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LATEST NEWS FROM PROJECT 21

Biden Needs to Get Ruff With China on Pet Safety

Biden Needs to Get Ruff With China on Pet Safety

ConservativeBlog.org /
“Now China’s coming for our pets.” That’s the warning that National Center Senior Fellow Horace Cooper spells out in a Newsmax commentary about the threat ...
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Supreme Court

Racial Disparities Don’t Prove Discrimination

Press Release /
Supreme Court Case Could Impact Election Integrity Challenges Washington, D.C. – As part of an important voting rights case being considered today by the U.S ...
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Cuban Bans Anthem in Latest Appeal to Woke Mob

Cuban Bans Anthem in Latest Appeal to Woke Mob

ConservativeBlog.org /
Playing the national anthem at professional sports events wasn’t very controversial until Colin Kaepernick took a knee in 2016. While this form of protest has ...
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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

Supreme Court Immigration Ruling Applauded by Project 21’s Emery McClendon

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - Project 21 member and Indiana Tea Party organizer Emery McClendon has the following statement about President Obama's loss in a critical immigration case that was handed down by the U.S. Supreme Court today: As one who followed the Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents, or DACA, case closely, and a person that participated in a press conference outside of the U.S. Supreme Court on the day of the oral arguments, I am happy for this outcome. It would have been better if they had agreed with the lower court, but the matter should ...
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Juneteenth — America’s Celebration of the End of Slavery — to be Celebrated Sunday, June 19

Press Release /
Project 21 Joins Those Calling for the Appreciation of and Continued Advancement of Freedom Obama White House Strangely Silent for Eighth Year, Despite Calls that it Issue Some Form of a Commemorative Proclamation for Juneteenth, Joining 43 States and the Bush White House Washington, D.C. - Sunday, June 19, marks "Juneteenth," the anniversary of the arrival of Union soldiers in Galveston, Texas on June 19, 1865, who carried with them the news that the Civil War was over and that slavery had been abolished by President Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation two-and-a-half years earlier. According to the National Juneteenth Observance Foundation, ...
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‘Roots’ Rebroadcast Stokes Memories in Project 21 Members, Friends

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - Members of the Project 21 national leadership network are commenting on the History Channel's multi-day reboot of the epic miniseries "Roots," based on a novel by Alex Haley, that began Memorial Day. The original 1977 broadcast of "Roots" was a phenomenon. At least 130 million Americans watched at least part of the original broadcast, at a time when the national population was just 220 million. Even more impressively, seven of its eight episodes were among the top ten TV broadcasts of all time up until then. Many Project 21 members and their colleagues were among them. "'Roots' ...
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Obama Locker Room Edict Condemned by Black Conservatives

Press Release /
"Attaching this insanity to the legacy of civil rights… trivializes everything the brave men and women experienced and sacrificed in the pursuit of social, economic and legal equality…" "Civil rights champions were not spat upon, beaten with police batons and sometimes murdered for the right of men to go to the same restroom with little girls…" "Why is there such a rush to strip away the innocence of American children?" "As a Christian conservative, Black clergyman, I am deeply offended…" "The idea that a mentally ill person should assume the mantle of civil rights so hard-fought and won by black ...
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Project 21 Black Leadership Network Statement on Savage, Senseless Attack on Houston Deputy Constable

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - The following is a statement by Project 21 founding member Council Nedd II on the ambush attack on Harris County Deputy Constable Alden Clopton late last night: I am appalled at the senseless willingness to harm and to risk loss of life. I am especially appalled when a sworn peace officer is wantonly shot in the back, for no other reason than wanting to serve his community. It's bad enough when officers are killed or injured responding to the commission of a crime or during an investigation, but to be shot in the back as Alden Clopton ...
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Wendy Bell Firing from WTAE-TV in Pittsburgh Criticized by Black Leaders

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - Spokesmen for the national black leadership group Project 21 are critical of WTAE-TV in Pittsburgh for firing anchor Wendy Bell for comments about a March 9 multiple murder in the Pittsburgh suburb of Wilkinsburg. Bell wrote, in part: ...There's no nice words to write when a coward holding an AK-47 hoses down a family and their friends sharing laughs and a mild evening on a back porch in Wilkinsburg. There's no kind words when 6 people are murdered. When their children have to hide for cover and then emerge from the frightened shadows to find their mother's ...
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Project 21 Black Leaders Condemn Obama Trip to Cuba

