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LATEST NEWS FROM PROJECT 21

BLM Protesters “Want to Create Socialism”

BLM Protesters “Want to Create Socialism”

ConservativeBlog.org /
Innocent people going about their daily lives – shopping, driving and eating in restaurants – are finding their law-abiding behavior disrupted by Black Lives Matter ...
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Bail Reform is to Justice What “an Arsonist is to Forest Management”

Bail Reform is to Justice What “an Arsonist is to Forest Management”

ConservativeBlog.org /
In commentaries for the Daily Caller and Newsmax, Project 21 Co-Chairman Horace Cooper has defended the cash bail component of our criminal justice system as ...
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Here’s How Trump Can Get Ginsburg’s Replacement On The Court — Guaranteed

Here’s How Trump Can Get Ginsburg’s Replacement On The Court — Guaranteed

Commentary /
History often repeats itself. Before treating the present Supreme Court vacancy which occurred right before an election as an unprecedented circumstance, consider that actually we’ve ...
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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

Blacks Question Conciliation Toward Cuba: Network Cites Abuses and Anti-Black Racism by Communist Regime

Press Release /
Blacks Question Conciliation Toward CubaNetwork Cites Abuses and Anti-Black Racism by Communist Regime Citing government-sponsored discrimination, military aggression on the African continent and a poor human rights record, members of the African-American leadership network Project 21 question the support liberal black politicians provide to the communist dictatorship of Cuba's Fidel Castro. Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) members Gregory Meeks (D-NY), James E. Clyburn (D-SC) and Bennie Thompson (D-MS) recently returned from a trip to Cuba, urging the U.S. Government to ease the decades-old U.S. trade embargo on the island. Another CBC member, Cynthia McKinney (D-GA), praised the Cuban government in a ...
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Juneteenth Holiday a Reason for Black Celebration: Education and Achievement Lauded and Encouraged by Project 21 Members

Press Release /
As "Juneteenth," the oldest celebration of the end of slavery in America, is observed nationally on June 19, members of the African-American leadership network Project 21 ask African-Americans everywhere to take time to celebrate the progress they have made and independence they have achieved. New statistics compiled by Project 21 show tremendous gains made by the black community that merit recognition. Juneteenth marks the day - June 19, 1865 - that Union soldiers brought word of the end of the Civil War and emancipation of slavery to Texas. As the newly-freed African-Americans encountered uncertainty away from the plantations, they viewed ...
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Orioles Baseball Team Warned Not to Discriminate ­ May 2000

Press Release /
African-American Network Asks Owner Angelos to Consider Afro-Cubans Recent statements by officials of the Baltimore Orioles baseball team in which they orginially said - but later retracted - that they would not sign Cuban defectors to play for the team concerns members of the African-American leadership network Project 21. Project 21 members cite the discriminatory nature of Angelos's initial actions, and the particularly strong effects it would have on Afro-Cubans in Major League Baseball. Orioles Vice President Syd Thrift told The Washington Times last week that the team would not sign Cuban defectors. The team did pass on meeting with ...
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Black Network Demands Social Security Reform

Press Release /
Black Network Demands Social Security Reform Bipartisan Support for Private Investment of Payroll Taxes Applauded When 48% of young Americans believe they will see a UFO but only 28% believe they will see a Social Security check when they retire, reforming America's retirement security plan must be a top national priority, says a recent statement by the African-American leadership group Project 21. Members of the African-American leadership network Project 21 are pleased with the bipartisan progress now underway toward privatizing Social Security and making it fair for black Americans. As the baby boom generation ages, the increasing strain on Social ...
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Million Moms Marching for Wrong Reason; Black Network Seeks Better Law Enforcement, Not New Gun Laws

Press Release /
Crime control ought to be the message of the upcoming Million Mom March in Washington - not gun control. Members of the African-American leadership network Project 21 demand the government enforce existing laws against gun violence before considering new regulations to further restrict the ability of law-abiding citizens to protect themselves. Organizers of the Million Mom March claim "our children's lives far outweigh the right for just anyone, especially juveniles, to carry a [gun]." They are pushing further restrictions on the Second Amendment freedom to own guns like mandatory licensing and trigger locks. Despite their alarmist descriptions of an epidemic ...
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Blacks Protest Media Bias Against Cuban-Americans

