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LATEST NEWS FROM PROJECT 21

Leftists Want to Bring Back Jim Crow

Leftists Want to Bring Back Jim Crow

ConservativeBlog.org /
Give leftists the power they desire, and they will behave as if they’ve “partnered with David Duke.” In a Fox News Channel interview, Project 21 ...
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Time for Another Tea Party?

Time for Another Tea Party?

ConservativeBlog.org /
As the Biden transition team cobbles together a presidential cabinet, Shannon Bream of the Fox News Channel noted that “people [are] coming to the table ...
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Liberal Actually Says Pandemic Learning Will Improve By “Throwing More Money” at the Problem

Liberal Actually Says Pandemic Learning Will Improve By “Throwing More Money” at the Problem

ConservativeBlog.org /
"At this point, the only solution that I can think of that makes sense is throwing more money at schools.” A liberal activist actually said ...
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Blueprint for a Better Deal for Black America

About Project 21

Project 21 is an initiative of The National Center for Public Policy Research to promote the views of African-Americans whose entrepreneurial spirit, dedication to family and commitment to individual responsibility have not traditionally been echoed by the nation’s civil rights establishment.

Project 21 participants have been interviewed by hundreds of media outlets, including the O’Reilly Factor, Hannity and Colmes, the CNN Morning News, Black Entertainment Television’s Lead Story, America’s Black Forum, the McLaughlin Group, C-SPAN’s Morning Journal and the Rush Limbaugh, Michael Reagan, Sean Hannity, G. Gordon Liddy and Larry King shows, as well as in newspapers such as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, The Washington Times and many others.

Project 21 participants live all over the U.S. and have a variety of careers. What they have in common is a desire to make America a better place for African-Americans, and all Americans, to live and work. Project 21 members do this in a variety of ways in their own communities, and, through Project 21, by writing opinion editorials for newspapers, participating in public policy discussions on radio and television, by participating in policy panels, by giving speeches before student, business and community groups, and by advising policymakers at the national, state and local levels.

Project 21: A History

Project 21 is an initiative of The National Center for Public Policy Research to promote the views of African-Americans whose entrepreneurial spirit, sense of family and commitment to individual responsibility have not traditionally been echoed by the nation’s civil rights establishment. This became most obvious during the April 1992 riots in Los Angeles, when the media provided extended coverage of the reaction of liberal civil rights leaders to the events surrounding the Rodney King controversy. Curiously, the media made little mention of those in the African-American community who spoke out in favor of law and order and individual responsibility – and against the rioting.

Rather than merely complain about the lack of attention given to conservative and moderate African-Americans as typified by the coverage of the riots, The National Center for Public Policy Research convened a meeting of conservative and moderate African-American activists in mid-1992 to determine whether it was feasible to construct a network to bring conservative and moderate voices in the black community to the attention of the media. The answer was yes, and Project 21 was born. By March of 1993, Project 21 secured the necessary funding to hire a full-time coordinator to pursue its goals. Project 21’s mission includes the active promotion of conservative and moderate viewpoints by Project 21’s network of members in the media, and the ongoing recruitment of new members to be promoted.

Project 21 acts as a public relations network for moderate and conservative African-Americans, and is interested in promoting those African-Americans who want to discuss their beliefs not only in the privacy of their own homes but in thousands, sometimes millions, of homes across America. Whether a member is a talented writer, articulate speaker, dedicated policy analyst or just have interesting viewpoints on important issues, Project 21 is there to help its members get recognition.

Project 21 has enjoyed enormous success. Project 21’s network of African-American moderates and conservatives have been interviewed by hundreds of newspapers, talk radio shows and television programs throughout the country. Participants have been featured on such programs as CNN & Company, CNN Morning News, The McLaughlin Group, C-SPAN’s Morning Journal, Larry King, Rush Limbaugh, The Michael Reagan Show, BET’s Our Voices, and America’s Black Forum as well as in newspapers such as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, The Washington Times, The Detroit News, USA Today, The Cleveland Plain-Dealer, and many others.

