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LATEST NEWS FROM PROJECT 21

Illogical Election Prompts Demand for Reforms

Illogical Election Prompts Demand for Reforms

ConservativeBlog.org /
In a call for election reforms and a more thorough investigation of the recent election’s results, Project 21 member Emery McClendon suggests there are “too ...
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What Have We Got to Lose? by Emery McClendon

What Have We Got to Lose? by Emery McClendon

New Visions Commentary /
Common sense and a fair judicial system should see that something has to be wrong with how this election has been projected to the nation ...
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Project 21’s Stacy Washington Begins Weekday Satellite Radio Show

Project 21’s Stacy Washington Begins Weekday Satellite Radio Show

ConservativeBlog.org /
Project 21 Co-Chairman Stacy Washington will bring her “Stacy on the Right” talk radio show to weeknights on the SiriusXM Patriot channel beginning November 30 ...
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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 Activists: Resuscitation of Immigration Reform Legislation Ignores Overwhelming Public Opposition

Press Release /
As senators and the White House try to resurrect the already-failed immigration reform bill, members of the Project 21 black leadership network warn against betraying the public trust. "If there was ever any doubt about what the elected really think about those who elect them, one need only consider their action on immigration reform," said Project 21 chairman Mychal Massie.  "Pollster Scott Rasmussen found that 72 percent of the people he polled consider it very important to reduce illegal immigration, yet only 23 percent of the same group support the Senate's immigration reform bill and only 16 percent think it ...
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Black Conservatives Denounce Juneteenth-Related Violence

Press Release /
With violent acts - including one death - plaguing several local Juneteenth observances across the nation, members of the black leadership network Project 21 are critical of celebration organizers who deflect blame for what happened. Project 21 members, longstanding supporters of the Juneteenth holiday, say such behavior is inconsistent with the founding principles of Juneteenth and future observances of Juneteenth are threatened if the violence is not condemned in the strongest terms. "It is unfortunate that violent acts overshadowed the Juneteenth events celebrating freedom and empowerment for black Americans," said Project 21 fellow Deneen Borelli.  "Clearly, the cause of these ...
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Sanctions on Sudan Applauded; Darfur Situation “An Embarrassment” to the Civilized World, Says Project 21, “Strong Determined Action” Needed to Stop Suffering of the People of Darfur

Press Release /
President Bush began the work week with an early-morning press conference in which he announced U.S.-imposed sanctions on government and rebel leaders in Sudan and Sudanese-controlled companies due to their role in prolonging the mass murder in Sudan's Darfur region. Stalling on a truce and the insertion of peacekeeping forces on the part of Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir is the stated reason for the President's action. Specifically, the three men cited individually -- Sudanese state minister for humanitarian affairs Ahmad Muhammed Harun (who is also accused of war crimes), military intelligence and security chief Awad Ibn Auf and Khalil Ibrahim ...
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Black Activists Urge Caution on Immigration Compromise

Press Release /
Black activists with the Project 21 leadership network are skeptical of the just-announced compromise legislation on immigration reform brokered between senators and the Bush Administration. "This debate should not be about civil rights.  It should be about law and order," said Project 21 member Geoffrey Moore.  "Politicians buckling to special interests while disregarding the will of the citizens they were elected to represent is very disturbing." The 380-page compromise legislation to overhaul American immigration law and border control was announced on May 17 and will begin debate in the Senate as early as May 21.  A Senate vote could occur ...
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Where are Sharpton and Jackson? Rape Jokes About Condoleezza Rice as Offensive as Insults against Rutgers Basketball Team

Press Release /
In light of popular radio hosts joking on-air about violently raping Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, the black leadership network Project 21 is asking: Where are Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson? Both Sharpton and Jackson protested when the now-fired Don Imus called the Rutgers women's basketball team "nappy-headed hos," but have issued no comparable condemnations regarding jokes about raping the Secretary of State. On May 9, XM satellite radio hosts Greg "Opie" Hughes and Anthony Cumia laughed and gave encouragement to a guest, "Homeless Charlie," on their May 9 program who said he wanted to have sex with Secretary of ...
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Project 21 Press Release: Sharpton Must Apologize; Weeks After Imus Crusade, Sharpton Shows Intolerance of His Own

