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Black Leaders Sound Off on the Death of Dr. Ronald Walters

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I woke up today to find that the sun would shine a little bit less brightly than it did the day before. The first email I read was one telling me that Ronald Walters, a noted black Political Scientist at The University of Maryland, had died. He was 72 years old.

Dr. Walters was the director of the African American Leadership Institute. He was also the Campaign Manager for the presidential run of Rev. Jesse Jackson in 1984. I knew Ron as a mentor and friend. He was also on the faculty here at Syracuse University at one point in his career, long before my own. He was one of the most respectable and accomplished black scholars I've ever met, and he was appreciated by nearly everyone. His advice on leadership, activism and black empowerment was second to none.


I reached out to a few friends to get their takes on Professor Walters and many of them were very happy to reply. They were saddened to see the end of Ron's life and career, but most of them understood the urgency of continuing his meaningful work. I haven't been able to catch up with Rev. Jesse Jackson yet, but I'll be on his show Sunday morning. Ron and I have been on Rev. Jackson's show together in the past, and few people were impacted more by Dr. Walters than Rev. Jackson himself.

NAACP President Ben Jealous had this to say:

"I first met Ron when I was 20 and had just been suspended from college for leading campus protests. He sat me down and explained how to build real power for people who others thought permanently powerless. Those lessons guided my life's work for almost 20 years."

Congressional Black Caucus Chairwoman Barbara Lee said this:


"Professor Walters was a scholarly giant and was one of America's most insightful analysts of the political landscape, in general, and of the intersection of race, politics and policy, specifically. His scholarly work and sound advice, have assisted many past and present members of the Congressional Black Caucus, and other African American political and civic leaders around the country."


Noted Georgetown University Professor Michael Eric Dyson had this to say about Ronald Walters:

"Professor Walters embodied the noble legacy of fierce intellectual warriors who combat oppression and battle injustice with their pen and voice. His analyses of the political and social plight of black America, and his lucid, eloquent defense of the vulnerable and often forgotten black working classes and the poor, stand as hallmarks of a remarkable and influential vocation. Ron Walters was one of the great intellectual activists and political scientists of our times."

Duke University Professor Mark Anthony Neal said this:

"Walters was a giant, who continued to toil at an HBCU until late in his career, when so many others were swayed by the glamour of white elite institutions."

Former Green Party Presidential Candidate Cynthia McKinney said:

"This country has lost what it can ill afford - an intellectual giant."

Dr. Peniel Joseph, a Black Political Scholar at Brandeis University, said:

"Dr. Ron Walters was one of the most important political scientists and scholars of his generation, whose prodigious corpus of work cast a strobe-light on racial, political and economic inequalities that impact African Americans both domestically and internationally. Equally important, Dr. Walters was a scholar-activist in the Du Boisian tradition of linking scholarship to advancement of social and political struggle."

Nationally-syndicated radio show host and attorney Warren Ballentine said:

"Ron was the reason so many in my generation had a knowledge of African American politics that was and is so vital to us having a voice in America. We lost a giant."

Gary Flowers of the Black Leadership Forum:

"Dr. Walters was a gentleman, scholar and a prolific political scientist. As a scientist, he not only observed politics, but transformed politics. Dr. Walters was the political engine that powered political campaigns, most notably that of Rev. Jesse Jackson, Sr. He spoke truth to power."

There is no replacing Dr. Ronald Walters. I can't think of a more significant figure in the field of Black Political Science. He was also a good human being. I recall speaking to him at a speaking engagement we did together, and he talked to me like I was his own son. He expressed the importance of young black scholars continuing the legacy of social justice and fighting to do what is right. I will never forget him, and his words will impact me forever. Ronald Walters, may you rest in peace.



Dr. Boyce Watkins is the founder of the Your Black World Coalition and a Scholarship in Action Resident of the Institute for Black Public Policy. To have Dr. Boyce commentary delivered to your email, please click here.

 

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Kanye West Stays Drama-Free at 2010 MTV Video Music Awards

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The 27th annual MTV Video Music Awards had big shoes to fill. Last year, the show was filled with surprising moments such as Kanye West infamously interrupting Taylor Swift's acceptance speech and then Lil' Mama jumping on stage in the middle of Alicia Keys and Jay-Z's performance of 'Empire State of Mind.'

This year, Eminem opened the show with his single 'Not Afraid,' and although Rihanna previously told MTV she wouldn't be able to perform their song, 'Love The Way You Lie,' the Barbados native sported her new red hair for the opening performance clad in a white tutu number.

Teen pop star Justin Bieber rocked an outside performance with tons of screaming fans right before his mentor, Usher, sang 'OMG' and 'DJ Got Us Fallin in Love.'

Drake made his first VMA performance with a remix of 'Fancy,' alongside Mary J. Blige and Swizz Beats.

Grand Hustle newcomer B.o.B. performed his single, 'Airplanes,' with Haylee Williams of Paramour. And Bruno Mars joined him for 'Nothin' on You.'

In a surprise appearance, Cher, who is promoting her upcoming 'Burlesque' film, presented Lady Gaga with video of the year honors for 'Bad Romance'

But the night's highlight was Kanye's return to the VMAs to close out the show with his new song 'Runaway' featuring The Clipse MC Pusha T. Since his infamous VMA moment last year, people were waiting to see whether the Chicago MC would perform some type of apology track to Taylor Swift. Instead, the Grammy Award-winning country star opened her performance with a video montage of the incident.

