Friday, September 30, 2005

William Bennett? What do you think?



Have you heard the William Bennett quote? I'm wondering what you think?

In case you haven't heard, the former Education Secretary and best-selling self-proclaimed "Values Czar" William Bennett showed some "value" cards on Wednesday.

According to an ABCNew.com story (see http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/Politics/story?id=1171385&page=1 for more info), Bennett took a call from a listener who theorized that social security was in jeapordy because of the rate of abortion. She explained that abortion has caused a situation where there aren't enough tax-paying citizens to pay for social security.

Interesting theory. Not sure if it's credible, but it made me wanna go, "Hmmmm..."

Bennett responded saying, if it were your sole purpose to reduce crime, "You could abort every black baby in this country, and your crime rate would go down. That would be an impossible, ridiculous and morally reprehensible thing to do, but your crime rate would go down,"

Bennett now says his remarks were valid and those who know him know he's not racist.

What do you think?

Here are some questions to get the discussion going:


  • Does Bennett's statement reveal a need for him to check his heart concerning Black people in America?
  • Is the media simply blowing this thing out of proportion?
  • What does Bennett's statement reveal about his mental picture of Black people and their contributions to American society?
  • Do you think Bennett's statement is a common unspoken thought in America?
I look forward to hearing your thoughts. I'll throw in my two cents once I've heard from you.

Peace...


Wednesday, September 07, 2005

Privileged Eyes In A Flood

"You wouldn't believe what people are saying about the flood victims in Louisiana," my mom huffed with exhaustion. She sat down to dinner after spending part of the afternoon on an online discussion group this past Saturday night. My mom participates in online discussion groups all the time. She's particularly attracted to the ones that discuss issues of poverty and race. Over the Labor Day weekend, she witnessed the first tide of backlash against the victims of the New Orleans flood.

I didn't think I'd see this kind of backlash in the context of the worst natural disaster in U.S. History. The current death toll estimates are 10,000. That's 10,000 souls. That's five 9/11's. 10,000 brothers and sisters, mom's and dads, students, workers and professionals. 10,000 Whites, Blacks, Native Americans, Latinos, Asian Americans and tourists from overseas. 10,000 dreams... gone... forever.

In my work over the past 6 years as an ethnic & racial reconciler, I've come to expect the spirits of self-actualization and rugged independence to rear their heads in discussions of race and racism. The comments usually come from those who have benefitted from affirmative action on behalf of America's ethnic majority and they sound something like this:

"Well, they just need to get off welfare and get a job."
or
"My grandfather pulled himself up by his own bootstraps. He was poor and didn't have a dime to his name during the depression. He started his own business. He taught us that we could do anything we put our minds to."
or
"They have such a victim mentality. When are they going to take personal responsibility for their position in the world."

When discussing poverty and class, these comments seem logical and even wise at first glance. I mean, shouldn't everyone be responsibile for his or her own fortune and future? Isn't it degrading to have to depend on the government for one's livelihood. This seems like good sense. Yet, this line of thinking reveals something else far more insidious and pervasive in our country today.

It reveals a view of the world as seen through eyes of privilege. These privileged eyes usually have no idea they are privileged. They have all but forgotten their own the privileged majority's dependence on the government sponsored "welfare" programs of yesteryear designed specifically to benefit White Americans. For example:

1. Government Instituted Free Labor. 1640. Maryland becomes the first colony to institutionalize slavery. Massachusetts follows in 1641 with written legislation that changed the status of African indentured workers to chattel slaves. This lays the foundation for nearly 225 years of free labor building the economy for the ancestors of White Americans. Both the north and south benefit from the international cotton trade one of the most lucrative investments in American history. Free labor paved the way for America to become the economic super power that it is now.
("The African American: A Journey from Slavery to Freedom", Long Island University, B. Davis Schawartz Memorial Library, http://www.liu.edu/cwis/cwp/library/aaslavry.htm#beginning)

2. Government Handouts - Free Land. A Cherokee boy discovered gold in Dahlonega, GA in 1828. Before long 15,000 miners moved in and set up camp on Cherokee land without asking permission. Soon, the U.S. government gave plots of Cherokee land to the miners while the Cherokee still lived there. By 1838, the Cherokees were removed from their land along with the other 4 "Civilized tribes" of the southeast (The Choctaws, Chickasaws, Creeks, and Seminoles).

