers.’ Which is not to undermine his eventual contributions. But the civil war would have ended a year earlier had he truly been less ‘pragmatic.’
Until Roosevelt, it was the Democrats who helped build and sustain the walls of apartheid in this country, including former vice president Al Gore’s father. Kennedy implored Martin Luther King not to lead the March on Washington, and then told him to make sure the marchers were out of town by sundown.
The author of the ‘real history’ could do several chapters on White theft. African American arctic explorer Matthew Henson doesn’t’ get the credit for being the first to set foot on the North Pole. Edison really didn’t invent the light bulb. A Black man conducted the first open heart surgery, and if you want to go back a few centuries, the Greeks were not the father of medicine; it was practiced for decades in Kemet. Truth be told, Greeks and Romans sat at the feet of Africans like Amenhotep and then claimed his teachings as their own.
I could go on and on. But you get my point. Truth will set you…or them…free, not only from living a lie, but also elevating us to a position of equality in the realms of invention, science, medicine and math.
The truth could have the same effect as chemotherapy, cleansing the Eurocentric body of the cancerous cells of ignorance It may also provide a light to follow for people of African decent, a light that could lead us out of the shadow of slavery. (Yeah, those of us who don’t consider ourselves slaves, yet still act like ones.)
Imagine, how the world would change if history were rewritten, and accepted as truth. We can free Europeans from the lie they have lived, bring equality to the world, and force a new course for human development.
So let’s get it started. And let’s start with chapter one, which busts the most important bubble of all: That Jesus the Christ looked more like Barack Obama than Rush Limbaugh.
Hotep.
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