She sang a song off her upcoming album, 'Speak Now,' which included lyrics like, "I guess you really did it this time/ Left yourself in your war path/ Lost your balance on a tight rope/ Lost your mind trying to get it back," and "32 and still growing up now," leading viewers to assume the song had the 'Power' rapper in mind.

Nevertheless, 'Ye left his performance at the end of the night with the crowd chanting "Kanye, Kanye." Clearly, his "toast to the a**holes" proclamation put him back on top.



 

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Blessed Beyond Bounds

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Your DAILY AFFIRMATION for Monday, September 13, 2010:

"Today I affirm that I live beyond worldly bounds. From this moment on, my life, my experiences and my accomplishments are no longer bound by limiting thoughts, beliefs or perspectives. I am free to live the abundant life that the Creator intends for me. One with Spirit, one with the Lord---I AM boundlessly blessed. "
____________________________________________________________________

Know that you are blessed beyond all bounds.

Barry J.


Previously: Beneficiary of Unlimited Abundance


Barry Johnson is an businessman, motivational speaker and management consultant. He holds a B.S. degree from Yale and an MBA degree from Harvard. You can follow him at twitter.com/thebarryjohnson and email him at bjohnson@risemovement.org

 

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Team USA Beats Turkey Soundly to Win World Championship

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Say what you want about Team USA, but in your comments, you must include the descriptive term, "World Champions." The team that nobody wanted went across the world and won the gold medal at the FIBA World Championships today, soundly defeating Turkey in 81 - 64 in the title game. The game was rarely close in the second half, with the US team leading by more than 20 points on multiple occasions. Kevin Durant led the way, being named MVP of the tournament for an outstanding performance.

Durant averaged 22 points per game for the entire series, scoring 28 points in the championship. He was an easy pick for the MVP award, and has made himself a front runner to be added to the Olympic team, which should feature Kobe Bryant, LeBron James, and all the usual suspects. Most of the players from this team will probably not be invited to play with the Olympic Team in 2012. Durant should be the exception.

Duke University's Mike Krzyzewski has something to be proud of. He was the first coach to win gold at both the Olympics and the World Championships in basketball. He has helped to restore USA Basketball to prior glory as well. The 62-year old coach has achieved a great deal in his career, and this might be near the top of his list.

I watched much of the title game and saw something exciting and calming about the team our nation put on the floor this year. While the athletes aren't the marquee names of the NBA, they played very well together. Having Coach K on the sidelines gave me the feeling that this team was somehow different. I didn't see a bunch of guys thrown together with the expectation that US basketball superiority was going to help them to dominate the rest of the world. Instead, I saw men who respected their opponents and each other. They realized that while their athletic gifts are second to none, they woud have to humbly approach the Herculean task in front of them. I was proud to see this team on the floor, for they were truly a team in every sense of the word. It was awesome.

Dr. Boyce Watkins is the founder of the Your Black World Coalition and a Scholarship in Action Resident of the Institute for Black Public Policy. To have Dr. Boyce commentary delivered to your email, please click here.

 

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Black Man's HIV Status Leads to Breakthrough in Research

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According to scientists, HIV research is undergoing a "renaissance." Recent developments can lead to a plethora of new drugs to fight a disease that has crippled the black community. The most interesting part of it all is that much of the progress has come from the body of a black man.

The U.S. government recently stated that its scientists have found three new antibodies to fight the disease, one of which can neutralize 91 percent of HIV strains. That's more than any antibody has produced thus far. The antibodies don't cure HIV, but they can be used in powerful new vaccines.

The HIV antibodies which led to the developments were found in the cells of a 60-year old black man. Scientists have not released his name, and only refer to him as "Donor 45." His body made the antibodies naturally, and scientists are using his results to create a vaccine that will produce the antibodies in anyone who takes it.

Gary Nabel, the director of the Vaccine Research Center at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, is the person leading the research. He says that it's going to to take work to get where scientists believe they are going. The results of the latest research have been published in the online journal Science. According to estimates, there were 33 million people living with HIV at the end of 2008, with roughly 2.7 million people being infected every year.

Before the days of Donor 45, most efforts to produce an HIV vaccine were relatively weak. A trial in Thailand seemed to reduce the chances of infection by about 30%, but the results were statistically questionable. The new work has been defined as a "renaissance" by scientists.

For black people in the United States, the rate of HIV infection is reaching epidemic proportions. Half of all Americans infected with HIV are African Americans. Washington DC is among the worst cities in the US, where 6.5 percent of all African American men are infected with the disease. The Center for Disease Control also estimates that 39 percent of black men and 48 percent of black women are infected with genital herpes, so the spread of Sexually Transmitted Diseases is quite rampant.

The best recommendation in all this: Get tested and make sure your partner is getting tested. The days of simply believing that someone is clean because of how they look are over (not that there ever really was such a time, but everything is relative). Nowadays, the most attractive people can be the ones most likely to have been places and done things that you don't know much about. You have to ask questions, take your time before becoming sexually active, see test results and keep yourself protected. Sharing your body should not be taken lightly, for it can ultimately cost you your life.

Dr. Boyce Watkins is the founder of the Your Black World Coalition and a Scholarship in Action Resident of the Institute for Black Public Policy. To have Dr. Boyce commentary delivered to your email, please click here.

 

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MTV Video Music Awards Red Carpet Rundown

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The 2010 MTV Video Music Awards -- one of the most anticipated awards show of the year -- has come and gone. However, many of the outfits from last nights show are still fresh in our minds. Fun, short and flirty dresses, high platform heels, and embellishments such as feathers and beads summed up last night's attire on the red, excuse us, white carpet. Check out some of the successful, and not so successful outfits from the awards show.
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MTV VMAS 2010 Red Carpet

'Glee' cast member Amber Riley was rockin' the white carpet in this fun, flirty short satin and tulle dress. From the knees up, we give the outfit a pass, but the boots have got to go!