3. Government Handouts - Free Land. The Cherokees were offered "Indian Territory" land by the U.S. Government "in perpetuity" (which means "forevermore") in exchange for their lands in Georgia and North Carolina. Then on March 2, 1889, the U.S. Congress passed the Indian Appropriations Bill opening "Indian Territory" in Oklahoma to settlment by White settlers. At noon on April 22, 1889 White settlers participated in a first come, first served horse race to grab 1.9 million acres of free land.
~ Source: "Built in a Day: The Oklahoma Land Rush"
http://www.nps.gov/jeff/oklahoma_rush.html

4. Workfare - The New Deal's Civilian Conservation Core. As part of FDR's New Deal, the CCC was created to get Americans effected by the Great Depression back to work. The program helped multiple racial groups, yet White Americans were the greatest beneficiaries by far. This government help laid foundations of economic stability for thousands of ethnic majority families at a make it or break it time in American history. Without this help, thousands of American families enjoying stablity today would not have been able to find their financial footing during the years of the great depression. (see http://www.cccalumni.org/history1.html for more information).

For the past few days network news anchors have been pressing questions of race, poverty and the federal response to hurricane Katrina. They've asked, "Has the slow response time been a reflection of our government's lack of care for African American citizens?" It's understandable that questions of race and poverty have been raised. 67% of New Orleans is Black and over 30% of the population is living in poverty. There has been no debate. The initial federal response to Katrina was a failure.

So, my mother sat down to dinner late Saturday night with an incredulous look on her face. She'd just engaged in an online discussion group where the opinions of the conversants went something like this conversation I found on the MSNBC.com Katrina Boards today:

Original Post by "Looloo", 9/6/05, 2:28pm, "People Take Responsibility!"

"No one should be denied food and water especially in this country. But for goodness sake!!!Many of those people are young, healthy and able bodied individuals. At some point they should have realized what a dangerous situation they were in and taken some precautions. Did they not hear about Katrina on the news?

But the excuse is "they were poor." Well stop being poor. And stop depending on the government for money. This is such a vicious cycle and as long as hand-outs exist - with more money given for each new child, the longer poverty due to welfare will exist.

The rest of us have to sweat it out at work - without handouts, and pay our taxes. Do you see us getting checks every month for our expenses? No. And that's the way it should be.

This does not include people who are truly sick, or elderly. They of course get a pass and the government ((we the taxpayers)) should take care of them."

Response from "Meemee", 9/6/05, 2:36pm
"you said it exactly."

Response from "NAS", 9/6/05, 2:49pm
"and what have you done to help the cycle? besides complain?"

Response from "Luke", 9/6/05, 3:10pm
"Besides complain??? Probably pay his taxes to support all of the services. He said what so
many of us feel. If more people would realize that help comes at the end of our own arms, we wouldn't have so many left in this situation. Again, the sick or elderly get a pass. In fact, if more people would take the proper responsibility for themselves, we would be able to increase services to those who truly need it."

Response from "Really", 9/6/05, 3:18pm
"They were told leave and did not."

Response from "Mooseman", 9/6/05, 3:29pm
"Amen! Read on..."

Response from "George", 9/6/05, 3:30pm

"Yes. People do not use proper judgement and don't seem to make choices that will better themselves and the lives of the people around them. I must admit that I am quite confused at why people who are clearly living in poverty would continue to keep creatingnew life. I simply couldn't believe the amount of babies involved in this horrible scene. It seems so selfish to me to see a person who could barely manage to support themselves and yet they have a child. (and in some cases several) Why would anyone want to bring a child into the world and offer them nothing but hardship?"

Response from "RealityMan", 9/6/05, 3:35pm
"Right on the money. One would think that after a couple hundred years the race would have bettered it's position in society. It has not. The last great black man was Dr. King. Think about that. The "woe is me" syndrome is getting old. When you are unable to support yourself much less contribute something positive to society and the economy, who will continue to support you? This is a democratic society, not a socialist society. The government isn't required to provide lifetime support for anyone."


Dear Jesus,
Give us the humility that leads to listening that leads to understanding. Give us empathy to feel what it's like to walk in the shoes of the other. Give us compassion that leads us to act on behalf of the other. Give us wisdom, discernment and courage to truly understand what happened in New Orleans so that it might never happen again.
Amen.