Press Release /
Black activists representing the Project 21 leadership network are calling upon the Reverend Al Sharpton to acknowledge and apologize for his inappropriate and insensitive remarks directed at the Mormon faith.  The particular shame of Sharpton making such a statement, Project 21 members say, is compounded by the fact that he recently led the movement that forced the firing of radio shock jock Don Imus for insensitive on-air racial comments about the Rutgers women's basketball team. "Reverend Sharpton would like to portray himself as a man of faith and a teacher of tolerance, but his recent bigoted attack upon Mitt Romney's ...
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Project 21 Press Release: Referee Racism in Pro Basketball? Black Activists Skeptical of New Study

Press Release /
Black activists charged today that premature release of a new study claiming a racial bias by NBA referees will unnecessarily incite racial tensions. Business professor Justin Wolfers of the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania and Joseph Price, a graduate student of economics at Cornell University, are scheduled to release a study at the annual meeting of the Society of Labor Economists May 4 and the American Law and Economics Association May 6.  The study, which purports to analyze 600,000 foul calls over 13 seasons, claims the rate of fouls called against a player can rise by up to ...
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Blacks Back Wolfowitz: Project 21 Members and International Leaders Praise Wolfowitz’s Focus on Africa; Efforts to End Poverty and Corruption

Press Release /
Black activists with the Project 21 leadership network are voicing their support for embattled World Bank president Paul Wolfowitz because of his strong commitment to helping ease poverty and suffering on the African continent. "It's unconscionable that, when there is finally someone at the World Bank who is focused on rooting out corruption, bloat and truly helping the people of Africa, his tenure is being threatened by a coalition of the unwilling who want to maintain the status quo at the institution and punish Paul Wolfowitz for what he did at his previous job," said Project 21 chairman Mychal Massie ...
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Black Activists Support President Bush’s Iraq Timetable Veto

Press Release /
Veterans who are members of the black leadership network Project 21 are supporting President George W. Bush's veto of the recently-passed emergency military spending bill because it contains a timetable for pulling U.S. troops out of Iraq. "It was a wise decision for President Bush to veto this bill," said Project 21 member Jimmie Hollis, a U.S. Air Force veteran.  "Liberals are playing politics with the lives of our troops.  While I am not surprised by anything I see in House of Representatives these days, I was somewhat surprised that the Senate passed such a sham of a bill.  Thank ...
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Project 21 Press Release: Black Activists Criticize Congressional Proposals to Create a Race-Based Hawaiian Government

Press Release /
Without a hearing, the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Natural Resources is expected to vote on the "Native Hawaiian Government Reorganization Act of 2007" (H.R. 505) on May 2.  Members of the black leadership network Project 21 are expressing concern that the legislation directly conflicts with the spirit of inclusion and equality that civil rights activists fought so hard to create. Similar legislation in the U.S. Senate (S. 485) is scheduled to be the topic of a hearing in the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs on May 3. "It's a shame that so many continue to risk and suffer ...
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Project 21 Press Release: Black Activists Laud Supreme Court’s Ban on Partial Birth Abortion

Press Release /
Today's U.S. Supreme Court ruling upholding a legislative ban on the practice of partial birth abortion is being hailed by members of the black leadership network Project 21 as a victory for the safety and welfare of the unborn as well as a reminder of the importance of having strict constructionists jurists on our courts. "At last, the Supreme Court acknowledges that the right to kill one's baby has limits," said Project 21 member Djana Milton.  "Although abortion itself remains constitutionally guaranteed, all manners of cruelty in the process are no longer tolerable.  This is one of the most civilized ...
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Project 21 Press Release: Black Conservatives: Duke Rape Case Shows Importance of “Innocent Until Proven Guilty”

Press Release /
Today's announcement that dubious sexual assault charges filed against the three current and former Duke students were dropped has members of the Project 21 black leadership network sharply criticizing those who used the year-long investigation to create racial animosity for personal or political gain. "It's absurd that a year of sex, lies and vilification consumed the lives of three young men now found to be wrongly accused of committing heinous crimes," said Project 21 Fellow Deneen Borelli.  "It underscores the importance of the maxim 'innocent until proven guilty.'"  Duke students Reade Seligmann, Collin Finnerty and the now-graduated David Evans, who ...
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Project 21 Press Release: Black Conservatives Speak Out on Don Imus Controversy, Criticism