MTV VMAS 2010 Red Carpet

Ciara showed off her sexy legs in this feathery flapper-inspired dress with an intricate lace bodice. The 'Ride' singer paired the look with trendy nude pumps.

MTV VMAS 2010 Red Carpet

MTV VMAS 2010 Red Carpet

Eva Marcille was definitely a head turner with both her outfit and new blond hair. The model/actress opted for a colorful beaded mini-dress, accented with feathers. We're not sure how she could even walk in those blue platform pumps, but she worked it.

MTV VMAS 2010 Red Carpet

Ne-yo looked liked one smooth gentlemen on the white carpet, wearing gray from head to toe. The gray suede shoes were an added touch.

MTV VMAS 2010 Red Carpet

Nicki Minaj sported sky-high platforms, a jumpsuit and ahot pink wig. We know she likes to turn heads, but we feel she could have put in a little more effort!

MTV VMAS 2010 Red Carpet

Rosario Dawson looked lovely in a purple leather dress. She accented her simple classic look with a pair of teal pumps and bright red lipstick.

MTV VMAS 2010 Red Carpet

Selena Gomez' outfit was out of this world, literally. Although the young actress looks beautiful, her metallic spacesuit-inspired dress with beaded bodice doesn't top our list for best dressed.

MTV VMAS 2010 Red Carpet

'Access Hollywood's Shaun Robinson kept it simple with this ivory mini dress, accented with a skinny black belt.

MTV VMAS 2010 Red Carpet

 

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Dr. Boyce Video: Meet Bruce George, Creator of Def Poetry Jam

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PRODUCTION PLAYER! DO NOT DELETE.


I didn't meet Bruce George until this week. But I am happy to say that I was quite impressed with him. He's a good brother, an incredibly talented artist and the kind of person that says things that let you know that he has reflected deeply on his own life and sense of purpose.

Bruce is the creator of the highly successful series, Def Poetry Jam. The show has won an Emmy Award, but that's not all it's done. It has also inspired much of black America, where we've broken down the myth that people of color can only respond to a comedy show or hip hop music video. The poetry on the show was mind piercing, powerful and a strong reminder of the impact words can have on our psyches.

Only a man with the vision of Bruce George can produce such an outstanding creation. I hope you enjoy learning more about him as I did in the video above.

Dr. Boyce Watkins is the founder of the Your Black World Coalition and a Scholarship in Action Resident of the Institute for Black Public Policy. To have Dr. Boyce commentary delivered to your email, please click here.

 

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Nicki Minaj Has Lady Gaga Swag, Laurie Ann Gibson Says

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Could Nicki Minaj be the next Lady Gaga? Laurie Ann Gibson certainly thinks so. Choreographer extraordinaire Gibson worked with Gaga to create the dance chemistry in Gaga's MTV Video Music Award-winning "Bad Romance" video and also put together Minaj's VMA pre-show dance routine for her song "Check It Out," with Will.i.am.


Minaj, who was dressed in a pink-and-purple spacesuit and coiffed with a cotton-candy-colored wig, impressed her live audience with her dance moves. Accompanied by two dancers in matching outfits, Minaj stood stock-still like a futuristic superhero for the song's intro before wiggling her hips into the Gibson-choreographed moves.


Gibson, who MTV viewers will remember from Sean (Diddy) Combs' "Making the Band," told MTV News that Minaj has the makings of a superstar. "What I love about Nicki is she has the eye of the tiger and she is fearless," Gibson said. "These are the components that I saw about three years ago in Lady Gaga. I thought, 'This is going to be fantastic.' Her swag is amazing."
And just what was that robotic movement we saw Minaj do during her performance? "The idea is that we're Barbies landing from outer space," Gibson explained. "It's doll-like. It's amazing."

Source: MTV




Kevin Eason is a freelance editorial cartoonist and Illustrator from New Jersey. His brand of satire covers news events in politics, entertainment, sports and much more. Follow him on Facebook.

 

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John Boyd: Black Farmers Deserve Justice Now

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When John Boyd steps before a crowd and talks about the indignities and discrimination that black farmers have had to endure from the federal government, he's not just speaking from a script. Boyd, who raises beef cattle, corn, wheat and soybeans in Mecklenburg County, Va., is speaking from real-life experience.

In 1986, Boyd went to his local U.S. Department of Agriculture office to apply for a $12,000 operating loan.

"The white supervisor said he wasn't going to give me any of his money," said Boyd. "He works for the federal government, but it was his money."

And matters only got worse from there. Boyd said the man was chewing tobacco and picked up a spit cup. Instead of spitting into the cup, Boyd believes the man purposely spit on his shirt.

"That was routine and systematic," said Boyd, who almost came to blows with the man.

Eventually, in an effort to save his own farm from foreclosure, Boyd joined other black farmers looking to sue the government for the discrimination they faced daily. The result was the Pigford v. Glickman case in which 16,000 black farmers won a $980 million settlement.

However, many black farmers were not properly notified of the suit or given enough time to join. As a result, then-U.S. Senator Barack Obama helped pass a bill to reopen the case and a $1.25 billion settlement was agreed upon. But since 2007, the Senate has failed to vote to fund the settlement even though it has twice passed the House.

