Showing posts with label black news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label black news. Show all posts

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Gospel Artist Marvin Sapp’s Wife Dies of Colon Cancer

by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Syracuse University 

Prominent Gospel Music artist Marvin Sapp recently lost his wife to colon cancer. Marvin's wife, MaLinda, had been married to him for 15 years and they have three children together. MaLinda was an Administrative Pastor at the church they ran together, the Lighthouse Full Life Center, in Grand Rapids, MI.
Before she died, MaLinda was a college professor and licensed professional counselor. The following statement was issued by 92.1 Praise Houston about the death of MaLinda Sapp:

 

Click to read.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Black Student Helps Invent Electric Car that Goes 400 Miles Per Gallon

by Dr. Boyce Watkins 

 

Kansas City, Missouri is one of my favorite places in the world. I have friends there that I respect, and I've grown an appreciation for the African American community in that city. One of the things I noticed about Kansas City is that there are both reasons for despair, and rays of light that provide tremendous promise. One of those lights is a student by the name of Kelvin Duley.
Duley was part of a team at De LaSalle High School, which invented an electric car that can travel 300 miles per gallon. Last month, Dooley said he wanted to grow up to be a professional basketball player. Now, he says he wants to become an engineer. This experience has changed him for life.

 

CClick to read.

ColorOfChange.org Launches a “Turn Off Fox News” Campaign

 

Dear friends,

Many of us already know that Fox News is biased -- but it's actually much worse than that. For years they have used lies, distortions, and race-baiting to divide this country. Recently, it's gotten downright dangerous. Earlier this summer, a heavily armed man got into a gun fight with police after he was pulled over on his way to kill people at the Tides Foundation[1] -- an obscure non-profit that Glenn Beck regularly demonizes on his Fox News TV show.[2]

Fox News is bad news for America -- and it spreads, and is legitimized, partly through TVs in public places.

That's why I've joined the TurnOffFox campaign -- the first part of a larger campaign to diminish the influence of Fox. It's about educating people about Fox and getting it turned off in stores, restaurants, and other public places.

Will you join me? It takes just a moment to declare your own household "Fox free", and at the same time appeal to public establishments in your community to stop playing Fox. And you'll get a FREE Turn Off Fox sticker when you do. Click here:

http://colorofchange.org/turnofffox/?id=1870-1096688

No other news organization that's considered legitimate consistently wages smear campaigns based on lies and race-baiting. But for years Fox News has done exactly that, and the pattern has only gotten worse since Barack Obama entered national politics.

Here are just a few examples:

-- A frequent Fox guest, Jesse Lee Peterson, said that the majority of Black people have poor moral character, and cited "what they did to the dome" after Hurricane Katrina as evidence.[3] Peterson has also used his platform on Fox to claim that 90% of Black people are racists -- against Whites.[4]

-- In a case of naked race-baiting, Fox host Glenn Beck called President Obama a "racist" who had a "deep-seated hatred for White people or the White culture."[5] Earlier that week, Beck claimed that the President's health insurance reform proposals were a form of "reparations" designed to "settle old racial scores."[6]

-- Fox host John Stossel argued that the public accommodations section of the Civil Rights Act -- which prevents businesses from discriminating based on race, sex, and other factors -- should be repealed.[7]

-- Fox News hosts Bill O'Reilly and Sean Hannity were the first to air deceptively edited and incomplete video of Shirley Sherrod's remarks to the NAACP.[8] The video made it seem like Sherrod was confessing to using her position at the USDA to discriminate against White farmers, when she was really talking about the importance of overcoming prejudice. Sherrod lost her job over this misrepresentation, which Fox enthusiastically repeated without seeking the facts. Fox has since tried to pretend it had nothing to do with this smear -- but Fox is the number one reason these kinds of distortions and smears have any part in our national dialogue.

The examples above aren't even a tenth of Fox's vicious lies and smears, and over the years they've just gotten more brazen.

The goal of Turn Off Fox is to reduce the number of public TVs showing Fox News, while spreading the word about Fox's poison (and how it works) to those who don't know.

Signing up for the campaign is just the first step. We make it easy for you to tell us about businesses playing Fox. If you're willing to talk with them, we'll provide you with straightforward materials that explain why they shouldn't be a party to what Fox is doing. And if there are businesses you know that want to tell the world they would never play Fox, you can help them declare themselves a "Fox-free zone."