Project 21 members have been published, quoted or interviewed over 35,000 times since the program was launched in 1992.

Project 21 first burst into attention following the release of Black America 1994: Changing Direction in January 1994. A 77-page volume, Black America 1994 is a comprehensive assessment of the challenges and opportunities facing the African-American community. A collection of 15 essays written by Project 21 participants, the report addressed important contemporary issues including economic stagnation, crime, education, health, welfare, and the disintegration of the black family.

In the weeks following the report’s release, its contributors participated in several hundred media interviews, and Project 21 received nearly 5,000 requests for information and numerous offers of support.

Project 21 released a major report, The Health Care Ghetto: African-Americans and Health Care Reform, at a National Press Club press conference in August, 1994. The report was the first of its kind to analyze how various health care reform initiatives would affect minority communities.

In January 1995, Project 21 released a second annual report: Black America 1995: A New Beginning. The report consisted of 38 essays by Project 21 members on topics ranging from the information superhighway to crime. In January 1996, a series of profiles were released of black conservatives and moderates who shun government spending and embrace greater community involvement as the way to solve problems. Black America 1996: A Time for Renewal also included an agenda created by black conservatives and moderates outlining what government needs to do – and what it needs to stop doing – if people are going to start solving their own problems.

In 1997, following two years of research, Project 21 released an in-depth report: Black America 1997: How Government Harms Charities… And How Some are Succeeding Anyway. Until now, it has not been widely known that humanitarian groups suffer from government’s regulatory harassment. The 90-page report received front page newspaper coverage in Washington D.C. and led to calls from lawmakers interested in repealing the regulations that harm the ability of charities to help the poor.

Project 21 also has taken a lead role in bringing to public attention the fact that a substantial number of government environmental rules have a disproportionately negative economic impact on minorities. In addition to assisting with the research and publication of over 60 studies, op-eds and press releases on this topic in recent years, in 2002, joining with the John P. McGovern Center for Environmental and Regulatory Affairs to form a Center for Environmental Justice, Project 21 released a comprehensive econometric analysis of the impact of so-called “smart growth” regulations on minorities. The study, “Smart Growth and Its Effects on Housing Markets: The New Segregation” was published in November, 2002.

Project 21 is also actively involved in educating the public on proposals to empower communities rather than the government. For instance, Project 21 was instrumental in promoting the ideas incorporated in the Community Renewal Act, sponsored by Reps. Jim Talent (R-MO) and J.C. Watts (R-OK) in the 105th Congress. Project 21’s Contract with Black America, proposed to the leadership of the Republican Congress in January 1995, started the process that eventually led to the crafting of the Community Renewal Act.

Press Releases

Black Activist on End of Congressional Ban on Oil Exploration: ‘Energy Freedom Day’ Great for Families and for Energy Independence

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - On October 1, 2008, a congressionally-mandated ban on offshore oil exploration and expanded development of oil from shale rock in the American West officially expires.  Supporters of increased domestic energy production are calling it "Energy Freedom Day." With the end of the ban, the federal government can begin issuing leases for new exploration along American coastline thought to contain 18 billion barrels of oil and 55 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.  As the process of separating oil from shale is perfected, land in the American West could yield between 800 billion and two trillion barrels of ...
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“Jena Six” Defendant Could Provide Example of the Benefit of School Choice

Press Release /
"Jena Six" Defendant Could Provide Example of the Benefit of School Choice Washington, D.C. - Jesse Ray Beard, the youngest member of the "Jena Six," is reportedly interested in spending a portion of his legal defense fund on private school tuition. Beard and five other black students attending Jena High School in Jena, Louisiana are accused of beating a white student in a racially-charged December 2006 incident.  The case received international attention and protests in favor of the black students.  One of the Jena Six - Mychal Bell - has pleaded guilty to a juvenile charge related to the incident.  ...
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Black Group Chairman Renews Call for Presidential Pardon of Jailed Border Patrolmen