These days, Boyd, who is president of the National Black Farmers Association, is on a mission to get black farmers a payment that will likely only average out to $50,000 per farmer, not nearly enough to compensate them for their losses, he says. Meanwhile, the number of black farmers is dwindling, with estimates of between 30,000 and 40,000.

Boyd recently arrived in New York City with his work mule named Struggle as part of a tour across the country and sat down with AOL BlackVoices' Jeff Mays for a Q&A.

BlackVoices: Why is it important for black farmers to receive this settlement?

There are farmers dying with no resources who have been shut out of these government programs, and it was done by design. They cut off the credit, and there was no choice for many but to close up shop. We are losing this land for virtually no money. This was a legalized way to get land from black people and put it back into the hands of white people for pennies on the dollar using foreclosure. We are lucky to still have any black farmers the way we were treated by the government. When you lose your farm, you don't just lose a job, you lose a way of life. You lose your family name and your standing in the community. This settlement would put money in the poorest counties in the country where these black people live. They are going to spend this money in the community. Statistically, many black farmers never leave their state they are born there and die there.

I'm also battling what I call "old black pride." These farmers know they are in trouble. They know they are in trouble months ahead of time, but they don't tell anyone because they are embarrassed. It's our dirty laundry and we keep it to ourselves. That's a problem within our own culture. If you receive a foreclosure notice two months out, give me that notice two months out and give me time to help keep you on the farm. Don't call and tell me the sale is next week. That's not enough time.

For 26 years, almost every adult day of my life, I've been working on this issue. I ain't going home without the money to help these farmers. I'm willing to stand out here in New York City and say I need this to happen. I'm going to use every legal opportunity.


BV: President Obama introduced the bill to fund this second phase of the settlement when he was still a senator. Why are you now focusing on the president to help get the settlement funded?

He is the world leader. We know he is busy, and we support him, but I need help. I clearly need help in the Senate, and I think he can push the legislators there. We need the president to go a step further, and the way I am asking for him to do that is to call for a cloture vote before the midterm elections. This case is about discrimination, plain and simple. I can't believe this case has not been settled after all these years. Obama should tell Congress to get this done. We'd like to see him use the bully pulpit a little more. It's discouraging to some people that even with a black president, we still have these problems. We want to keep him focused on the issue. I would like to sit down with him and see where he thinks he can be a little more helpful in getting this done. This thing has failed seven times, and I think we need the involvement of the president. You know I'm blowing the phone up. I want to hear from the president what he thinks the next steps are.

This case is bigger than President Obama. These problems existed when he came into office. He didn't make these problems. This settlement has been going on for decades. Do I think he's trying to fix it? Yes. Do I think he is distracted with bigger issues? Yes. Am I out here trying to remind him that I need a final nail in the coffin? Yes. Me asking for help does not mean I don't support my president. I bet if I sit down and speak with the president, I bet he's going to tell me I did a good job getting his attention.

BV: You've suggested that one of the reasons the bill is being held up is because of the upcoming midterm elections. Some senators want to be seen as fiscally conservative and don't want to have this bill attached to their records. Why can't the bill wait until after the midterm elections when there is less political pressure?


I can't wait until after the elections because the politics are too risky. This is the best time. A change in leadership will take a while longer. We want the leadership of both parties to put aside politics and do the right thing for the black farmers now. I'm preaching eulogies, and I'm not a preacher. You have to tell families that daddy didn't have to die without the benefit of this money. Congress has voted on it seven times and it has failed seven times. It's been attached to different spending bills five times. I want a free-standing bill with 60 votes so I can call out those persons who say they are for us but won't vote for us. They are hiding behind the big spending bill.

There is a distrust among black farmers right now. The history of how the federal government has treated black farmers and the fact that they haven't settled the case leaves a bad taste in the farmers' mouths. When the federal government comes out and says, "we have new programs to show you," but they haven't paid the settlement, it's like asking them to trust someone when they haven't paid the money they owe but they want to borrow some more money.

BV: Why should African Americans be concerned about this issue?

Every black person in this country is no more than three generations from the farm. That's why we were brought to this country in the first place. We all need food. With the health conditions of our people, we should be more concerned about eating healthier food and supporting black farmers and the fact they produce healthier food, because we can't afford the chemicals to go into the crop. We've been farming organic way before it became popular. When we lose black farmers, we lose part of our history. We need African Americans, and all Americans, to call your U.S. senator and tell them to pass the black farmer bill.

BV: What does the future hold for black farming in this country?

I want to focus on getting more young people involved in farmer and agribusiness. There are opportunities we need to be looking at. We need young people to look at urban farming and see that there is a way they can produce healthy food. We have a rich heritage. Let's not run away from farming but embrace it and see what we can do.

We can do that by partnering with black megachurches. We shouldn't have a black megachurch and not have a farmers' market outside where members can grab fresh fruits and vegetables after fellowship. That's something we can do without the federal government to help black farmers. It's a win-win because black people get healthier food, and we help black farmers to stay on the farm and keep our farms.











 

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President Obama Says Black Farmers Settlement is a 'Priority'

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President Obama
said making sure that black farmers receive their $1.25 billion settlement for discrimination is a "priority" for his administration.

Black farmers have been fighting for almost two decades for the settlement, which addresses the discriminatory way in which black farmers were denied access to loans, grants and subsidies from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

"It is a fair settlement, it is a just settlement. We think it's important for Congress to fund that settlement. We're gonna continue to make it a priority," Obama said during a recent press conference. (See Obama's comments at the 47 minute mark of the video below).