Press Release /
Improper Racial Attacks are Motivated by Political Differences Racial bias of any sort should be abhorrent to our society, but media coverage of the Elian Gonzalez custody battle shows that the establishment media has not been discreet about its dislike of Miami's Cuban-American community. Members of the African-American leadership network Project 21 condemn the media outlets choosing to demonize a segment of America's diverse population to enforce a political agenda. News coverage of the legal deadlock over whether Elian Gonzalez should be returned to his Cuban national father or remain with his Cuban-American relatives while his petition for political asylum ...
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Inconsistent Concern Over Confederate Celebrations; Black Group Wonders If Politics Taint Selective Protests – April 2000

Press Release /
High-profile black leaders and politicians appear to be selective in their outrage over commemorations of the Confederacy. Members of the African-American leadership network Project 21 point out that state observances of the Confederacy in the home states of President Bill Clinton and Vice President Al Gore, who are Democrats, are not drawing the condemnation that has been placed at the feet of Republican politicians. On April 22, President Clinton's home state of Arkansas observes Confederate Flag Day. On April 26, Vice President Gore's home state of Tennessee has a similar Confederate heritage observance. Neither commemoration has elicited the national attention ...
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Earth Day No Celebration for Black Americans; African-American Network Seeks Environmental Justice from Overregulation

Press Release /
While Leonardo DiCaprio and other big government environmentalists observe Earth Day on April 22, they are overlooking the suffering that some environmental regulations cause in the black community. Members of the African-American leadership network Project 21 support promoting a policy of true environmental justice that ensures government actions do not discriminate against the poor or minorities. In promoting dubious environmental scare theories like global warming - which cannot be proven by satellite temperature data, the most accurate measure of the earth's temperature, or long-term temperature trends - the Clinton Administration is siding with radical environmentalists in promoting policies like higher ...
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Civil Rights or Political Wrongs?: Government Agency Improperly Weighs In Against Colorblind Justice – April 2000

Press Release /
Members of the African-American leadership network Project 21 are appalled at the politicization of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights in forcing a "poll vote" to condemn colorblind college admissions and state contracting in the state of Florida. Project 21 members see this rush to judgement as detrimental to reforming race-based policies and a cheap shot at supporters of reform. Last November, Governor Jeb Bush (R) unveiled the One Florida plan, which orders Florida universities and government agencies to discontinue their affirmative action requirements. In the case of public universities, admissions policies were changed to guarantee admissions to the top ...
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Earth Day No Celebration for Black Americans; African-American Network Seeks Environmental Justice from Overregulation – April 2000

Press Release /
Government Agency Improperly Weighs In Against Colorblind Justice Members of the African-American leadership network Project 21 are appalled at the politicization of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights in forcing a "poll vote" to condemn colorblind college admissions and state contracting in the state of Florida. Project 21 members see this rush to judgement as detrimental to reforming race-based policies and a cheap shot at supporters of reform. Last November, Governor Jeb Bush (R) unveiled the One Florida plan, which orders Florida universities and government agencies to discontinue their affirmative action requirements. In the case of public universities, admissions policies ...
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Does Clinton Care About Civil Rights? Justice Department Refuses to Prosecute, Covers Up Alleged Black Murders – November 1999

Press Release /
Members of the African-American leadership network Project 21 question the Clinton Administration's sincerity in fighting crime that targets specific racial groups in light of revelations that the Clinton Justice Department allowed members of an organized crime operation - including one member who allegedly targeted blacks for murder - to operate freely while cooperating with a federal investigation. John Martorano recently pled guilty to racketeering charges in Boston. Under the terms of his plea agreement with the government, he will only receive up to 15 years in prison. Although he has admitted to 20 murders, the testimony he is providing against ...
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Black Judges and Blackface: Liberals Playing Race Card Riles Black Leadership Coalition – November 1999

Press Release /
A politician in blackface and the liberal record of a black judge dominate politics in Missouri and raise the ugly and divisive specter of racial politics nationwide. Project 21 members deplore the use of the "race card" and the threat it now poses to a fair and impartial judiciary.In October, the U.S. Senate voted against the nomination of Judge Ronnie White to a federal judgeship. Missouri Senator John Ashcroft, a Republican, led the opposition to White, who is black, on White's lenient "record in criminal, and particularly death penalty cases." Two state prosecutors' offices and 77 of Missouri's 114 sheriffs ...
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NAACP Baseball Boycott Bites Blacks; Boycott of Detroit Tigers Owner Could Hurt More Than Help