Press Release /
Don Imus has been suspended by CBS Radio and MSNBC for two weeks in the wake of comments made on his April 4, 2007 syndicated radio show.  On that show, Imus called members of the Rutgers University women's basketball team "rough girls" and "nappy-headed hos."  Others in the studio with Imus also called the girls "hardcore hos" and compared their looks to the men's professional Toronto Raptors and Memphis Grizzlies. Imus has apologized for the remarks and has promised to meet with the team.  The Reverend Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson, the National Association of Black Journalists and the National Organization ...
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Cesar Chavez Did Little to Stop His Union’s Violence, Charges Civil Rights Activist at Congressional Hearing on Honoring Chavez

Press Release /
Joe R. Hicks, a Project 21 member who marched arm-in-arm with Jesse Jackson at Cesar Chavez's funeral in 1993, will testify before Congress March 29 in opposition to spending public funds honoring the late United Farm Workers union organizer. Hicks was asked to testify about Chavez as part of congressional consideration of H.R. 359, "The Cesar Estrada Chavez Study Act," introduced by Representative Hilda Solis (D-CA).  The bill would authorize a  "special resource study of sites associated with the life of Cesar Estrada Chavez and the farm labor movement" that could lead to inclusion of sites in the American Southwest ...
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House Action on Iraq Supports ‘Disgrace and Defeat’, Black Leader Says

Press Release /
Project 21’s Kevin Martin is speaking out in support of President George W. Bush's decision to veto the controversial emergency supplemental spending bill for troops in Iraq and Afghanistan that was approved by the House today by a thin 218-212 margin.  This bill links aid to our military forces serving overseas to a timetable for their withdrawal.  Martin, a Navy veteran, says lawmakers should not tie the hands of our forces serving overseas.  He also objects to using important legislation as a vehicle to approve earmarks, as this legislation does. "Any bill that sets deadlines and is loaded with pork-barrel ...
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Project 21 Press Release: Black Activists React to Senator Joe Biden’s Comments About Senator Barack Obama

Press Release /
In calling Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) a "storybook" candidate based on his view that Biden is "articulate, bright and clean," Senator Joe Biden (D-DE) has angered members of the black leadership network Project 21, who say Biden's remarks are elitist, condescending and insensitive. "Joe Biden's comments are completely unacceptable and clearly elitist," said Project 21 member Ak'bar Shabazz.  "By praising Obama as the first 'articulate, bright and clean' black presidential candidate, he isn't only insulting the senator from Illinois, but all black Americans who strive to polish themselves and provide a positive image in the community.  Biden clearly needs to ...
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Project 21 Press Release: Black Activist Takes Issue with School Choice Opposition

Press Release /
Senator Edward Kennedy's (D-MA) opposition to a proposed revision of the federal "No Child Left Behind" educational policy to allow school choice is evidence of an elitist attitude and a willingness to put the desires of the teachers' unions over the needs of students according to a fellow with the black leadership network Project 21. "When public schools are failing our children, parents should have accessible school choice options to meet their child's educational needs," said Project 21 fellow Deneen Borelli.  "To deny children the opportunity they need in order to preserve the status quo is something Senator Kennedy and ...
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Black Activist Criticizes Nagin’s Convoluted Comments to Senate Committee

Press Release /
Calling his testimony a "smokescreen" to cover up his own failings at the outset of the Hurricane Katrina crisis, members of the black leadership network Project 21 are criticizing the racially-charged rhetoric of New Orleans mayor Ray Nagin (D) before the Senate Homeland and Government Affairs Committee yesterday. "Mayor Nagin continues to do everything to deflect blame from himself," said Project 21 member Darryn "Dutch" Martin. At a January 29 Committee field hearing that was held in New Orleans, Mayor Nagin complained that President George W. Bush did not mention the rebuilding efforts in the Gulf region in his State ...
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Black Activists Outraged Over Liberal Merger of Abortion and Civil Rights

Press Release /
Inclusion of Planned Parenthood in a self-described civil rights coalition has outraged members of the black leadership network Project 21, as Planned Parenthood advocates and provides abortions - particularly in the black community. "How can a civil rights group that claims to support underprivileged blacks embrace an organization created expressly to hasten the demise of black people?" asked Project 21 Chairman Mychal Massie.  "People of conscience should be appalled and outraged by this alignment." The Planned Parenthood Federation of America recently became a member of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights (LCCR), a political coalition of almost 200 groups representing ...
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Project 21 Press Release: Senator Boxer’s Insult of Condoleezza Rice Condemned by Black Conservatives