Press Release /
"Communism has never worked, can never work and... must be challenged" "Why is the President cozying up to killers?" "This president... has pole-vaulted over America's territory of Puerto Rico, which is dying on the economic vine, to play kissy-face with the Castros" "Cuba gets legitimacy and currency while America gets empty promises" "Castro turned on us; not us on them" "Mr. Obama should think before he acts" "Many members of the Obama Administration are making excuses for this bastion of institutional racism" Washington, D.C. - Members of the Project 21 black leadership network are issuing strong statements of condemnation about ...
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Project 21 Black Leadership Network Statement on President Obama’s U.S. Supreme Court Vacancy Announcement

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - The following is a statement by Project 21 Co-Chairman Horace Cooper on President Obama's nomination of a candidate to fill the vacancy on the U.S. Supreme Court: The White House believes it can hide behind the notion that the U.S. Senate should "do its duty" and act on his nominee. Perhaps if the President had done his duty to "preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States," he would have a case. Having undermined and disregarded the Constitution (including holding the dubious distinction of being the modern President with the most unanimous losses before the ...
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Congressional Black Caucus: Don’t Tell Us Black Lives Matter!

Press Release /
Black Lawmakers Group May Seek Sanction of Congressman for Ruing High Abortion Rate in Black Community Lawmaker Sean Duffy's Remarks Expressing Concern About Lives of Black Babies Called "Insensitive" and "Disgusting" by CBC Members Washington, D.C. - Members of the Project 21 black leadership network are rising to the defense of Wisconsin Republican Congressman Sean Duffy, who is under fire from the Congressional Black Caucus for remarks on the House floor expressing concern about the high abortion rate in the black community. As reported by The Hill, this is what Duffy said: Duffy during a House floor speech cited statistics ...
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Black Conservatives Critical of Obama’s State of the Union Address

Press Release /
Puffy, Partisan Speech Further Mires President's Lamentable Legacy "You Can't Put Enough Lipstick on This Pig of His to Make It Look Pretty" Washington, D.C. - Members of the Project 21 black leadership network are commenting on - and available for interviews about - President Barack Obama's final State of the Union Address. While starting out talking about alleged areas for potential bipartisan accomplishment, the agenda President Obama quickly pivoted to and championed throughout the rest of his speech to Congress encompassed a big-government agenda he has always sought to enact with or without the support of elected lawmakers - ...
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Project 21 Founding Member Bishop Council Nedd II to be Sworn in as Pennsylvania State Constable on January 4

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - Project 21 founding member Bishop Council Nedd II, rector of St. Alban's Anglican Church in Pine Grove Mills, PA, will be sworn in as a Pennsylvania State Constable on January 4. "I'm excited about this new endeavor," says Bishop Nedd. "I come from a family of law enforcement officers, so law enforcement is a vocation that has always been near and dear to my heart. However, my father, uncles and brother never wanted me to go into the family business. They wanted me to become an attorney. I've always tried to set my own path, so I ...
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Today’s Contentious Supreme Court Debate on Affirmative Action Draws Comments from Black Conservative Leaders

Press Release /
Ending Affirmative Action is Important Because It Does Four Negative Things, Says Derryck Green There is Still a Very Real Concern About Academic Mismatches, Says Bishop Council Nedd II Washington, D.C. - Leaders of the Project 21 black leadership network are commenting on today's oral arguments in the U.S. Supreme Court over Fisher v. University of Texas, a key affirmative action case. With the Pacific Legal Foundation and others, Project 21 submitted in September an amicus brief to the Supreme Court in the case, and has twice before submitted friend of the court briefs in Fisher (here and here). It's ...
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Black Conservatives Comment on Obama’s Terrorism Address