Thursday, September 01, 2005

Answering The S.O.S





Would you believe I haven't watched the news in a week?! I'm usually a news freak. I can easily watch multiple hours of news per day with the afternoon news, the evening local news, ABC World News Tonight, then the 11pm local news and finally Nightline at 11:30pm. But for the past week, I haven't seen even one news cast. I've just been busy.

Tonight I turned on the news and saw the pictures of Katrina's wake. I've heard about Katrina. I've heard it's been bad. But I didn't realize it's been this bad.

I was moved by what I saw tonight; The Mayor of New Orleans has sent out a desparate S.O.S, thousands of people are sleeping in stadiums trying to find lost family members, reports of bodies floating everywhere and rats eating bodies in the street. Finally, there is the desparate exodus of 1/2 a million people to neighboring states.


Now I'm watching Nightline and it's worse. It seems that FEMA didn't act in time. The talk on multiple news stations tonight is, "Were we too late?" and the answer has been "Yes." In fact, even as I write this post, thousands camping out in the New Orleans Convention Center still aren't getting food and people are dying around them -- four days into this disaster.

So, I want to call us to pray and find ways to act. According to the Salvation Army, the greatest need right now is for money (not goods) and workers to help feed the hundreds of thousands of displaced people.

So, please check with organizations like World Vision, the Salvation Army and the Red Cross to find out how you can personally participate in the national answer to the S.O.S.

Second, if each person in America and around the world who's heard about Katrina's victims gave $15 or more directly to the relief charity of their choice we could raise the funds to meet the immediate needs of region. Tonight, I will go online and give to World Vision.

Finally, a prayer.

Dear Jesus,
Be with those who are living in absolute misery in America's deepest southtonight. Dear Lord, have mercy. Give our brothers and sisters food where there is no food. Give them drink where there is no drink. Give them medicine where there is no medicine. Give them comfort where there is no comfort.

And God, mobilize people to act. Bring the most experienced, the most skilled, the most equipped, the most resourced to the heart of this disaster. Deploy them, Lord. Guide their hands. Guide their feet. Free them from fear and immobilization. Loose their feet and use them to stop the tears of loss from flowing in Biloxi.

Bring buses, Lord. Bring cranes, Lord. Bring order, Lord. Stop the violence, Lord. Stop the looting. Stop the rapes, Lord. Rescue our brothers and sisters, Lord. Bring your shalom, Lord. Bring SHALOM, Lord.

Bring Shalom.

Amen.


Lisa Sharon Harper Posted by Picasa

I just finished watching Malcolm X. It got me thinking when I saw it back in '94. It got me thinking again tonight.

Everyday I walk to the subway to go to school or to a friends place or to run errands. And everyday, I pass the Audobon Ballroom -- now the X Cafe. It's the place where Malcolm X was assassinated. There's no museum there like there is at the spot where Dr. King was taken down. No, in this place there is only a statue in the lobby and an X on the window... the window of a cafe'. X marks the spot -- I guess.

I got to the point in the movie where Mr. X is ambushed. He lays there bleeding and slightly shaking in his wife's arms. Another woman sits nearby. She's shaking. In the background we hear another woman sobbing deep sobs... they come from a place too deep to see with an X-ray machine.

I hear the sobs and I think of all the killing. I think of all the sorrow. I think of what evil -- what craziness man is capable of. "They killed Malcolm!", someone shouts on screen! They did kill Malcolm-- at the very point in his life when he began to embrace Shalom ... they killed Malcolm.

Next they killed Martin. They killed Martin too...

My mind goes to up to 160,000 killed in Darfur... 200,000 ethnically "cleansed" in Bosnia... up to 27,000 civilians reported killed by military intervention in Iraq... racial oppression in Soweto... ethnic and religious oppression in Ireland. I think of the drug trade in South America that fans the flames of heinous violence south of our border and the enslavement of women and children around the world for affluent men on business trips who want sex far from home. I think of this violence that crawls like spiders over the face of our world.

It's the tragedy of The Fall. Sin so deep we can't wash ourselves clean. Left to our own devices we will either commit violence against our fellow human being... or we will stand by and watch in silence.

So, Malcolm X lay there in a pool of blood on a stage down the street from my apartment 40 years ago. And another one who spoke of joining together to fight the cause of injustice ... another one who called a spade a spade ... another one who spoke truth to power lay crushed under the weight of The Fall.


So, I sit weeping with the woman on the screen. I weep and I pray.

Jesus!

Help us.