The federal government first settled Pigford v. Glickman in 1999, paying out more than $980 million to 16,000 farmers, but many of the black farmers who were discriminated against were not properly notified or given enough time to join the suit.

As a result, a 2007 farm bill introduced by Obama when he was a U.S. Senator, reopened the settlement, and the $1.25-billion figure was agreed upon.

Since then, however, the bill has languished. It has passed twice in the House but has failed seven times in the Senate. On most of those occasions, it has been attached as part of a larger bill. John Boyd, president of the National Black Farmers Association has called for a stand alone bill on the measure because many senators claim to support his bill but say they are against the large spending bill the measure is attached to.

Boyd has also called on Obama to use his bully pulpit to help get a stand alone vote on the bill before the midterm elections.

"Black farmers across the nation applaud President Obama's statement and hope that it will bring us closer to justice. We are asking the Senate to act immediately to fund this settlement, with definitive action attached to any legislative vehicle that leaves the chamber headed to the President's desk. As the President indicated, the time for political games has ended. People are dying. The time to act is now," Boyd said in a statement.



In an interview with Aol BlackVoices, Boyd said the president should step up and help push the measure through.

"Obama should tell Congress to get this done. We'd like to see him use the bully pulpit a little more," said Boyd. "This thing has failed seven times and I think we need the involvement of the president. You know I'm blowing the phone up. I want to hear from the president what he thinks the next steps are."
Obama did not elaborate in what his next steps might be but his speaking out on the topic is a good sign. The editorial boards of two of this country's major newsapers, The New York Times and The Washington Post, have both called on the settlement to be funded.

Boyd fears the issue is caught up in a bipartisan battle and may be derailed if there is a change in leadership after this year's midterm elections. Now is the time to act, he says.

Black farmers are dying in poverty while many others continue to lose their land to foreclosure. The average payout of about $50,000 to each farmer represents less than they deserve, Boyd said. A "half loaf," he called it, but a loaf that will keep many from starvation.

 

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Valuable Fisk University Art May be Repossessed by the State

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This week, Attorney General Bob Cooper asked a judge to allow the state of Tennessee to take possession of a 101-piece art collection owned by Fisk University. The collection was donated to the university by the late Georgia O'Keeffe and is valued at $74 million.

Fisk has referred to the repossession as "nothing less than a theft of the art from Fisk." The school also argues that taking the art collection may cause the university to shut down forever.

The idea came about after Chancellor Ellen Hobbs Lyle rejected the university's proposal to sell a 50 percent holding in the art collection in order to raise funds. The school has been struggling financially and was finding ways to pay bills. The collection was going to be shown for half the year in Arkansas, and the school would receive $30 million in return.

The school has mentioned that maintaining the art collection was prohibitively expensive and that it couldn't afford to keep it up. Since the school says it can't afford to maintain the collection, the state is trying to take possession of the art in exchange for paying the cost of the upkeep. The goal is to keep the collection in the city of Nashville for the entire year.

The attorney general's plan says that the collection would be returned to Fisk once it has demonstrated that it can afford to keep it. Fisk President Hazel O'Leary has protested the plan publicly:

"Nashville has a simple choice to make, and that is whether it is better to keep the art in Nashville full time and have Fisk close or keep the art in Nashville half the time and have Fisk survive," she said. "The state of Tennessee and Metropolitan Nashville have decided that the art is more important than Fisk."

I am in complete agreement with O'Leary about the state's unjust decision to confiscate one of the most valuable assets of a struggling university. Taking this art collection from Fisk is similar to the paternalistic notion of a black mother having her child taken by the state because she cannot afford to feed him. Rather than helping Fisk afford the cost of taking care of the art collection, the state is adding insult to injury by attempting to take the collection for itself. I can't imagine the same thing happening to the University of Tennessee.

The problems for Fisk go back to a fundamental survival issue for many Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs). The economic problems have never gone away, much of them due to the legacy of racism and financial exclusion exhibited by our nation over the past 400 years. Many predominantly white universities have endowments that are in the billions, while HBCUs struggle to pay the light bills. This financial disparity is not because of a differential in our commitment to education. It's because for hundreds of years, our wealth was stolen from us and given to somebody else. Taking the art collection away from Fisk at this critical time is nothing more than a continuation of the same racist legacy that created the inequality in the first place. The state of Tennessee should be ashamed. You don't deal with the effects of inequality by creating more of it.

Dr. Boyce Watkins is the founder of the Your Black World Coalition and a Scholarship in Action resident of the Institute for Black Public Policy. To have Dr. Boyce's commentary delivered to your e-mail, please click here.

 

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Fashion's Night Out: Style on the Streets

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From Styleist:
Last night, fashion lovers flocked to stores citywide (and nationwide) for the biggest shopping event of the year, Fashion's Night Out.

StyleList was on the scene in New York to document shop-hopping style, from the Mercer Street Block Party, hosted by Phillip Lim and Rag & Bone, to the uptown crowd trying to glimpse the slew of designers and celebrities appearing at the big-box retailers.

Who did we spot? Besides Sonic Youth's Kim Gordon and Thurston Moore (hanging out at Sportmax) and star blogger Jane Aldridge of Sea of Shoes, there were plenty of fashion lovers with their own sense of style. Click through our slide show to see it all! To check out the gallery, click here!

 

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2010 Fall Fashion Week: Catching Up With Naomi Cambell

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From Styleist:
Naomi Campbell sat calmly on her black lacquer throne at the rear of the third floor of Dolce & Gabbana's Madison Avenue store in New York City, a felt-tip marker in hand.