Press Release /
Call Speech "Least Inspiring Presidential Speech Ever," Say President Failed to Instill Confidence in Already-Suspect Policy "Passion is No Excuse for a Failure of Leadership" Washington, D.C. - Members of the Project 21 black leadership network are commenting on and available for interviews about President Barack Obama's address to the nation on terrorism and his agenda for dealing with this threat to American citizens and other western nations. "President Obama gave what might have been the least inspiring presidential speech ever," said Project 21's Council Nedd, an Anglican bishop with strong ties in the Middle East who is also an ...
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Project 21 Members Issue Statements in Response to Resignation of University of Missouri President Tim Wolfe

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - Project 21's Stacy Washington and Horace Cooper have issued statements addressing the resignation of University of Missouri President Tim Wolfe today in light of student and faculty protests over racial issues on the campus. Said Stacy Washington, a Project 21 member and talk show host on 97.1 FM News Talk KFTK in St. Louis, Missouri: The purveyors of Political Correctness have won again. It's a shallow victory for so-called "striking" college football players to achieve the resignation of the President of the University of Missouri. It's clear that this move was partially motivated by the potential loss ...
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Affirmative Action Returns to the U.S. Supreme Court; Black Conservatives Join Supreme Court Legal Brief Demanding End to Race-Based University Admissions

Press Release /
Schools Accused of Trampling Constitution for Politically-Correct Diversity Goals U.S. Supreme Court to Hear Same Racial Preferences Case Twice in Almost Two Years Washington, D.C. - Project 21, a leader in the promotion of black conservative public policy opinion and activism, has joined a new legal brief to the U.S. Supreme Court opposing racial preferences in school admissions. Project 21 joined an amicus curiae ("friend of the court") legal brief written by the Pacific Legal Foundation and also joined by the Center for Equal Opportunity, American Civil Rights Institute and National Association of Scholars in the case of Abigail Noel ...
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Are Spurious Claims of Police Racism Fueling Ideological Attacks Upon Whites by People With Troubled Psyches?

Press Release /
In Light of Virginia Journalist Killings, Project 21's Joe Hicks Fears People with Mental Psychosis and Other Brain Disorders are Responding Dangerously to the Re-Birth of Militant Black Protests Washington, D.C. - "Did the ideology of black racial victimization play a role in the murder of a white Virginia TV news reporter and her cameraman?" asks Joe Hicks, a political commentator and member of Project 21. "When Dylann Roof walked into Charleston's historic Emanuel African Methodist Church and shot down nine black members of a Bible study group his actions were not informed by organized, active white supremacist groups - ...
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Mr. President, Don’t Use the 50th Anniversary of the Voting Rights Act to Divide Americans

Press Release /
Celebrate the Achievement, Black Leadership Group Says Washington, D.C. - Members of the Project 21 black leadership network are hitting back against President Barack Obama's use of the 50th anniversary of the Voting Rights Act to divide Americans from one another and to promote a political agenda. The Voting Rights Act anniversary is a time for celebration, say Project 21 members, who say it was inappropriate for the President to use his speech noting the occasion to falsely accuse his political rivals of "deliberately making it harder for people to vote" and of intentionally passing "laws that aim at disenfranchising ...
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Ban Federal Funding for Planned Parenthood, Say Members of the Black Leadership Network Project 21

Press Release /
S. 1881, Senator Joni Ernst's Bill to Do Exactly That, to be Voted on Shortly Washington, D.C. - Members of the Project 21 black leadership network are joining calls for passage of S. 1881, a bill to prohibit federal funding of Planned Parenthood, sponsored by Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA). The legislation, which would ban federal grants and Medicaid reimbursement payments to Planned Parenthood, but keep overall funding levels for womens' health care services the same, will be voted upon in the U.S. Senate at approximately 5:30 PM on Monday, August 3.(1) Project 21 members say: Dr. Day Gardner: It is ...
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The Law Should Not Treat Bill Cosby Differently Because He Gave a Speech

Press Release /
Members of Black Leadership Group Say U.S. District Court Judge Was Wrong to Release Transcript of Deposition in a Cosby Civil Case Explicitly Because Cosby Gave a 2005 Speech Telling Young Black Parents to do a Better Job Raising Their Children Washington, D.C. - Members of the Project 21 black conservative leadership network are weighing in following news that documents in a civil case related to allegations that Bill Cosby molested a Temple University employee were made public by a U.S. district court judge specifically because Dr. Cosby has publicly criticized the way many black parents rear their children. "I'm ...
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Black Conservatives React to U.S. Supreme Court Decision for Use of “Disparate Impact” in Administration of Fair Housing Act