As businesses Turn off Fox and stand up as Fox Free, and as we encourage our friends and family to do the same, we'll help make clear, to people across the country, what Fox is about. And we'll reduce their ability to do harm.

Please join me in signing up for the TurnOffFox campaign:

http://colorofchange.org/turnofffox/?id=1870-1096688

Thanks.

References

1. http://bit.ly/a5F7kW
2. http://mediamatters.org/research/201007290032
3. http://mediamatters.org/research/200510030005
4. http://bit.ly/c060C0
5. http://mediamatters.org/research/200907300019
6. http://mediamatters.org/mmtv/200907230040
7. http://mediamatters.org/mmtv/201005200033
8. http://mediamatters.org/blog/201007200060

Friday, August 20, 2010

Yoseph Robinson: Man Dies Protecting Girlfriend from a Robbery

Yoseph Robinson, Former Hip-Hop Exec Turned Orthodox Jew, Murdered in Robbery

by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Syracuse University 

 

Yoseph Robinson was a good man and role model. He'd converted to Judaism after his fight with drugs and often reminded others of the importance of being morally strong. He upheld these values until his last moments when he died protecting his girlfriend from a robbery.


Lahava, a woman helping Yoseph write a book, was laughing and joking with a man when he suddenly demanded her money. Robinson told the man to leave her alone, and that's when a struggle broke out. Yoseph was shot several times in the arm and chest and died on the scene. The robber got away on foot in the Brooklyn area.


Before his untimely and unfortunate death, Yoseph Robinson served as a role model for neighborhood children. Everyone loved him, and he was writing a book on his transformation out of drugs and into a more productive life. As he died, he told his girlfriend to tell his daughter how much he loved her.

 

Click to read.

Thursday, June 10, 2010

News: Oscar Grant Trial Has No African American Jurors

by Dr. Boyce Watkins

On New Year's day of 2009, Oscar Grant was shot in Oakland, California. The shooter was a Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) officer by the name of Johannes Mehserle. Grant was 22-years old at the time of his death, and the shooting was captured by cell phone cameras and disseminated throughout the Internet. Adding insult to injury, the Grant family just found that there will be no African American jurors in the trial of grant's shooter.


Jack Bryson, whose sons were with Grant the night he was killed, was angry about the jury selection.


"This is like a slap in the face," Bryson told The Associated Press. "This case came all the way to Los Angeles after the judge in Alameda County said they couldn't get a fair and impartial jury there.
"This is the best you can do, and you did this in two days. We could've stayed back in Oakland for this."

Click to read




Monday, June 7, 2010

Black Social Commentary from TheGrio - 6/7/10


  • Dr. Boyce Watkins

    Dr. Boyce Watkins

    Author and Finance Professor at Syracuse University

    Rand Paul puts foot in mouth again with MLK comparison

    2:56 PM on 06/07/2010

    OPINION - I am not sure why Rand Paul keeps working to convince black people that he loves us...

    > MORE

  • Earl Ofari Hutchinson

    Earl Ofari Hutchinson

    Journalist, author and broadcaster.

    Why BP keeps stonewalling Obama

    12:32 PM on 06/07/2010

    OPINION - BP's corporate arrogance is made out of cash. It can and has bought its way out of trouble repeatedly and when need be even bought governments...

    > MORE

  • Dr. Boyce Watkins

    Dr. Boyce Watkins

    Author and Finance Professor at Syracuse University

    Arizona isn't the only state with a racist agenda

    9:18 AM on 06/07/2010

    OPINION - The collective outrage expressed over the civil liberties issues in the Arizona immigration law has been hardly present during other more serious racial atrocities...

    > MORE

  • Monique W. Morris

    Monique W. Morris

    Author and VP for Economic Programs, NAACP

    Blacks blocked from serving on Southern juries, study says

    9:13 AM on 06/07/2010

    OPINION - Knowing that this type of discrimination continues is the first step toward holding district attorney's offices accountable for fair treatment...

    > MORE

  • Marcus Vanderberg

    Marcus Vanderberg

    Sports and social commentator

    Record-breaking Ray Allen saves NBA Finals

    8:38 AM on 06/07/2010

    OPINION - If Allen thinks of more things to do to be better, it could spell the end for the Los Angeles Lakers...