Press Release /
Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA) is being criticized by members of the black leadership network Project 21 for implying that Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice lacks a proper perspective on the War on Terror in Iraq because she does not have children. "Barbara Boxer is a feminist who is attacking the feminist dream," said Project 21 member Kevin Martin.  "But Condoleezza Rice's achievements are disqualified because she is a black conservative, and her rise was not blessed by the liberal establishment.  Former attorney general Janet Reno was also unmarried and childless, but I don't remember insulting questioning like this regarding her ...
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New Visions Commentary

A Fairness Doctrine for Schools? by Bob Parks

New Visions Commentary /
The next time the liberals control the White House, there is little doubt that changes at the FCC will bring about a new "Fairness Doctrine" that mandates that privately-owned, ratings-based talk radio have an equal political balance. In short, liberal hosts and shows will be imposed on talk radio no matter how unpopular they have proved to be in the past under free market conditions. If, on the other hand, as long as conservatives hold onto the executive branch, there is ample justification for seeking a similar policy of fairness when it comes to government-run schools. Similar arguments apply, but ...
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Is Slavery Apology Proper or Politics? by Stephen Roberts, M.Div.

New Visions Commentary /
In July, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a resolution that "apologizes to African-Americans on behalf of the people of the United States, for the wrongs committed against them and their ancestors who suffered under slavery and Jim Crow." Senators must agree on an apology before a president can make it official. Is an apology necessary?  Is it appropriate?  Is it appreciated? "As a young black male, it really irritates me," wrote a 20-year-old poster to the New America Media website named "Christopher."  He considered the resolution disrespectful because those who suffered under slavery and so many who lived through ...
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HBCUs Should Produce Quantum Physicists, Not Quarterbacks, by B.B. Robinson, Ph.D.

New Visions Commentary /
Our nation's future lies in science and technology. Already in high demand, engineers and scientists will be needed even more in years to come.  It creates an opportunity and a challenge for America's Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs). There is a clear and present need.  Microsoft founder Bill Gates warned Congress last March that American companies "face a severe shortfall of scientists and engineers with expertise to develop the next generation of breakthroughs." Among black students, there is a distinct technological training deficit.  According to the report Science and Engineering Indicators 2008 from the federal National Science Board, the ...
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A Need for Less Speed? by Mychal Massie

New Visions Commentary /
In June, Senator John Warner (R-VA) pushed "cap-and-trade" legislation he claimed would reduce greenhouse gas emissions.  Analyses found it would more likely drive up energy prices, drive down the gross domestic product and put untold numbers of people out of work for a dubiously-small reduction in global temperature. Warner's terribly unpopular bill failed to muster even enough support for a full Senate vote. It seems Senator Warner has yet to realize the folly of his regulatory ways.  Now, he's interested in re-imposing a national maximum speed limit to conserve gasoline and reduce emissions.  But slowing the speed of American progress ...
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Property Rights: It’s Not Just for the Rich, by Reece Epstein

New Visions Commentary /
Liberals normally claim to defend small independent businesses over "big box" retailers.  It seemed odd, then, when the liberal enclave of Oakland, California evicted two such underdogs to benefit a department store. By doing so, it exposed governments' growing disrespect for property rights. On July 1, 2005, movers on the Oakland city payroll began boxing up the contents of Revelli Tire and Autohouse.  City officials had plans to turn the properties into apartments and condominiums.  Owners John Revelli and Tony Fung didn't want to move, and believed the city's offers to buy them out were far too low.  In retaliation, ...
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History is Always the Final Judge, by Ak’Bar A. Shabazz

New Visions Commentary /
"A wolf wrapped in monk's robes.  A devil with a human face and a beast's heart." That's how Tibetan Communist Party Secretary General Zhang Qingli recently described the Dalai Lama, Tibet's traditional political and spiritual leader. It almost makes me laugh.  How can someone really believe this?  As I am very familiar with the work of the Dalai Lama through his books, articles, interviews and speeches - and his Nobel Peace Prize - it seemed natural for me to find humor in this Chinese puppet leader's assessment of someone almost universally recognized for being peaceful. The more I read, however, ...
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Congressional Liberals Having Their Cake and Eating It Too, by Kevin Martin