Press Release /
Washington, D.C. - Legal and policy experts with the Project 21 black leadership network are available for comment on today's U.S. Supreme Court decision that allows perceived group racial disparities to be used as a trigger for enforcement of the Fair Housing Act. "When those statistical differences alone are used as proof of discrimination, freedom and liberty are lost; but worse the constitutional protections provided to every American as an individual are lost too," said Project 21 co-chairman Horace Cooper, a legal commentator who taught constitutional law at George Mason University and is a former leadership staff member for the ...
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New Visions Commentary

The Political Price Tag on Miss America’s Tiara, by Day Gardner

New Visions Commentary /
Forty years ago, I helped black girls become more accepted as the “girl next door” as a Miss America contestant. After seeing this year’s pageant, I fear a Pandora’s box of politics has been opened. It risks making an institution that has helped empower women for almost 100 years irrelevant and further polarize our society. Miss America featured black contestants since 1971, but television audiences only saw fleeting glimpses of them until I advanced to the semifinals as Miss Delaware in 1977 pageant. It was an honor to do so, but my journey was challenging. Racial animosity dogged my progress, ...
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Are White Voters Smarter Than African-American Voters? by Stacy Swimp

New Visions Commentary /
The U.S. Supreme Court recently ruled to restore a Michigan law that bans straight-ticket voting. Two of the Justices dissented, concluding that state officials should be permitted to enforce the ban in the November 2016 election. Straight-ticket voting is a policy which says that voters are permitted to select a party's entire slate with a single notation. Straight-ticket voting has been in effect in Michigan since 1891. The ban on straight-ticket voting would have required voters to cast votes for individual candidates. At first glance, one might think, "if it isn't broke, why fix it?" Or perhaps it might appear, ...
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A Woman on the $20 Bill? Make Her an Entrepreneur

New Visions Commentary /
There's a campaign underway to remove President Andrew Jackson's face from the $20 bill and replace it with a woman as a way of "promoting gender equality." The group Women on 20s wants Jackson's portrait removed in time for the 2020 centennial of the 19th Amendment, which gave women the right to vote. They also, of course, want to "make our money more egalitarian, inclusive and an affirmation of American values." This group, however, doesn't just want any woman. They want a woman of their own choosing. They will send President Barack Obama the specific woman they think should grace ...
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Audit the Fed, but Be Careful Who Gets That Power, by Hughey Newsome

New Visions Commentary /
Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) is leading 30 other senators in legislation to "audit the Fed." The Federal Reserve, America's central bank, sets monetary policy and oversees financial institutions. Senator Paul's bill would make the institution more transparent by allowing an auditor to report to Congress about its deliberations. Representative Thomas Massie (R-KY) introduced similar legislation in the U.S. House of Representatives. This is a cause Senator Paul and his father, former congressman and presidential candidate Ron Paul, have long championed. It would place a check on the independence of a powerful, yet largely unknown, institution. Reining in the Fed is ...
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Uber Fights Cab Discrimination, by Gianno Caldwell

New Visions Commentary /
There was a time when actor Danny Glover made national news because, as a black man, he said he couldn't get a cab to stop for him. That was before the Uber ridesharing service that is now challenging the cab industry — and winning when it comes to service. I understood Glover's situation. As a black man going to school and working in downtown Chicago while living in the South Side, I relied on public transportation because it was nearly impossible to get a cab to go into my predominantly black neighborhood. There was one time when I left school ...
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Hands Off: Don’t Raid Your Retirement Accounts! by Fred Banyon

New Visions Commentary /
After the Great Recession of 2008, an unpleasant phenomena resurfaced. Because of financial distress from the recession, a large number of Americans began tapping into their secured retirement savings. African-Americans and Hispanics were the groups that dipped into these sacred instruments the most. According to a 2012 study by Ariel Investments and AON Hewitt, African-American employees took these "hardship withdrawals" more than any other ethnic group. Fully, 8.8 percent of African-Americans took hardship withdrawals in 2010 as compared to 3.2 percent of Hispanics, 1.7 percent of whites and just 1.2 percent of Asian workers. Because these assets are designed for ...
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Obama Immigration Policy Questions His Commitment to Making Black Lives Matter, by Ted Hayes