    > MORE

  • Clutch Magazine

    Clutch Magazine

    Weekly magazine for young contemporary women of color

    What ladies can learn about men from the NBA playoffs

    10:05 AM on 06/05/2010

    OPINION - But besides the raw comedy, the league is also a great source of education for any woman who has wondered why guys act the way they do...

    > MORE

  • Monique Harden

    Monique Harden

    Co-director of Advocates for Environmental Human Rights

    Can the Gulf Coast still be saved?

    1:08 PM on 06/04/2010

    OPINION - President Obama should respond to the oil gushing from the depths of the Gulf of Mexico as he would to a foreign invading army...

    > MORE

  • Ronda Racha Penrice

    Ronda Racha Penrice

    Author of African American History For Dummies

    Is 'blackface' always beyond the pale?

    12:05 PM on 06/04/2010

    OPINION - Blackface is not going anywhere anytime soon...

    > MORE

  • Earl Ofari Hutchinson

    Earl Ofari Hutchinson

    Journalist, author and broadcaster.

    Why Democrats are the greatest danger to Obama's agenda

    11:44 AM on 06/04/2010

    OPINION - President Obama's deadliest enemy is not Sarah Palin, GOP congressional obstructionists, the Republican National Committee or even Fox News...

    > MORE




  • Monday, May 17, 2010

    Julianne Malveaux Questions the Kagan Nomination

    I was among the many who were disappointed that President Barack Obama did not nominate an African American woman to be an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. After all, there are six white men, two women, one Latina and one white, and a nominal African American man on the Court.  Why not an African American woman?
    The Black Women's Roundtable, led by Melanie Campbell, was so disappointed that they shared their concerns with the President in a letter that spoke both to the contributions African American women have made and the qualifications of a few good women that President Obama should have considered before nominating Ms. Kagan to the nation's highest court.


    I won't even speak on what I perceive as some of the shortcomings of the Kagan nomination.  The Solicitor General has earned the support of some colleagues that I fully respect, such as Harvard Professor Charles Ogletree.  At the same time, we have to pause at the fact that her definition of diversity is ideological diversity, not racial and ethnic diversity, and that she seemed to make Harvard a more welcome place for conservatives, if not for African American faculty.


    The hue and cry about the absence of an African American woman nominee, however, speaks to a greater issue in the African American community and among African American leadership.  African Americans are too often in the reactive, not the proactive mode.  If we had been thinking long run, we might have projected that there would soon be a Supreme Court opening.  Then, conversations about the possibility of an African American woman nominee might have been happening sooner, not later.   
    Hampered by the reality of the 24-hour news cycle and a decades-long failure to discuss and develop some leadership coordination, the African American community appears fractured and disorganized.  Conversations about a black agenda, or lack thereof, that have taken place in the media (and I've been part of at least one of those) reveal good ideas, and little implementation.  Many would say it is enough to put the ideas out there, that pundits and scholars are not the same as leaders.  Then question, though, is where are the leaders?
    I'm not trying to do the roll call or to spark debate about which leader is more influential than another.  I am simply asking how the conditions of African American people are to change if the only tools we have in our arsenal are talk and reaction?  My most immediate concerns are education and economics; black people are lagging in both of these areas.  What are we going to do to make it better?


    Unfortunately, there is too much "paralysis of analysis" with far too much conversation focused on this nonsense of post racialism in the Obama era.  Too many are tentative in offering feedback to the White House, fearing that they'll be labeled "anti-Obama", or even worse, "race traitors".  Other communities are pushing hard for action from the White House, while many African Americans with credibility are being tentative, conciliatory, or short-run and reactive.


    To be sure, I understand the tentatively.  Some see criticizing president Obama as offering aid and comfort to the tea party crowd who are irrationally critical of the President.  That hasn't stopped other perceived Obama Administration allies - gays and lesbians, immigrant Americans, and others from fighting for what they were promised in the 2008 election.    All of the angst around whether African Americans can offer President Obama feedback reflects the warped way African Americans are perceived in our society.  We aren't homogenous, and our views cannot simply be distilled into "liberal" and "conservative".
    Which brings me back to the courts.  If we want an African American woman on the Supreme Court, now may be the time to organize around that.  How could it happen?  Short lists might be developed in the African American legal community, biographies developed, names floated, support garnered.  There is likely to be at least one more opening on the court in the next two years, and some advance preparation, planning, and lobbying might well yield the right results.