Press Release /
The latest boycott called by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) - this time against Little Caesar's pizza and the other businesses of Detroit Tigers baseball team owner Mike Illitch - highlights the group's growing reliance on publicity stunts over substance. Members of the African-American leadership network Project 21 are concerned that the NAACP may be rebuilding its reputation on the backs of poor blacks who will be hurt by the economic impact of the boycotts.NAACP president Kweisi Mfume takes issue with the Tigers because no black candidates were interviewed for an open manager position. While ...
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Linking Abortion to Crime Could Label Unborn Black Americans as Crooks

Press Release /
A new study proposing that legalized abortions have caused a reduction in crime is causing great concern among members of the African-American leadership network Project 21, many of whom fear such ideas could be used to resurrect racist population control programs of the past meant to control the black population in the United States."According to this troubling new study by the liberal elite, all it takes to predict criminal activity is to take a look at the color of the skin of the mother. If you can get a black woman to abort her unborn child, you can make the ...
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Black Investing Up, Survey Says Blacks Consider Saving to be #1 Priority – June 1999

Press Release /
Findings of a recent study show black Americans are planning to start investing at higher rates than whites. Members of the African-American leadership network Project 21 are excited at future prospects of wealth and prosperity this will create for the black community."We have made great strides in our fight for equality, but without a strong financial base, blacks will never completely reach parity," said Project 21 member Anthony Anderson. "The fact that black Americans now realize the importance of investing gives them the strongest tool to ensure their civil rights." According to the 1999 Black Investors Survey (BIS) commissioned by ...
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Break the Chains of Big Government: African-American Leadership Network Hopes Black Holiday of Juneteenth Will Promote Independence – June 1999

Press Release /
When "Juneteenth" is observed on June 19, the members of the African-American leadership network Project 21 ask African-Americans everywhere to use the celebration of education, self-development and respect to examine and reassess the reliance of many in the black community on government support."We need to be mindful of what the Civil War was about: freedom. Americans of all nationalities are becoming less free every single day," said Project 21 member Reginald Jones. "We should use this special day as a reawakening of the American spirit by teaching and reading the Declaration of Independence, Constitution and Bill of Rights." Juneteenth commemorates ...
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Earth Day No Holiday for Black Americans – April 1999

Press Release /
Black Leadership Network Faults Anti-Minority Environment Policies Members of the African-American leadership network Project 21 find fault with the beliefs and goals of radical environmentalists who are celebrating Earth Day on April 22. These activists regularly promote drastic regulations that harm the welfare of average Americans, particularly minorities, as solutions to perceived environmental problems."Black Americans can no longer afford to senselessly follow the belittling policies of the radical environmental movement," said Project 21 member John Meredith. "The leaders of that insidious movement, if indeed they achieve their ultimate goal, would do far more harm to us as a people than ...
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Three R’s Take a Back Seat to the Final Four: Suspension of NCAA Academic Standards Could Hurt Student Athletes

Press Release /
Members of the African-American leadership network Project 21 call Judge Ronald L. Buckwalter's March ruling overturning the NCAA's minimum acadmic standards for freshmen athletes a fit of "March Madness" that will devastate student athletics for years to come. Project 21 members say Judge Buckwalter's assertion that the use of standardized tests is "a discriminatory practice" because the tests are allegedly biased against African-Americans demeans blacks because it suggests they cannot be held to the same standards as other races. It also jeopardizes the guarantee that student-athletes will receive a quality education. "I would imagine that Coach Jerry Tarkanian of Fresno ...
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Black Organization Decries Unfair Maryland Taxation

Press Release /
Death Tax and Proposed Cigarette Tax Unfair to Low-Income and Minority Citizens Two taxes in the state of Maryland - inheritance taxes and a proposed increase in the cigarette tax - are criticized by members of the African-American leadership network Project 21 because they are unfair to all taxpayers and particularly hard on lower- and middle-class citizens, particularly upwardly-mobile blacks. On March 11, 1999, the Maryland General Assembly will hold hearings on a bill introduced by Delegate Obie Patterson to repeal the state's inheritance tax, which heirs must pay in addition to the federal inheritance tax. Patterson says, "To tax ...
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African-American Group Critical of Judge’s Ruling Against Academic Standards

Press Release /
NCAA Academic Standards Ensure Accomplishment in Classroom and on the FieldMembers of the African-American leadership network Project 21 are outraged by the March 8 ruling of a federal judge overturning minimum academic standards instituted by the NCAA to ensure college athletes receive an education allowing them to become successful citizens. Project 21 members say Judge Ronald L. Buckwalter's assertion that standardized tests are biased against African-Americans is demeaning because it suggests blacks cannot be held to same standards as other segments of the population. It also significantly diminishes the guarantee that a player will receive the education he or she ...
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New Visions Commentary