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - Mychal Massie, chairman of the Project 21 black leadership network, today is re-issuing his long-standing request to President George W. Bush for a pardon or commutation of the sentences of Jose Alonso Compean and Ignacio Ramos.  An appeals court ruling Monday failed to fully clear the incarcerated U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents of the major charges against them. "This is a demoralizing day for those who serve on the front lines to secure our borders," said Massie.  "I am renewing my call for President Bush to treat these incarcerated border agents with at least the same ...
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District of Columbia v. Heller Supreme Court Second Amendment Decision Hailed by Black Activists

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - Today's U.S. Supreme Court ruling guaranteeing the Constitution's individual right to own firearms and overturning the ban on most gun ownership in the nation's capital in the first major Second Amendment case in almost 70 years is being hailed by black activists of the Project 21 leadership network. Project 21 Fellow Deneen Borelli says the decision supporting an individual right to use firearms is a loud and clear declaration that the government cannot pick and choose what constitutional protections are honored and enforced. "This is a great day for law-abiding citizens of the nation's capital who have ...
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“Juneteenth” Observed by Black Conservatives

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - "Juneteenth" is the oldest and most recognized commemoration of the end of slavery in the United States.  Members of the Project 21 black leadership network suggest the Juneteenth holiday - observed every June 19 - be used as a day for reflection on the struggle for freedom and the ongoing quest for self-empowerment. Project 21 members, who have called attention to the Juneteenth since 1999, urge black Americans to use this day to embrace their inherent talents and strengthen their ties with family and community for the betterment of themselves and future generations. "As we celebrate Juneteenth ...
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Black Conservatives Speak Out on Race, Sex Discrimination Lawsuit Filed Against NASCAR

Press Release /
Project 21 Chairman Asks Race Officials to Conduct Thorough Investigation and Act Decisively If Allegations are True Washington, D.C. - NASCAR is being sued for $225 million by a black female former employee who says she was the victim of sexual harassment and racial and gender discrimination while serving as a technical inspector for the sport.  Two NASCAR officials are now on indefinite suspension for their reported ties to the charges made in the lawsuit. Project 21, the black leadership network, has supported NASCAR in the past against allegations that a lack of black drivers constituted evidence of racial bias ...
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Black Activists Rap Cesar Chavez Earmark Bill; President Bush to Decide if Taxpayer Funds Will Honor Militant Activist Whose Followers Used Violence as “Organizing” Tactic

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - Black activists with the Project 21 black leadership network are highly critical of legislation that would open the floodgates for taxpayer spending to honor the questionable legacy of the late labor activist Cesar Chavez.  Project 21 members oppose spending taxpayer funds to honor Chavez as well as other irresponsible spending provisions found in the bill. The legislation has been adopted by Congress and needs just a presidential signature to become law. "To say the jury is still out on the legacy of Cesar Chavez is an understatement," says Project 21 member Joe Hicks.  "Unlike other individuals who ...
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Supreme Court Endorsement of Photo ID Election Rule Hailed by Black Activists

Press Release /
Project 21 and the Center for Equal Opportunity Had Presented an Amici Curiae in Case Washington, D.C. - Today's U.S. Supreme Court ruling upholding Indiana's photo identification election law is hailed by black activists from the Project 21 leadership network as a positive move toward ensuring that future elections are less likely to be corrupted by vote fraud. Project 21 and the Center for Equal Opportunity had presented an amici curiae ("friend of the court") brief to the Supreme Court in this case that said Indiana's law and other voter ID laws do not suppress voter turnout, as claimed by ...
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World Malaria Day Marked By Call for Action; Millions at Risk

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - In observance of the very first "World Malaria Day," an activist with the Project 21 black leadership network is calling upon establishment environmentalist groups and global health administrators to rethink their opposition to the use of the pesticide DDT. "Malaria is a devastating disease that has ravaged the world.  When the United States virtually eradicated it over 50 years ago, it wasn't by passing out nets and treating the infected.  It was the aggressive use of effective pesticides that eliminated disease-carrying mosquitoes before they could infect people," said Project 21 member Bishop Council Nedd II, who has ...
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Green Politicization of Iwo Jima Photo Condemned by Black Veteran