    It is overtime for African American leaders and scholars to take a long view toward black progress.  We should stop squabbling about the leaders of tomorrow and start preparing the leaders of two decades from now.  And we must learn to be more proactive than reactive.  Otherwise, this same debate will recur when next there is a Supreme Court opening, when next there is a reason to react.

     

    Dr. Julianne Malveaux is an economist, author and commentator, and the Founder & Thought Leader of Last Word Productions, Inc., a multimedia production company.

    Last Word Productions, Inc. is a multimedia production company that serves as a vehicle for the work and products of Dr. Julianne Malveaux. For the last 10 years the company has centered its efforts on Dr. Malveaux's public speaking appearances, her work as a broadcast and print journalist, and also as an author. Currently, Julianne Malveaux is President of Bennett College For Women in Greensboro, North Carolina.

    To find more of Dr. Julianne Malveaux's columns, work and appearances please visit:

    www.juliannemalveaux.com




    Friday, May 14, 2010

    The Latest: Black Scholars vs. Harvard University - Dr. Boyce debates Harvard Professor on Kagan

    Dr. Boyce Watkins

    Dr. Boyce Watkins

    Author and Finance Professor at Syracuse University

    Kagan's record on race has White House on edge

    4:33 PM on 05/14/2010

    OPINION - If Kagan didn't have the courage to stand up against injustice at Harvard Law School, what makes us think she will on the Supreme Court?...

    > MORE




    Tuesday, May 11, 2010

    Dr. Boyce: Not Judging Lawrence Taylor, Not Yet

    lawrence_taylor_rape

    by Dr. Boyce Watkins, The Institute for Black Public Policy

    Former New York Giant Lawrence Taylor has had a life that has been shameful, exciting, devastating and amazing.  He has seen the highest of highs and the lowest of lows, whether you are referring to his physical prowess or his battle with drug addiction.  I can’t, for one second, pretend that I know how difficult it is to walk away from crack cocaine, but I believe thatLawrence Taylor had the strength to do it.

    RELATED: Teen In LT’s Rape Case “Doesn’t Want To Ruin His Reputation”

    I was proud to see Taylor rebuild his life after spending quite a few years making one mistake after another.  Just like on the football field, I wanted to see him succeed.  And he was succeeding, at least for a while.  Then came the rape allegations.

    Click to read




    Obama's Supreme Court Pick Hired Zero Black Professors at Harvard

    Kagan Hired No Black Professors While Dean Of Harvard Law

    Read more about Kagan Hired No Black Professors While Dean Of Harvard Law

    TAGS: education, Elena Kagan, Harvard, Supreme Court




    Monday, April 26, 2010

    Dr. Boyce on MSNBC's TheGrio.com - 4/27/10




    Tuesday, April 20, 2010

    Dorothy Height Dies at 98 Years Old

    by Dr. Boyce Watkins

     

    Dorothy Height was born on the same day as my father (March 24). I’m not sure if that means anything, but it sure feels significant to me. Like my father, Height has had a dramatic influence on how I see the world, and what it means to have courage. She was accepted to Barnard College (the sister school for Columbia University), but not allowed to attend the school because they’d already accepted their two black students for the year. When my God daughter takes it for granted that she attends Barnard today, I remind her of the struggles of Dorothy Height.

    Barnard eventually apologized to Height for not admitting her to the university, but some apologies come entirely too late. By the age of 68, Dorothy had reached retirement age: too old to attend Barnard, but still young and restless in her tireless quest for social justice. Her journey for justice would continue another 30 years after the 1980 apology by the university, nearly as long as the life of Jesus. This reminds us that it’s never too late for us to start changing the world, and the best time to start that process is now.

    Representing the beauty of Delta Sigma Theta, Inc, Height served as president of the organization for over a decade. She also advised kings and queens in America, standing next to Dr. Martin Luther King in addition to Eleanor Roosevelt, Dwight D. Eisenhower and Lyndon B. Johnson. She reminded Eisenhower that black kids should be allowed to attend the same schools as whites, and helped President Johnson understand that black women deserve to serve at the highest levels of government. Sadly enough, she was the only woman among the “big six” figures in the Civil Rights Movement, which reminds us that part of our journey on the path to equality means that we must be willing to honestly look at ourselves in the mirror. Even 40 years after the epic struggle of Height, King and others, we still find that only men are usually invited to the table of black leadership. This has got to change, for hypocrisy should not have a workspace in the house of black liberation.