Across a velvet rope straining like a rubber band, hundreds of fans and the odd celeb -- oh, hey, Estelle, Tyson Beckford, Chris Brown, Patrick Demarchelier and Chace Crawford! -- pressed toward her like inmates of some Charles Dickens madhouse paid an unexpected visit by Queen Victoria.

"She's signing T-shirts? Sign my T-shirt, Naomi," screamed one roundish young woman, pulling an Ed Hardy-like garment away from her skin like a shedding lizard. But that wasn't quite how it worked.

Dolce & Gabbana has collaborated with Campbell on a special edition of 14 T-shirts, each bearing an iconic image from her modeling career by a different photographer, to benefit Campbell's charity, Fashion for Relief. If you bought one for $200 at the Fashion's Night Out event, she would sign it.

"All the proceeds are going to the floods in Pakistan," Campbell told StyleList, when we finally sat down with her at the signing table, the rambunctious crowd yelling personal requests at her throughout. ("Tell him I don't take cards from men," she told one junior assistant conveying a plea from an eager gentleman who was wearing a backward white Yankee cap.) For more with Naomi Campbell, click here.

 

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When Times Get Financially Tough, Do You Turn to Religion More?

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A recent article on Newser described a survey done concerning people in various countries who stated that religion was an important part of their daily lives. Globally, 84% of people claimed to consider religion an important part of their day. In most cases, there was a link between the amount of poverty in a country and the numbers of people who considered religion to be important (the U.S. being one exception), with the poorest countries usually claiming the highest numbers of people who considered religion to be important. On the other extreme, Sweden had the lowest percentage of people who considered religion important, at 17%. Sweden boasts one of the highest standards of living in the world.


In my older age I have learned to refrain from getting into a lot of discussions concerning religion, because it is an ultimately pointless exercise. Debating religious belief is one of the biggest wastes of time imaginable, because of the nature of belief; it isn't (despite what many would like to think) provable or disprovable, or based on logic or reason. It is a personal and emotional issue. And that goes to the heart of these findings.

I don't think it's coincidental at all that there is usually a correlation between the wealth of a country and the importance given to religion. Aside from having more money, wealthier countries also have higher education levels, less unemployment, less crime, drugs, etc. All of this equals less stress, and fewer reasons for people (paraphrasing President Obama) to cling to their Bibles (or other holy book). In short, people in good circumstances are generally not in any big hurry to get to a heaven in the sky; they have heaven right here on earth. This is the case regardless of the particular religion in question. In any religion, you are far more likely to find fundamentalist, extremely devout followers among the poor.

The U.S. was given as an exception to the rule of citizens of wealthy countries giving less importance to religion. This can be explained numerous ways. Despite being one of the wealthiest countries on the planet, the U.S. also has one of the highest wealth disparities on earth, with the majority of wealth being held by less than 10% of the population. And, despite having a large middle-class, the ability to reach and maintain middle-class status has grown increasingly more difficult over the past several decades. This is particular the case for black Americans, who have average wealth levels far below that of whites. We also struggle with higher unemployment (and thus higher stress from lack of money) even in good economic times.

Most obvious of all, is the residual impact of slavery on the socioeconomic status of many black Americans. Even black Americans who have "made it" deal with various forms of discrimination and injustice. All of this (in addition to the condition of many Native Americans, and the poverty and poor living conditions for many Hispanic immigrants) goes to explain the high attachment many in the U.S. give to religion. And I won't even go into the effect of the history of the slave master teaching us the "wait for your reward in heaven" form of Christianity -- which many of us still cling to.


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+Back to School Stupidity: Students Pay to Get Unpaid College Internships


Don't get me wrong. I am not saying that a person must be ignorant or uneducated to be religious. What I am saying is that generally, when people are suffering, religion goes from being an important part of a person's life, to being the focal point of that person's life. When people feel they have no control over their condition or are hopeless, their dependence on religion grows. And there are many people like that in the United States, especially now, as the economy remains stalled.

Have you turned to religion more during these trying economic times?

 

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80% of School Districts Lay Off Teachers: How You Can Help

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Here's a frightening statistic just in time for the back-to-school season: 80% of school districts in America laid off teachers this academic year. The cuts are mainly tied to funding woes at public schools nationwide.

It's a tragedy, of course, that so many educators -- even top-rated ones ones -- are getting the axe. But it's even more of a tragedy that our youth won't be getting, in many cases, the solid education they need via experienced teachers. In addition to staff reductions, schools across the country are slashing programs and extra-curricular activities, asking parents to contribute more to classroom supplies, and increasing class sizes.


And when you start to get 35 or 40 elementary, middle school or high school students in a single classroom, it's almost inevitable that instruction quality will decline, as teachers are forced to "teach to the middle" and not offer as much specialized guidance and attention to individual students, as is done when there are smaller classroom sizes.


Related:
+Back to School Stupidity: Students Pay to Get Unpaid College Internships
+When Times Get Financially Tough, Do You Turn to Religion More?


I'm certainly grateful for the relatively small class sizes my three children currently have in their public schools. In fact, I thought it was pretty good when my youngest, who just entered pre-kindergarten, wound up in a class of just 15 students. Then other parents seemed aghast. "Oh my!" one mom exclaimed when I told her there were 15 pupils enrolled. "The pre-k class last year had just seven students," she said.

Our town happens to be the top-ranked school district in the state of New Jersey. I can only imagine what economic pressures are doing to less fortunate areas.