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - Kevin L. Martin, a member of the Project 21 black leadership network and a U.S. Navy veteran, is joining fellow veterans in denouncing the Earth Day-related cover art on the April 21 issue of Time magazine.  Time altered the famous flag-raising photo from Iwo Jima to show Marines raising a tree rather than the American flag to highlight an article promoting activism favoring increased regulation to fight perceived man-made global warming. "For Time to compare the politically-driven hoax about the severity of man-made global warming to one of most pivotal moments in American history is a slap ...
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Black Activist Says Drug Smuggler’s Guilty Plea Reason to Revisit Presidential Pardon for Ramos and Compean

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - A Mexican drug smuggler whose testimony under a grant of immunity helped American prosecutors convict and jail two U.S. Border Patrol agents has now pleaded guilty to charges that he conspired to smuggle marijuana into the United States twice after he was granted immunity. In light of this new development, Project 21 Chairman Mychal Massie is renewing his demand that President George W. Bush pardon or commute the sentences of incarcerated Border Patrol agents Ignacio Ramos and Jose Alonso Compean.  Ramos and Compean are serving jail sentences of 11 and 12 years, respectively for actions taken in ...
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EPA Sludge Tests a “Modern-Day Tuskegee Experiment”; Children in Poor Black Neighborhoods Potentially Imperiled by EPA Studies

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - Revelations that the federal government conducted potentially dangerous sludge-related experiments on children in Baltimore is condemned by Project 21 black leadership network fellow Deneen Borelli, who is demanding more answers about the origins of the experiment and wants to know how much other reckless policymaking is permeating federal agencies. The Associated Press reported April 13 that researchers using federal grant money selected nine families in poor, black Baltimore neighborhoods to test if sludge could reduce child health risks from lead.  Sludge derived from human and industrial waste was tilled into the families' yards and grass was planted ...
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Black Churches to Participate in Day of Prayer for Jailed Border Patrol Agents

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - Project 21, the black leadership network, has recruited the support of black churches across the United States to participate in a special day of prayer declared by a member of Congress to call attention to the plight of incarcerated U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents Ignacio Ramos and Jose Alonso Compean. "To many Americans, the radical beliefs and comments of the Reverend Jeremiah Wright have come to falsely personify the Christian church - and particularly those with black congregations.  We hope this show of support for the law and good government will help undo the damage he ...
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Project 21’s Massie to Receive “Conservative Man of the Year” Award

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - Mychal Massie, chairman of the Project 21 black leadership network, will receive the "Conservative Man of the Year" award from the Suffolk County (New York) Conservative Party for his many contributions to advancing conservative principles." The members and staff of Project 21 are extremely proud of Mychal," said Project 21 staff director David Almasi.  "Mychal has earned more than his fair share of criticism from the left for daring to speak his mind and promoting the diversity of opinion among black Americans that is largely overlooked in the media.  It is high time for him to be ...
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Black Activists See No Racial Double-Meaning in LeBron James-Gisele Bundchen Vogue Magazine Cover

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - While some might consider it a milestone that basketball star LeBron James became the first black man to grace the cover of Vogue for the fashion magazine's April issue, critics are saying the photo of him with supermodel Gisele Bundchen is racially insensitive and "screams King Kong."  Members of the Project 21 leadership network join with James and others in saying those complaining about the photo are making a big deal out of nothing. "There are some people who view everything through the lens of racial stereotypes," said Project 21 fellow Deneen Borelli, who has worked as ...
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Black Activist Asks: If Courts Can Gut Second Amendment, How Can We Assume 13th Amendment Ban on Slavery is Safe?