    The “God mother of the women’s movement” never wasted a second on her quest to make the black family stronger. She sacrificed her own opportunity to marry and have children to open the door for other women to have happy families of their own. As one of the sponsors of the Black Family Reunion, an event that takes place in Washington DC, Height has helped strengthen one of the most important institutions within the African American community.

    Height’s affiliation with The National Council for Negro Women is nothing short of legendary. Chairing the organization for 50 years, Height helped shape the vision and inspiration for millions of women, their children and their grand children. She was even primed to head to the White House with Al Sharpton, Marc Morial and Ben Jealous this year to meet with President Obama. Only a snow storm of historic proportions could slow down the 98-year old who never stopped creating storms of her own.

    There is no other Dorothy Height, and I wonder if there ever will be. Dorothy reminds us that even long lives are far too short, and that the time for action is now. There is a little bit of Dorothy inside all of us and we must insist upon carrying the torch.

    Dr. Boyce Watkins is the founder of the Your Black World Coalition and the initiator of the National Conversation on Race. He is also the author of the book, "Black American Money. For more information, please visit BoyceWatkins.com.




    Monday, April 19, 2010

    The Latest from Dr. Boyce on AOL Black Voices - 4/19/10

     

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    Harvard's Charles Ogletree Describes Sharpton's Link to Obama

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    The Black Agenda: Wealth-Building Must Top the List - Dr. Boyce Money

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    Officer Charged With Beating a Motorist

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    Financial Lovemaking: Tiger, Tiki and the High Cost of Cheating

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    Jay-Z Sues Red Sox Slugger David Ortiz Over 40/40 Club Name

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    Bill O'Reilly Gets Booed at Sharpton's National Convention

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    President Obama Spends $18 Billion on Jobless Benefits

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    Police May Have Coerced Boys to Confess to Gang Rape of 7-Year-Old

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    Former NAACP President Benjamin Hooks Dead at 85

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    Man With HIV Knowingly Infected Women, Set to Be Released From Prison

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    Kennedy Family Member Staying in Prison on Murder Conviction

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    Mississippi Gov. Says Slavery Conversation is Not Important

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    NBA Star Derrick Coleman is Now Broke: $87 Million Up in Smoke

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    Michael Steele Tries to Explain Himself to Other Republicans

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    Suspects Found in Slaying of Newlywed Couple




    Sunday, April 4, 2010

    Dr. Boyce Watkins: US Prison Racism has got to Stop

    by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Syracuse University

    Many people throughout the world believe that South Africa during apartheid was one of the most racist regimes in the history of the world. In that society, black people were clearly considered to be inferior to whites, and were denied equal access to education, medical care and basic public services. Even having sex with a person of another race was considered to be a criminal offense. Apartheid came to an end in 1994 under mounting international opposition, as the world argued that black peoplein South Africa were being subjected to an inhumane system that should not be tolerated by decent people everywhere. The United States was one of the countries that took the lead on the initiative to disband apartheid, passing the Comprehensive Anti-Apartheid Act of 1986, leading to sanctions against South Africa and demanding the release of political prisoner, Nelson Mandela.


    It turns out that when it comes to our prison systems, the United States cannot claim the moral high ground that it once seemed to possess. According to data from the Prison Initiative, America incarcerates 5.8 times more black men per capita than South Africa did during apartheid. To add insult to injury, African Americans are roughly 6 times more likely to go to prison than whites, and black males are nearly 7 times more likely. These numbers are atrocious and an international embarrassment. It is about time that we did something about it.

     

    Click to read




    Thursday, April 1, 2010

    Dr. Boyce on MSNBC's TheGrio - 4/1/10




    Tuesday, March 23, 2010

    Dr. Boyce on AOL Black Voices - 3/23/10

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    Tea Partiers Deny The Use of Racial Slurs

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    Rush Limbaugh Back Pedals on Pledge to Leave the Country

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    Michael Steele Looks Even Worse as a Black Man Defending Tea Partiers

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    Police Officers Charged with Beating Celebrated with Free Beer

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    Jesse Jackson Jr. Presides Over The Health Care Debate

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    Young Mom's Body Found in Bed Frame of a Hotel Room