That's why we should all be extra vigilant to make sure we give our children the very best educational opportunities available. Hard-working educators deserve our support too. So even though we all hate to pay higher taxes, and some of us balk at chipping in a little extra when those requests for money come home from school, at the very least just give a heart-felt "thank you" to a teacher you know is doing a great job with kids. Those teachers -- and our youth -- deserve no less.



Lynnette Khalfani-Cox, an award-winning financial news journalist and former Wall Street Journal reporter for CNBC, has been featured in the Washington Post, USA Today, and the New York Times, as well as magazines ranging from Essence and Redbook to Black Enterprise and Smart Money. Check out her New York Times best seller 'Zero Debt: The Ultimate Guide to Financial Freedom.'

 

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Black and Missing: Have You Seen This Person?

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Latisha Frazier

Case Type: Endangered
Date of Birth: October 3, 1991
Missing Date: August 2, 2010
Age Now: 18
Missing City: Washington
Missing State: District of Columbia
Gender: Female
Race: Black
Complexion: Medium
Height: 5-3
Weight: 165
Hair Color: Black
Hair Length: Medium
Eye Color: Brown
Wear Glasses or Contacts: No

Location Last Seen: In the 1900 block of Trenton St., SE at approximately 5 p.m..

Circumstances of Disappearance: Unknown

Last Seen Wearing: Brown shirt and black pants.

Identifying Marks or Characteristics: Frazier has a tattoo of "Diamond" on her right arm. Hair is in dreadlocks.

If you have information, regarding the whereabouts of Latisha Frazier, please contact the Black and Missing Foundation's tip line.

 

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Don't Ask, Don't Tell Policy Struck Down by U.S. District Court

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It's official: the 1993 policy "Don't Ask, Don't Tell," which banned openly gay people from serving in the military, has been struck down by a U.S. District Court. In a ruling issued on Thursday, which is expected to be appealed, California Federal District Judge Virginia Phillips applied "immediate scrutiny" to the law, saying: "it must be shown that the law or policy being challenged furthers an important government interest in a way that is substantially related to that interest."


Here's the judge's full ruling. President Barack Obama is already trying to repeal Don't Ask, Don't Tell, which was first signed into law by former president Bill Clinton. The Senate is scheduled this month to take up a proposal to overturn Don't Ask, Don't Tell.
I know some people will be mad about this ruling because they oppose anything having to do with homosexuality. But disliking homosexuality from a moral or religous standpoint is one thing. Denying someone the right to earn a living in their chosen career, on the basis of their sexuality, is another thing.


Related:
+President Obama Says Black Farmers Settlement is a 'Priority'
+John Boyd: Black Farmers Deserve Justice Now


That's why Don't Ask, Don't Tell always struck me as strange: If someone -- straight or gay -- is willing to die for their country, get paid meager wages, and be separated from their family and friends, who are we to stop them?

What is your opinion on "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" being struck down?



Lynnette Khalfani-Cox, an award-winning financial news journalist and former Wall Street Journal reporter for CNBC, has been featured in the Washington Post, USA Today, and the New York Times, as well as magazines ranging from Essence and Redbook to Black Enterprise and Smart Money. Check out her New York Times best seller 'Zero Debt: The Ultimate Guide to Financial Freedom.'

 

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Civil Rights Museum Getting Less Visitors Than Expected

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The next time you are anyone in your family is in the vicinity of Greensboro, North Carolina, I urge you to pay a visit to the International Civil Rights Center & Museum.

During its first six months of operation, the museum, which commemorates the nonviolent sit-in protests of the 1960s that helped to spark the nation's civil rights movement, has had less attendees than expected. The museum is located in the Woolworth's building where four students from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University helped to spark sit-ins throughout the South by defiantly sitting at the lunch counter where management refused to serve them.

What started out as a protest by four students-- Ezell A. Blair Jr. (also known as Jibreel Khazan), David Leinhail Richmond, Joseph Alfred McNeil, and Franklin Eugene McCain-- ended up with over 300 students protesting at the site. Soon, students throughout the South began holding their own sit-ins. Soon enough, the lunch counter had been integrated.

"We had no notion that we'd even be served," McCain told the Washington Post. "What we wanted to do was serve notice, more than anything else, that we were going to be about trying to achieve some of the rights and privileges we were due as citizens of this country."

The media picked up the story as protests began to spread. Four years later, The Civil Rights Act of 1964, made segregation in public places illegal.

The original lunch counter where the four young men helped to ignite the push for civil rights is still in place along with other interesting exhibits. What's missing is the visitors, some say.



Museum planners expected 200,000 visitors the first year but have realized only 40,000 during six months of operation. Only about 3,000 of those visitors were from out of the area.

Melvin "Skip" Alston, the chairman of the museum's management committee and one of the co-founders, told Aol BlackVoices in an interview that the number of visitors was actually around 50,000 and that he is excited by the great start given that full marketing efforts have yet to kick in.

"We never expected 200,000 people the first year. That number is based on a few years down the road with people planning trips to the museum. We are talking about the family reunions and the sororities. It's just a matter of time," Alston said.

In the coming year, there will be an effort to bring students from a 75-mile radius surrounding the museum as well as different church events every Sunday. Visitors from outside the area will increase as well.

"We have 50,000 new boosters to spread the word and no where to go but up," Alston said.

That doesn't mean that support of the effort can't begin now. It is important to preserve, memorialize and pass on these important events in American history so that future generations can use the lessons they provide now.

Among the lessons provided by the museum are bravery, persistence and that a few determined people can have a major impact.