New Visions Commentary /
In a nation of immigrants, do black lives matter? Apparently not, because black lives are effectively being ethno-racially cleansed from American society by an illegal alien invasion and a growing occupation of our neighborhoods. How? Black America is being challenged by what's been dubbed by its supporters as "comprehensive immigration reform." It is routinely suggested by U.S. presidents, other politicians and even leaders of the black establishment that America is a nation of immigrants. Not all of us are truly immigrants! That sentiment is misleading and wrong because it ignores the fact that so many blacks are not the successors ...
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Obama’s Economy Is Only Successful If Success Is Redefined, by Derryck Green

New Visions Commentary /
When it comes to the American economy, there is little success to celebrate unless success is defined downward. Under President Obama, the economic success that's being celebrated essentially papers over the pain of millions of struggling Americans. Obama devoted a significant portion of his uninspiring State of the Union address in January to his alleged desire to revive "middle class economics." It's seemingly nothing more than a continuation of his class warfare campaign rhetoric that pushes wealth redistribution in lieu of actual job creation and stability. Proof of Obama's lack of a real economic plan can be seen in his ...
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Fiscal Literacy Needed to Avoid Poverty Traps, by Fred Banyon

New Visions Commentary /
In Arizona, the governor recently signed legislation requiring that high school students pass a civics exam before they graduate. It's the same test the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service gives to prospective citizens. As one state senator explained, "a minimal understanding of American civics is of real value." Don't stop there! Students in Arizona and everywhere also should meet a financial literacy requirement. We have graduates who cannot balance a checkbook and don't realize the power of saving. To some, it's more important to have nice stuff than prepare for the future. A survey commissioned by Bankrate found more than ...
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Obama Should Work with the New Congress to Reinstate the Clinton-GOP Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act of 1996, by Gianno Caldwell

New Visions Commentary /
After 50 years of America's "War on Poverty" yielding little progress at much expense, how can we more effectively provide opportunity for our least fortunate brothers and sisters? In 1996, with a divided government similar to what we have now, a Republican Congress and President Bill Clinton created and signed the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act. It reformed traditional welfare by linking government benefits to recipients performing regular work or community service jobs. It also provided federal funding to the states for child care benefits for working parents and some medical coverage, and it permitted states flexibility in designing ...
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Low Gas Prices Could Ultimately Hurt U.S. Economy, by Fred Banyon

New Visions Commentary /
Although the prices at the pump are nice these days, the cost of oil should probably be a little bit higher. Sorry. There's celebration because the Dow Jones Industrial Average recently reached a new high of over 18,000, but some stock market experts think the market is long overdue for a correction. This should be cause for concern, but not panic or reason for an outright exodus of equities. For one thing, there's historical precedent. An Oppenheimer Funds study has shown that, on average, there have been two "bear markets" per decade. A bear market happens when there is a ...
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The “Black Lives Matter” Slogan Ignores Self-Destructive Behavior, by Derryck Green

New Visions Commentary /
"Black Lives Matter" is a great slogan. As a black man, I agree that black lives matter just as much as the lives of any of our racial counterparts. But chanting, marching and hashtag activism isn't going to work unless we also are willing to see the big-picture problems affecting black America. Here's a hint: making black lives matter has little to do with institutional racism, white privilege and white cops. One website organizing people pushing "black lives matter" calls it "a slogan under which black people can unite to end state sanctioned violence both in Ferguson, but also across ...
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To Improve Race Relations, Don’t Suppress Your Race, by Stacy Washington

New Visions Commentary /
Writers at Salon.com are a very unhappy bunch. Salon features articles about how depressing it is to be an American, how much life sucks for various victim groups and how everyone on the right side of the ideological spectrum is a liar. You get my drift. So I wasn't shocked to see a piece by Priscilla Ward talking about suppressing herself to please white people. Being the braver sort, I dove in — ready to be enthralled by her tales of liberal woe. It actually wasn't fun reading about Ward's angst-laden days and insistence upon sustaining a double life. Her ...
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Blacks’ “Wartime” Mentality Disregarding Opportunity Makes Them Their Own Worst Enemy, by Christopher Arps