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - As the U.S. Supreme Court considers its first major case involving the definition of the 2nd Amendment's protection of gun rights in almost 70 years, black activists with the Project 21 leadership network assert that government should not be allowed to pick and choose what constitutional protections are honored and enforced. "As a black American, I would be horrified to hear a state or local government enacted legislation or regulation that gutted the 13th Amendment's prohibit on slavery or the 15th Amendment's guarantee that all races could vote.  Why aren't more people outraged when the 2nd Amendment's ...
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Bush Criticized for Pardoning Drug Offenders, Embezzler While Leaving Border Patrol Agents Behind Bars

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - The chairman of the Project 21 leadership network is condemning President George W. Bush's March 25 issuance of a new set of presidential pardons that includes forgiveness for drug smugglers, an embezzler and others but not for jailed Border Patrol agents Ignacio Ramos and Jose Alonso Compean.  Ramos and Compean entered prison in January of 2007 after a controversial ruling on their actions in apprehendng a fleeing drug smuggler. "I believe the President's stolid refusal to pardon Border Patrol agents Ignacio Ramos and Jose Alonso Compean is the most unconscionable act of disloyalty he has perpetrated upon ...
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Backdoor Imposition of Fairness Doctrine Opposed by Black Broadcasters Who Charge that New “Local Programming” Regulations Under FCC Consideration Could Lead to Broadcast Restrictions

ConservativeBlog.org, Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - Concerned that proposed Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulations regarding "local programming content and diversity" could lead to a new "Fairness Doctrine," black broadcasting veterans affiliated with Project 21 have submitted comments to the FCC opposing new restrictions on currently-accepted political and social content. "We've seen an explosion in broadcast content since the FCC set aside the political restrictions of the Fairness Doctrine over 20 years ago," said Project 21 Fellow Deneen Borelli.  "To bring about new restrictions now would hurt businesses, political discourse and the diversity these proposed regulations purport to want to foster.  All it will ...
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Project 21, Center for Equal Opportunity Present Amici Curiae Brief to U.S. Supreme Court in Voter Fraud Case

Press Release /
Project 21 Members Argue that Voter ID Laws Depress Fraud, not Turnout Washington, D.C. - The U.S. Supreme Court today will hear oral arguments in the combined cases of William Crawford, et al. v. Marion County Election Board, et al. and Indiana Democratic Party et al. v. Todd Rokita, et al.  The cases challenge an Indiana law adopted in 2005 requiring voters to present government-issued photographic identification before being allowed to vote.  Project 21 and the Center for Equal Opportunity presented an amici curiae ("friend of the court") brief to the Court in this case making the argument that Indiana's ...
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Black Leader Urges Pardon for Incarcerated Border Patrol Agents Ramos and Compean

Press Release /
Mychal Massie, chairman of the Project 21 black leadership network, is asking President George W. Bush to pardon jailed U.S. Border Patrol agents Ignacio Ramos and Jose Alonso Compean. "This is Christmas, and in the spirit of Christmas, it is time for President Bush to show some compassion and pardon Ignacio Ramos and Jose Alonso Compean," said Massie. "Earlier this month, the President saw fit to pardon drug dealers, a moonshiner and thieves. It is time to give similar but more deserved relief to two men who have put their lives on the line in their service to our nation." ...
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New Visions Commentary

Prescription for Health Care Reform: Read the Bill, Tell the Truth, by Murdock “Doc” Gibbs

New Visions Commentary /
If you're a supporter of President Obama, I beg of you to please ask your representatives to start speaking the truth and quit smearing sincere Americans. We've already seen "tea party" activists pooh-poohed and marginalized.  They've even been called racists.  They are just concerned citizens - concerned like our patriotic founders about high taxation and unresponsive government. Likewise, recent health care reform-related protests at town hall meetings across America are not the organized, subsidized "mobs" they are being portrayed as by many reports.  They are moms, dads, veterans, college students, plumbers, painters, senior citizens and other Americans who - unlike ...
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Playing the Race Card Without a Full Deck, by Kevin Martin