Resolve an Indicator of the Future of World Freedom, by Ak’Bar Shabazz

New Visions Commentary /
People around the world are anxiously watching America for indications about their own future. It is up to the American people to determine how far freedom will spread across the planet. It is America's resolve in the war on terror will determine the outcome. Despite a seemingly constant stream of negative reports on the condition and direction of the transition in Iraq, tremendous positive changes are happening every day. Obviously, the battle isn't over, but there are several reasons to be optimistic. Iraq now has an interim government and elections are planned in a country that had previously been run ...
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New Medicare Benefits Going Unnoticed in Black Community, by Council Nedd II and Leslie O. Anderson

New Visions Commentary /
There are several passages in the Bible suggesting much is expected from those to whom much is given. Keeping that in mind, there is no shortage of people claiming to hold leadership positions in the black community. Some have moderately reasonable arguments as to how they earned this moniker, but others seem self-ordained. Some exhibit sincere motives, while others appear to be no more than opportunists running a confidence game. Regardless of how they arrived, they now have an obligation of stewardship. Medicare was designed as a health care safety net for America's seniors. Launched in the mid 1960s, around ...
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Bush Knew! by Geoffrey Moore

New Visions Commentary /
When commenting on the tragic events of September 11, 2001, many on the left have one thing to say. That one thing is "Bush knew"! If you listen to the likes of Michael Moore (no relation, thank God) and Cynthia McKinney, one would be led to believe that President George W. Bush was in cahoots with Osama Bin Laden and had full knowledge of dates, times and other logistics of what would happen on that morning. While I can't believe that he did not know they would fly planes into those buildings, there are things that he and the administration ...
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Liberal Dominance of Black Media Won’t Fix Itself, by Michael King

New Visions Commentary /
Not all blacks are liberal, but liberals nonetheless dominate the black media. So what's a conservative - especially a black conservative - to do about it? For one thing, stop allowing this dominance to occur by default, because it's falsely defining black America as less conservative than it really is. In a October/November 2003 Gallup poll, more blacks identified themselves as conservative (30 percent) than liberal (22 percent). A 1996 Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies poll similarly found a nearly equal distribution among blacks who defined themselves as conservative, liberal and moderate. School choice and gay marriage are ...
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Ryshawn Bynum: American Slavery’s Latest Victim? by Kimberley Jane Wilson

New Visions Commentary /
Two-year-old Ryshawn Lamar Bynum died on July 31, 2003. His father, Isaac Bynum, had brought the child to the intensive care unit of Oregon Health and Science University Hospital the previous day. Ryshawn arrived unresponsive, and doctors soon realized why: His neck was broken. So were two of his ribs. He had a severe brain injury (which, an autopsy showed, was the actual cause of his death), retinal hemorrhages and about 70 whip marks on his legs, buttocks, back and chest. Little Ryshawn was pronounced dead at 10:15 a.m. When speaking with the police, Isaac Bynum initially said the injuries ...
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Thank You, Bill Cosby, For Saying the Right Thing at the Right Time, by Lisa Fritsch

New Visions Commentary /
There are many reasons to thank Bill Cosby. First, there is his success as the first black comedian to tap into the creative and educational aspect of animation. His Fat Albert television show (soon to be a live-action movie), where he belted out "hey, hey, hey," conjures up fond memories of a larger-than-life cartoon about life lessons, educational esteem and camaraderie among friends. He also deserves thanks for pioneering America's first intellectual look into the lives of an upwardly mobile and traditional black family. Arguably the most popular sit-com ever, The Cosby Show was a breakthrough in American television. It ...
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It’s Not About Kerry-Edwards – It’s All About Beat Bush, by Murdock “Doc” Gibbs

New Visions Commentary /
One of the most amusing and interesting observations regarding the upcoming presidential election is that it pits the incumbent against the uninteresting. Let's face it. Where is the real groundswell of excitement, adoration and support for John Kerry and John Edwards? I believe Democrats are going to be voting Democratic regardless of the candidate. As uninteresting as Kerry is, it seems that Democrats will be walking lockstep to vote their party ticket whether it is Kerry or anyone else -- as long as the nominee is leftist/liberal. How else can you explain the ho-hum responses of most liberal blacks (a ...
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Anti-SUV Activists Versus the American Family, by Matthew Craig