New Visions Commentary /
"Let them eat cake." It's a phrase attributed to Marie Antoinette, the excess-addicted wife of French King Louis XVI, after being told the poor didn't have enough bread to eat.  While some scholars think someone else said it, there is no disputing that it highlights a disconnect found between the elite and the poor. Marie was a victim of the guillotine in 1793 at the height of the French Revolution, and yet her lesson still seems unlearned today. Congressional liberals, in addressing high energy prices, are essentially pointing Americans to the nearest bakery - but asking them to walk there ...
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Secure Their Livelihoods, Secure Their Votes, by Reece Epstein

New Visions Commentary /
Imagine not having a bank account.  Imagine all your money is hidden in a sock drawer. Imagine arriving home one day to find the door ajar.  You've been robbed!  You run to the sock drawer, but your savings are gone. An estimated 22 million U.S. households - 22 percent of minority households, according to a Federal Reserve Board survey - did not have bank accounts in 2001.  Some people claimed they didn't like high bank fees and some didn't trust banks. Still more people cannot open an account because they lack proper identification.  The USA PATRIOT Act, passed after the ...
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The Civil Rights Shakedown: Myth or Reality? by Deneen Borelli

New Visions Commentary /
Al Sharpton is making headlines again, but it's not for one of his crusades. Instead, Sharpton, his National Action Network (NAN), and several major corporations that have donated to NAN have been subpoenaed in recent months by federal investigators. While Sharpton's attorneys reported Tuesday that the criminal probe over millions allegedly owed in taxes by Sharpton and NAN has been dropped in lieu of civil action by the IRS, federal authorities remain tight-lipped over the status of any investigations. Critics have long accused Sharpton of obtaining corporate contributions by threatening racial boycotts. Sharpton denies this, saying "That's the old shakedown ...
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Jesse Jackson Outrage Strategy: No Dough, No Go? by David Almasi and Justin Danhof

New Visions Commentary /
Remember when Jesse Jackson challenged XM Satellite Radio for its racist advertising?  Probably not, since it never happened.  Why he didn't is the question. In 2006 and 2007, XM ran television commercials that were blatantly racist, at least under a definition set by Jackson five years earlier.  In the commercials, cartoon characters' musical tastes were personified by the radio waves featured in the XM logo.  For example, they formed a Beethoven-like mane for a classical music aficionado and the long, bushy moustache of a country-western fan.  At the end, as the music of rapper Snoop Dogg plays, a character smiles ...
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Food Crises and Restrictive African Trade Practices, by Thompson Ayodele

New Visions Commentary /
Food prices have skyrocketed internationally.  In my own Nigeria, rice has epitomized the crisis after doubling in price since last year. Riots happening around the world over food supplies are prompting panicked governments to find solutions to stem the crisis.  Whether they will bring about an abundance of food is debatable. Nigeria, for example, is considering increasing rice imports and disbursing loans to domestic rice processors.  While this might provide brief improvement, it will not prevent future shortages or ensure food abundance. Promotion and management of food imports in Nigeria in the past has bred abuse - so much so ...
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The Separate But Equal News Network, by Mychal Massie

New Visions Commentary /
There's a conservative joke poking fun at liberal media that predicts coverage of an impending apocalypse would have the headline "World to End: Poor and Minorities Hardest Hit." Despite his tenure as a Republican congressman, it seems J.C. Watts never heard that joke.  Then again, maybe he did and just didn't understand why it's funny. Watts recently announced his intention to start the Black News Television Channel - a news network targeted at blacks.  An agreement has already been made with Comcast to broadcast the channel in cities such as Philadelphia, Atlanta, Chicago, Detroit and Washington (but not New York ...
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Black America is Still Not Free, by Reece Epstein

New Visions Commentary /
Black America is still not free.  Despite the abolition of slavery and passage of civil rights laws, something still holds people back - themselves. That's the view of psychologist Dr. James Davidson, Jr., who says a major problem facing black America is an attitude of self-defeat.  He explains his views in his new book Sweet Release: The Last Step to Black Freedom (Prometheus Books). Raised in a poor community himself, Davidson paints a bleak portrait of the world he escaped: "Legions of teenagers, pregnant or orchestrating their lives towards pregnancy, stroll shamelessly through our streets.  Single-parent homes dominate our neighborhoods ...
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Everybody Pays for Single Parenthood – In More Ways Than One, by Darryn “Dutch” Martin