New Visions Commentary /
  Playing the Race Card Without a Full Deck by Kevin Martin (bio) It's not surprising that the Obama political machine began playing the race card once the President's policies began to lose popularity. What's surprising is how quickly it happened! Consider Obama's post-racial America as just another broken promise.  Add it to the pile including transparency in government and no new taxes for households earning less than $250,000 a year. People are upset.  The stimulus bill was rammed through Congress without much reading or debate of the bill.  Cap-and-trade legislation punishing people for using gas and coal instead of ...
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Green Hell: The Environmentalist Devil is in the Details, by Devon Carlin

New Visions Commentary /
Green Hell: The Environmentalist Devil is in the Details by Devon Carlin Americans are bombarded with save-the-earth pleas to reduce their "carbon footprint."  In this latest environmental fad, Americans are urged to alter their lifestyles to combat global warming. Reducing a carbon footprint can entail driving less or buying a hybrid-fuel car, using organic cleaning products or sorting recyclables.  Green crusaders promote wind and solar power as alternatives to natural gas, coal and oil. It all seems simple enough, but it's hardly the whole story.  As Kermit the Frog sings, it's not easy being green. In his latest eye-opening book, ...
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Special Treatment and Sotomayor, by Deneen Borelli

New Visions Commentary /
  Special Treatment and Sotomayor by Deneen Borelli (bio) In a recent 5-to-4 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court rejected race-based employment practices. In Ricci v. DeStefano, all Americans are put on equal footing regardless of race.  But some don't like this situation.  The Ricci case revolves around a 2003 exam that was given to firefighters seeking promotion in New Haven, Connecticut.  After the tests were scored, only two Hispanics and no blacks scored high enough to qualify for promotion. After black and Hispanic activists pushed to have the test results thrown out, the city's Civil Service Commission effectively did so ...
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Buried Civil Rights Treasures Unearthed in New Texts, by Cerere Kihoro

New Visions Commentary /
  Buried Civil Rights Treasures Unearthed in New Texts by Cerere Kihoro (bio) To many, Barack Obama's election marked a new era of race relations - a time when Americans will come closer to resolving the lingering racial issues in politics and society.   Similarly, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "I Have A Dream" speech is often considered the catalyst that awakened the passion of freedom-loving, patriotic Americans to embrace genuine colorblindness, equality of opportunity and equality before the law.  After all, is there any doubt that America has - in Dr. King's words - "rise[n] from the dark and ...
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Race, Police, Courtesy and Respect, by Jimmie L. Hollis

New Visions Commentary /
  Race, Police, Courtesy and Respect by Jimmie L. Hollis (bio) Racial profiling made headlines again recently when Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr. was arrested by police in Cambridge, Massachusetts. A neighbor reported seeing two men forcing their way into the Gates home.  Gates, arriving back from a trip abroad, had his driver help try to force open a broken door.  Gates' arrest came not from this, but for angrily yelling at the responding officers and suggesting racial bias. All this reminded me of my own past brushes with the law.  Early one July evening in 1964, in Little ...
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Enlightened Intolerance an Enemy of Democracy, by Bishop Council Nedd II

New Visions Commentary /
Washington, DC - 76% of African-Americans want Congress to make economic recovery, not climate change, its top priority, says a newly-released nationwide poll of African-Americans conducted by the National Center for Public Policy Research. The poll's release comes as the U.S. House of Representatives is planning a Friday vote on the Waxman-Markey cap-and-trade climate bill.  The legislation, if adopted, is expected to reduce aggregate GDP by $7.4 trillion in an effort to reduce global warming. The survey of 800 African-Americans, 80% of which were self-identified Democrats and 4% self-identified Republicans, found significant concern that government action on climate change would ...
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Racism is Not the Cause of Health Disparities, by Jeffery Temple