New Visions Commentary /
  When you get behind the wheel of your SUV or minivan, do you automatically become a member of a hate group? According to the radicals now dominating the environmental movement, driving one of these vehicles proves you hate the planet. To the contrary, SUV and minivan owners are often law-abiding American families that are simply obeying the law. While the owners of compact and hybrid cars can smugly believe they are saving the world and saving money at the gas pump, their choice of vehicle is not for everyone. SUV-haters fail to understand the needs of the average American ...
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Whose Victory? One Year Later, Affirmative Action Ruling Solves Little, by Tom Florip

New Visions Commentary /
Last June marked the first anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court's Grutter v. Bollinger decision, which upheld the use of racial preferences at the University of Michigan (U-M) but struck down an "admission points" system quantifying those preferences. U-M President Mary Sue Coleman called it a victory for that ever-trusty buzzword "diversity," and speculated that the ruling "will go down in history as among the great landmark decisions of the Supreme Court." Maybe so, but it's not turning out to be the type of landmark President Coleman had in mind. Grutter v. Bollinger is neither a symbol of equality nor ...
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A Low-Down, Dirty Shame, by Kimberley Jane Wilson

New Visions Commentary /
R&B star Usher (no full name for Usher Raymond IV, please, he's a celebrity) used to be a really cute kid. He danced a little, acted a little and projected an overall charming persona. His songs were inoffensive. Most of his music was a hip-hop version of bubblegum pop. Usher's all grown up now, and it's not pretty. His new album, "Confessions," is a commercial success and has received praise from fans and critics alike. The concept is quite simple. It's a sometimes-torrid look into a young man's personal life. It offers moody slow songs and shake-what-you-have-in-the-club songs. It seems ...
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Whoopi Goldberg’s Despicable Performance, by Mychal Massie

New Visions Commentary /
"Values is not part of a political slogan. Values are what's inside you." With that comment, presidential hopeful John Kerry launched into another diatribe about what sets him apart from President George W. Bush. No one's ever accused Kerry of being the brightest bulb in the box, but one would think him politically savvy enough to reconsider his values in the aftermath of his recent Radio City Music Hall fundraiser featuring comedienne Whoopi Goldberg. In that case, it seemed to be hubris before intelligence. In front of an ardently liberal crowd, Goldberg spewed forth vulgar, sexually-explicit comparisons between the President ...
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Time for Regime Change at the NAACP, by Ak’Bar Shabazz

New Visions Commentary /
After hearing Julian Bond and Kweisi Mfume trash President George W. Bush and black conservatives, it's painfully apparent what has become of the NAACP. A once-proud organization has been reduced to simple slander and rhetoric. The leadership that once produced American greats like Thurgood Marshall and WEB Dubois now seems diminished to a mouthpiece for the Democratic Party. The NAACP no longer appears focused on the advancement of the African-American community. It now acts as if its chief concern is electing liberals and maintaining its perceived influence. Ideas that founded the organization look to be replaced by the partisan pursuit ...
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One Righteous Dis: Bush Right to Turn Down NAACP, by Deroy Murdock

New Visions Commentary /
Liberal bellies are aching over President George W. Bush's absence from the Philadelphia convention of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Citing scheduling conflicts, the White House sent the president's regrets. As journalists have explained in grave and slightly damning tones, Bush is the first president since Warren Harding not to address the NAACP. The insinuation is that Bush's no-show before America's oldest and largest civil-rights group reflects his neglect of, if not disdain for, black Americans. No one should be surprised, however, to see Bush toss the NAACP's invitation into the trash. That's exactly where ...
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Spurring Lower Prices: FDA Aided America’s Rx Drug Consumers By Not Banning Authorized Generics

New Visions Commentary /
For years, generic drug manufacturers have been telling us that making more generic drugs available - earlier - is the key to saving consumers money and bringing greater access to prescription drugs. Competition, they said, will benefit millions of Americans because prices for prescription medications will drop if consumers have access to more generic versions of the medicines research pharmaceutical companies discover and develop. But now generic manufacturers are backpedaling on the issue and, like Goldilocks' selfish search for something to suit her "just right," the generic industry is rejecting the very competition they once told us was the Holy ...
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Bill Cosby, You Say the Darndest Things, by Kevin Martin and Tom Florip

New Visions Commentary /
Dr. Huxtable gave an unwelcome second opinion at a recent gala marking the 50th anniversary of the Brown v. Board of Education school desegregation decision. As he rose to address the crowd at Howard University, scarcely anyone expected Bill Cosby to deliver a scathing - albeit comical - rebuke of the state of black America. For speaking his mind, Cosby may have his ghetto pass revoked. He has a target on his back. Complaining about education in black households, Cosby said, "These people are not parenting. They are buying things for kids - $500 sneakers, for what? And [they] won't ...
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Marcus Dixon: A Small Example of a Greater Problem, by Lisa Fritsch