New Visions Commentary /
As a product of a poverty-stricken single-parent home, I know first-hand about the negative baggage that growing up poor and fatherless can breed. Numerous studies note that children born and raised in fatherless, single-parent homes are much more likely to live in poverty, experience depression, have trouble in school and get in trouble with the law than are children raised in married, two-parent households. Unfortunately, strong marriages and intact families increasingly seem the exception to the rule these days.  With high divorce rates and almost 40 percent of all American children (about 70 percent of black children) born out of ...
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A Charity Bill That Would Keep People from Giving, by Deneen Borelli

New Visions Commentary /
Despite our society's significant strides in accepting blacks and other minorities, supporters of race and gender preferences continue to try to perpetuate 1950s attitudes by creatively developing new concerns.  Their goal: to expand preferential treatment policies. In California, private, public and corporate charitable foundations are now being targeted for allegedly not doing enough for minority-run groups.  "The Foundation Diversity and Transparency Act" (AB 624), which passed in the California Assembly and is awaiting a vote in the State Senate, would require charitable foundations with assets of $250 million or more to report the race, sex and sexual preferences of its ...
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Why No Black Faces on Greenbacks? by B.B. Robinson, Ph.D.

New Visions Commentary /
Since before we were a nation, blacks have contributed mightily to the development of what is now the United States.  From mining to the space program, black Americans today serve integral roles in our society, leading in fields such as education, politics, religion and sports. One cannot pick up a newspaper, turn on the radio or television or surf the Internet without seeing the contributions of our community. But blacks are excluded from arguably the most important medium in use today in this nation and around the world - U.S. currency.  Our money is a key medium of exchange, unit ...
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Wright Comments Hurt Black Churches, by Deneen Borelli

New Visions Commentary /
Black churches are facing a threat to their very existence. A few years ago, there were unsubstantiated fears of a campaign of physical destruction by arsonists.  There is also the danger every election year of liberal politicians using black pulpits as soapboxes in violation of tax law. This time, however, the problem comes from within and is more dangerous. "Black liberation theology" threatens to hijack the character and damage the brand of thousands of respected black churches in the U.S.  The Christian messages of love, unity, faith and hope are in danger of being replaced with racial hatred, political rhetoric ...
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When Good Intentions Go Bad, Or Worse, by Bob Parks

New Visions Commentary /
Despite sensational rhetoric, very few people actually want to pollute.  It's not good business, and we all want clean air and water. When we get sucked into eco-panic, however, cooler heads seldom prevail - sometimes costing jobs and even lives. Consider the eco-panic over alleged global warming.  One legislative solution is to phase out traditional light bulbs because they use too much power and supposedly contribute to global warming. Their replacement, compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFLs), contain a small but toxic amount of mercury that makes cleanup of a broken one more than just a sweep.  We're told that, when ...
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Haters Didn’t Hurt the Hip-Hop Mayor, He Did, by Tara Setmayer

New Visions Commentary /
I wonder if any of the 60 Detroit pastors supporting embattled Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick are reminding him of this Biblical principle?  As the drama unfolds in Detroit, it makes me wonder about public integrity.  Are our leaders so drunk with power that honesty, character and respect for their offices and the people they represent now secondary nuisances? From Marion Barry to Eliot Spitzer and Richard Nixon to Mark Foley, character and integrity - or the lack thereof - know no party affiliation or skin color. Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick, "King Kwame" or the "Hip-Hop Mayor" to some, is yet another ...
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N-Word as a Term of Endearment? by Mychal Massie

New Visions Commentary /
Would a proud father call his daughter the b-word or a "ho"?  Would a loving husband call his wife a sloppy, dirty slut to show his affection? Not likely. Why?  Because people who respect themselves and honestly respect others don't show affection and respect with such loathsome and baneful language.  Sadly, there is a growing cacophony of black voices who think calling one another by the n-word, for instance, is acceptable for showing affection, respect and endearment for one another. Harvard law professor Randall Kennedy - the man who literally wrote the book on the word - notes that etymologists ...
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