New Visions Commentary /
  Racism is Not the Cause of Health Disparities by Jeffery Temple (bio) In 2002, a congressionally-commissioned report by the Institute of Medicine (IOM) determined health disparities between whites and minorities were caused by racial bias in America's health care system. For those who see the world through the prism of race, it was a validation.  Dr. Lucille Perez, then president of the race-based National Medical Association, remarked, "It validates what many of us have been saying for so long - that racism is a major culprit in the mix of health disparities and has had a devastating impact on ...
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The Liberal Version of Harriet Miers, by Mychal Massie

New Visions Commentary /
  The Liberal Version of Harriet Miers by Mychal Massie (bio) Here we go again with all the hubbub over race, sex and ethnicity. I care no more about the sex, ethnicity or life story of President Obama's nominee to replace Justice David Souter than if she is fat, chews gum or has three toes. What I do care about is Sonia Sotomayor's judicial demeanor, temperament and grasp of constitutional law. The Supreme Court is supposed to be the last point of address in our system of justice.  It is paramount that those before it have confidence that they are ...
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Obama’s Real Religion: Politics, by Deneen Borelli

New Visions Commentary /
Enlightened Intolerance an Enemy of Democracy by Bishop Council Nedd II (bio) Just before last year's elections, I was dismayed to hear police speaking openly at a local restaurant about potential violence no matter who won the White House. Where I live in Central Pennsylvania, racial tension exists beneath everyday civility.  Thankfully, there and across America, the concerns of my local police never materialized.  America elected a black liberal to the presidency without feared "white rage" in "red states." While Obama handily and peacefully won in California, civil unrest occurred due to something else on the ballot - Proposition 8, ...
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Obama Transnationalists Agenda Undermines U.S. Sovereignty, by Jeffery Temple

New Visions Commentary /
Obama Transnationalist Agenda Undermines U.S. Sovereignty by Jeffery Temple (bio) Our nation came about from a rebellion against colonial rule. Now, 233 years after that independence was declared, the Obama Administration is poised to accelerate a trend to once again place Americans under the thumb of foreign authority. President Obama has nominated Yale professor Harold Koh - a self-described "transnationalist" - to be his top legal adviser at the State Department. According to Koh in a 2006 Penn State Law Review article, "Transnationalists believe that U.S. courts can and should use their interpretive powers to promote the development of a ...
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Raising Taxes By the Mile, by Ak’Bar A. Shabazz

New Visions Commentary /
  Raising Taxes By the Mile by Ak'Bar A. Shabazz (bio) During the presidential campaign, Barack Obama endeared himself to many voters with a promise that 95 percent of Americans would get a tax cut and those making under $250,000 "would not see a single dime of tax increase - not on anything." Since Obama won and he's already spent so much, it was only a matter of time before his pledge went by the wayside. First came new taxes on tobacco to pay for middle-class kids' health care. Now Representative James Oberstar (D-MN), chairman of the House Transportation and ...
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Green Trumps Black and White for Television Diversity, by Devon Carlin

New Visions Commentary /
Green Trumps Black and White for Television Diversity by Devon Carlin Complaints about a racial "white-out" on television are common, but are they valid? As network executives contemplate fall schedules, they undoubtedly have the concerns of the NAACP on their minds.  The veteran civil rights group recently released "Out of Focus - Out of Sync, Take 4," its latest assessment of network diversity. Analyzing the major broadcast networks between the fall of 2003 and the spring of 2007, the NAACP acknowledges diversity has increased.  This progress is nonetheless derided as marginal. But the measure of diversity seems to be little ...
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Disconnect on Accuracy Doesn’t Add Up, by Jeffery Temple

New Visions Commentary /
Disconnect on Accuracy Doesn't Add Up by Jeffery Temple (bio) Remember how important every vote was in the 2000 election?  Back then, and in subsequent close elections, the message has been that every vote counts. Imagine that those votes were not actually "counted," that government instead estimated the outcomes based on a sample of ballots. Imagine the outcry.  Imagine the potential for abuse. Yet the government is now moving toward doing exactly that during the upcoming 2010 census.  Census data is used to draw congressional districts, make federal spending decisions and apportion the Electoral College.  At issue is the use ...
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World Peace Comes Through Strength, by Ak’Bar A. Shabazz