New Visions Commentary /
Is it possible to measure the political benefits and social impacts of winning the Cold War? The War on Terror? President Ronald Reagan was never given due credit by his liberal peers for winning this psychological - and sometimes physical - war. They were against his defiant stances. They suggested disarming. Americans and others worldwide now benefit because of his persistence. It's impossible to estimate the economic, political and social damage the world may have witnessed if he listened to the pessimists. President George W. Bush's challenge now is similar. The overthrow and capture of Saddam Hussein provides yet untold ...
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Thanking Bush for His Leadership, by Ak’Bar Shabazz

New Visions Commentary /
Is it possible to measure the political benefits and social impacts of winning the Cold War? The War on Terror? President Ronald Reagan was never given due credit by his liberal peers for winning this psychological - and sometimes physical - war. They were against his defiant stances. They suggested disarming. Americans and others worldwide now benefit because of his persistence. It's impossible to estimate the economic, political and social damage the world may have witnessed if he listened to the pessimists. President George W. Bush's challenge now is similar. The overthrow and capture of Saddam Hussein provides yet untold ...
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Some of My Best Friends are Black: A Business Proposal, by Kevin Martin

New Visions Commentary /
Earlier this year, Al Sharpton beat up on Howard Dean during a presidential primary debate about the lack of blacks and Hispanics in Dean's cabinet when he was governor of Vermont. More recently, John Kerry has been criticized for not having enough diversity in his campaign. It all gave me the idea for a great new business opportunity. In Dean's case, he had to admit that his administration (like the Clinton White House) had a distinct lack of minorities in its inner circle. This isn't the reason Dean went on to lose every presidential primary (with the exception of the ...
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AARP’S Campaign to Import Uncertified Drugs Poses Hazards to Seniors’ Health and Budgets, by Ak’Bar Shabazz

New Visions Commentary /
The Medicare reform legislation passed by Congress last fall brought more affordable prescription medicines to 42 million elderly and disabled beneficiaries, and AARP supported it. Now, it turns out, the aggressive seniors' mar-keting lobby had an ulterior motive. While the ink from the President's signature on the bill is still drying, AARP's leadership has mounted a campaign that can upset long-term access to affordable medicines, not only for Medicare patients but all who depend on prescription drugs to treat disease and illness. AARP is urging Washington's lawmakers to legalize drug re-importation into the United States from Canada as well as ...
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Reverend Al’s Campaign: When Sequels Go Bad, by Kimberley Jane Wilson

New Visions Commentary /
With few exceptions, sequels are never as good as the original. That's true in movies, books and - as Al Sharpton shows us - in politics. When Sharpton first began running for president, no political commentator considered him a serious contender. Many thought Sharpton was really trying to be seen as the second coming of Jesse Jackson, and this was his bid to emerge as the most powerful civil rights figure in America. It didn't work out that way, and now the Sharpton campaign is over and saddled with $600,000 in debt. When Jesse Jackson ran in 1988, he won ...
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Selected Project 21 Media Appearances

Project 21

Opportunity to Join

Help promote the diversity of opinion in black American community. Make the 21st century a time when character transcends race, and where open and honest debate flourishes.

Please complete this form to begin the process of becoming a member of the Project 21 black leadership network.

By clicking here, I agree to serve as a member of the Advisory Board of Project 21 - a program of the National Center for Public Policy Research. I understand membership does not imply agreement with all statements and views of all Project 21 members or the organization. I understand membership does not imply I am accepting any financial or other responsibility related to the success of Project 21 or the National Center. I understand that the National Center is a 501(c)(3) organization that does not seek to influence opinions on candidates or political parties, and I will abide by this rule as a member of the Project 21 Advisory Board. As Project 21 exists to examine new approaches and ideas and promote discussion of them, all participants in its programs - including formal publications and media appearances - must, of necessity, speak at all times on their own behalf. No endorsement by members of the Project 21 Advisory Council, other program participants or the National Center for Public Policy Research is implied.

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The National Center for Public Policy Research is a communications and research foundation supportive of a strong national defense and dedicated to providing free market solutions to today’s public policy problems. We believe that the principles of a free market, individual liberty and personal responsibility provide the greatest hope for meeting the challenges facing America in the 21st century.