New Visions Commentary /
Noted author and intellectual Shelby Steele, a black conservative, once wrote: "It is time for blacks to begin the shift from a wartime to a peacetime identity, from fighting for opportunity to the seizing of it." It's true. And even though blacks still seem to suffer disproportionately, we now have the opportunity to remedy our problems in ways never before possible. We need to open our minds. When black people fought deep-seated racism and Jim Crow laws that made it next to impossible for most of us to have any real sort of upward mobility in America, groupthink and group ...
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Important Questions and a Few Easy Steps to Stop an American Ebola Outbreak, by Kevin L. Martin

New Visions Commentary /
In fighting Ebola, President Obama has repeated his strategy from the Libyan revolution and is leading from behind. As public anxiety spiked at a fever pitch, the President and his staff made pronouncements and took actions leaving more questions than answers. It's no way to address a potentially growing threat to public health. There's good reason to be concerned, as the White House seems incompetent — or, at least, detached — when it comes to preserving public wellbeing. It's time for real answers. It may not be comfortable or good political optics, but lingering questions may cost lives. First off, ...
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How to Make Media Coverage of Race a Force for Unity, by Hughey Newsome

New Visions Commentary /
Like most Americans, I anxiously awaited the decision of the Ferguson grand jury. My concern was not about how the grand jury tasked with assessing the case against Officer Darren Wilson might rule. I trusted it to act fairly in dealing with the death of Michael Brown. My concern lies with the way the media conducts itself. During the civil rights era, the media played a critical and beneficial role. The media allowed Americans in the North to see firsthand the atrocities committed against African-Americans in the South. Media coverage helped generate the emotion needed and help stiffen resolve to ...
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Eric Garner Was Killed by New York Tax Collectors, by Shelby Emmett

New Visions Commentary /
Some of the greatest people in my life are black men. All of these great black men are heroes to me in some way. They are amazing fathers and hard workers whose work goes unheralded. These black men are my shoulders to cry on. They are a helping hand. They include big brothers and former boyfriends. They are BFFs and study buddies. They are classmates and soulmates. Most of these black men in my life — these heroes — have been stopped by police for dubious reasons. And all were frustrated with the obvious outrageousness of the situations. They have ...
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Hey Ferguson, Is Anyone Listening? by Wayne Dupree

New Visions Commentary /
Charles Barkley has come under fire in the liberal mainstream media (MSM) for calling the Ferguson rioters "scumbags." These are the rioters who looted and burned approximately 20 buildings in Ferguson, crippling small businesses and causing yet-unknown financial damages. I don't want to diminish Mr. Barkley's characterization of the rioters because I've made similar characterizations. But the Berkeley interview, in its entirety, was a thoughtful and reasoned approach on the Ferguson verdict as well as his strong feelings about black culture and issues within the black community. Anyone who didn't take the time to watch didn't hear Barkley's thoughtful perspectives ...
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How Liberals Use the False Myth of Voter Suppression to Rally Support – But at the Expense of Better Race Relations, by Hughey Newsome

New Visions Commentary /
In interviews before the midterm elections, NAACP President Cornell William Brooks appeared on news programs to warn, as he did on MSNBC, "this is the first election in a generation where the American electorate is unprotected by the Voting Rights Act." Brooks is not accurate: the Voting Rights Act remains powerful and in effect; only a small portion of the Act, Section 4(b), was struck down last year. What's more, when he asserts that the Act was "gutted," his words imply there is a conspiracy to neuter African-American voters by requiring IDs to vote and rolling back conveniences African-Americans disproportionately ...
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Big Government’s War on Homeless Reveals Need for Compassionate Conservatism, by Archbishop Council Nedd II

New Visions Commentary /
When did big government begin taking food out of the mouths of the homeless? That's happening now. The do-gooder welfare state and the regulatory state have gone to war with one another, and the casualties are America's homeless. It's the dark side of nanny-state liberalism. In Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, a 90-year-old World War II veteran could go to jail for feeding the homeless. To control allegedly expanding homelessness, officials in that city enacted new laws last October discouraging public acts of charity. For "Chef Arnold" Abbott, who has fed the homeless on a weekly basis for 23 years, the fact ...
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