New Visions Commentary /
  World Peace Comes Through Strength by Ak'Bar A. Shabazz (bio) Imagine if, when local governments meet to create a budget for their police departments, they entertain requests from criminals against buying bulletproof vests and other protective gear. After all, allowing the police to armor-up puts criminals at a disadvantage.  How can crooks succeed if cops can block their bullets? Worse still, imagine the government agreed.  While some lawmakers might commend themselves for saving money or "leveling the playing field," police officers would be left crossing their fingers and hoping they never find themselves outgunned. This obviously doesn't happen - ...
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Anti-Gun Laws Favor Criminals, by Mychal Massie

New Visions Commentary /
Anti-Gun Laws Favor Criminals by Mychal Massie (bio) On April 3, three Pittsburgh cops were brutally murdered in the line of duty. Eric Kelly, Stephen Mayhle and Paul Sciullo II were senselessly murdered while responding to a domestic violence call.  Two weeks earlier, four police officers were similarly murdered in Oakland. It's no surprise that, in the aftermath of such brutality, politicians seized upon these horrific acts of the criminally deranged to create more restrictions on gun ownership.  Some anti-gun groups even want an end to private gun ownership altogether. Increasing restrictions on or removing firearms from responsible gun owners ...
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Hurricane Katrina Hypocrisy, by Kevin Martin

New Visions Commentary /
Hurricane Katrina Hypocrisy by Kevin Martin (bio) Since Hurricane Katrina, liberal critics have hung the plight of New Orleans around the neck of former President Bush like an albatross. These critics relentlessly hounded the Bush Administration for its "inadequate" response to Katrina.  So, now that many of these critics run the federal government, one can expect natural disasters to be handled with prompt and effective action, right? No so fast. That opportunity came and went.  The Obama Administration was found to be lacking. When a brutal ice storm crippled several Midwestern states, particularly Kentucky and Arkansas, in January it took ...
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Real Stimulus: Reform How Banks Shop Credit Cards, by Bishop Council Nedd II

New Visions Commentary /
Americans are justifiably distraught over the home foreclosure crisis and the glut of delinquent debt.  They are also upset and perplexed by the capricious nature of the government's rush to rescue the financial institutions central to the problem. It's not a luxury afforded to the average American.  Why are banks being treated differently?  Among businesses, why are banks being treated differently from automakers? As the comedian and social commentator Jon Stewart said about the U.S. Congress:  "[They] won't bail out the people who make cars.  You'll only bail out the people who make car loans.  Not even car loans!  The ...
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Maxine Waters’ Leaky Argument Can’t Wash Away Banking Scandal Dirt, by Kevin Martin

New Visions Commentary /
Banks pushed risky loans to people who could not afford them.  Homeownership was promoted as a right for all instead of one for those who saved. Since the mortgage bubble burst, leaving many in financial trouble, a lot of anger has been directed at banks and the bankers involved. Lawmakers are worked up in a lather, but this should not remove them from scrutiny.  In the case of Congresswoman Maxine Waters (D-CA), criticism of her involvement in one aspect of this crisis is extremely justified. Yet she is playing the race card to defend herself.  That's just wrong. More facts ...
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Obama, the Pickens Plan and the Potential Fire Next Time, by Deneen Borelli

New Visions Commentary /
In July of 1967, Detroit and Newark were bathed in fire and blood.  Anguished and hurt, people in poor and minority communities in these cities had had enough of crippling policies foisted on them by the ruling political establishment.  They stood up and screamed for change. In the collective melees, 66 died, 1,914 were injured and around 8,500 people were arrested. It was an uprising against police brutality.  It was an uprising against poverty.  And it was an uprising against urban renewal and the government's abuse of eminent domain. Meant to acquire land for public projects, eminent domain was used ...
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