The fact that African-Americans in this country couldn't do something as basic as order a cup of coffee from a major corporate chain without facing discrimination should not be lost on this generation or future generations.

Young people today may see that we have a black president and think that all of our racial problems are solved. How informative it must be to learn that just 50 years ago, African-Americans were regularly and legally denied basic civil rights.

If museums covering topics such as civil rights lacks visitors, then there will be a reluctance for donors to provide support to similar projects around the country. The Negro Leagues Museum in Kansas City is also struggling.

"We should support these programs so future generations yet unborn know about the struggle we went through 100 years from now. They should know how many people died so they can have what they have today," said Alston. "They need to know so they won't disrespect their grandparents because they understand the contributions they made not just so that they could sit at a lunch counter, but so that they could own one."

The good news is that Alston is optomistic about the museum's future. But that doesn't mean we should not take an easy but important step in supporting these institutions by simply going for a visit.

"This is a way of learning from history so that 100 years from now we won't fall into the same traps." Alston said.

 

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Floyd Mayweather, Jr. In Rage Over Ex-Girlfriend's Alleged Affair with NBA Player

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And the plot thickens in the Floyd Mayweather, Jr. situation with regards to the alleged beat down he gave his girlriend Josie Harris last Thursday. Now,TMZ reports, that Mayweather went into a fit of rage when he found out that Harris might have been carrying on an affair with an NBA player.




According to a Las Vegas police report obtained by TMZ, the boxing champ read text messages on Harris's phone from Chicago Bulls C.J. Watson (pictured below). Reportedly, Mayweather yelled at the mother of his three children, demanding to know, if whether she had slept with Walker. Harris allegedly replied, "Yes, that is who I'm seeing now!"

The battling duo had lived together for seven years and separated in May after fifteen "on and off" years.

The police report goes on to detail the violent turn-of-events that occurred at Harris's home. The couple's 10-year-old son apparently testified to police, that he "saw his dad was on his mother and was hitting and kicking her."

Harris also told investigators, that the undefeated champ screamed at her and threatened to kill both her and the person with whom she is messing with, "I'm going to have you both disappear," she claims Mayweather contended. "He yelled and screamed that he was going to kill me and my boyfriend," Harris wrote. "Floyd has threatened to have other people do harm to me as well and if [there] is a way I can be protected from that please help me."

The young woman was taken to a nearby hospital and treated for facial injuries and a sore arm which she stated, that Mayweather tried to break during the violent confrontation.

Mayweather turned himself into Las Vegas police last Friday morning after they had been looking to question him about the Harris allegations. Mayweather was arrested and charged with grand larceny because Harris told police, that the 33-year-old had taken her Apple iPhone 4 which has a value of over $300. He was released on $3,000 bail and could face up to five years in state prison if he is convicted of taking items valued at less than $2,500.

Mayweather is scheduled for an initial appearance Nov. 9 in Las Vegas Justice Court.

 

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EEOC Says Many Government Agencies Fail to Submit Mandated Diversity Reports

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How's this for a failure of government: A recent EEOC report shows a shocking number of federal departments and agencies are amazingly lax when it comes to submitting legally-required reports about their diversity initiatives. Among the findings of the EEOC's latest Annual Report on the Federal Workforce for 2009:


* Only 79% of agencies and departments submitted Management Directive 715 (MD-715) reports. These reports -- which are supposed to be given to the EEOC annually, so the EEOC can review and approve them -- spell out a department's employment figures by race, national origin, sex and disability. The reports are mandatory under federal law.

* Just 61% of federal agencies and departments issued written policy statements expressing their commitment to equal employment opportunities and a workplace free of discrimination, even though such statements are supposed to be "issued [by leaders] at the beginning of their tenure and disseminated to all employees."

Either these government agencies are woefully ignorant of their responsibilities on the diversity front, which I highly doubt, or they simply don't see it as a priority. They also apparently have concluded that they can get away with this stunning lack of compliance and will not be subjected to particularly harsh sanctions. Maybe not even so much as a slap on the wrist. "There is absolutely no accountability for those agencies who do not wish to comply with the regulations,'' Carol Dawson, president of EEO Guidance, a national consulting and training company based in Jeffersonville, Ind. told Diversity Inc. "There is nobody doing anything about the percent that is not in compliance; there are no consequences whatsoever."

But imagine if this same scenario played out in the corporate world -- not about diversity policies, but about anything. If about 20% of corporate workers, or roughly 1 out of 5, failed to submit to their bosses required reports, what do you think would happen? I can guarantee you such a failure would not be tolerated. That's what makes this whole thing even more of a shame. These requirements are present for a reason: to help ensure equality and access to employment opportunities within the federal government for all people.


Related:
+Don't Ask, Don't Tell Policy Struck Down by U.S. District Court
+80% of School Districts Lay Off Teachers: How You Can Help


To make matters worse, I'll bet that many of these government agencies that can't even be troubled to submit diversity reports to the EEOC are also getting tax-payer money or some funding based on racial quotas and diversity-based hiring practices. It's high time these negligent federal agencies were called on the carpet on this issue and that they submit to the EEOC -- and by extension, to the public -- the information they're legally supposed to reveal.

How else can we ensure fairness in federal hiring?



Lynnette Khalfani-Cox, an award-winning financial news journalist and former Wall Street Journal reporter for CNBC, has been featured in the Washington Post, USA Today, and the New York Times, as well as magazines ranging from Essence and Redbook to Black Enterprise and Smart Money. Check out her New York Times best seller 'Zero Debt: The Ultimate Guide to Financial Freedom.'

 

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