Showing posts with label black politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label black politics. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

President Obama Delivers Speech on the Iraq War

by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Syracuse University 

He came, he saw, he conquered. Well, sort of. President Obama took the nation's attention for about 20 minutes tonight to deliver a speech about the end of America's military involvement in Iraq. Sitting in the Oval Office with pictures of his family in the background, President Obama effectively told America that the last eight years are over. He thanked the troops, thanked the American people, and reminded the Iraqis that we still support them. He was being presidential, as he normally is.
The president worked to build bridges with Americans who disapprove of his performance. He mentioned how the high cost of the war reduced the nation's ability to sustain its middle class. He talked about how patriotic Americans both approved and disapproved of the war, and even mentioned an earlier conversation he'd recently had with President Bush. He also reminded the American people that by ending military operations in Iraq, he was keeping one of his most significant campaign promises.

 

Click to read.

Was Congresswoman Eddie Johnson’s Behavior Out of the Question?

Rep. Eddie Johnson's actions are par for course in today's politics

by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Syracuse University 

Eddie Bernice Johnson, a congresswoman out of Texas, has found her self in hot water after she admitted that she used her CBC scholarship money as a personal family college fund. Between the years 2005 and 2008, Johnson awarded between nine and 11 scholarships each year. On each occasion, three or four of the winners were either related to Johnson or her district director, Rod Givens. Rep. Johnson claims this was all done unintentionally.

This case concerned me, but while thinking it through, I had to go back to the fundamental question of whether or not this type of nepotism (assuming Johnson's actions were deliberate) is detrimental enough to label her a poor politician or a bad human being.

Johnson is not a bad person or a crook, at least not based on this incident. She's also not worthy of the same kind of congressional hoopla received by the Charlie Rangel or Maxine Waters investigations. Don't get me wrong, when you break the rules, you certainly should be held accountable, and it appears that Congresswoman Johnson understands that. The latest reports say that she has begun working out a deal where she will repay the funds that were misallocated. Perhaps that should put the issue to rest.

Click to read.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Dr. Boyce Watkins - Wyclef Can’t Be President: Is that Good or Bad for Haiti?

by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Syracuse University Scholarship in Action 

 

I just returned from Haiti, a country that continues to be devastated by the recent earthquakes that rumbled the soil in it's capital, Port-au-Prince. Haitians lived under an umbrella of tragedy long before the earthquakes took place, and the suffering has only intensified since the media has left its shores. One thing that most of us believe, including myself, is that Wyclef Jean loves Haiti. His candidacy for president of Haiti was met with open arms by some, and folded arms by a few others. The evidence of disdain was presented to me personally when Wyclef had to cancel an appearance on my show due to the number of death threats he'd been receiving.
The mixed response to Jean's announcement reflects the multitude of perceptions that various stakeholders have when it comes to the idea of Wyclef becoming president. I have spoken privately to friends in hip hop who've assured me that Wyclef has an infinite supply of love for his home country and wants to do what's right. But I've also met with friends who feel that Wyclef is a beacon of self-promotion who cares far less for Haiti than for his own bank account.

 

Click to read.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Cornel West vs. Barack Obama

by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Syracuse University 

Dr. Cornel West apparently has a bone to pick with President Barack Obama. Over time, the good Dr. West has become increasingly vocal in his critique of Obama, and even went as far as to say that Obama treated him "like a cub scout," when refusing to address his concerns about the administration's behavior.
"Well, I'll tell you, I had not talked to my dear brother since the Martin Luther King gathering in South Carolina, and very briefly Super Tuesday. But he did come and make a beeline to me after his speech on I think it was Thursday morning in Washington, D.C. I hadn't seen him for two and a half weeks, and he made a beeline to me, though, brother, and he was deeply upset. He talked to me like I was a Cub Scout, and he was a pack master, you know what I mean?

 

Click to read.

Thursday, June 10, 2010

No Black Jurors for Oscar Grant Murder

by Dr. Boyce Watkins

On New Year's day of 2009, Oscar Grant was shot in Oakland, California. The shooter was a Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) officer by the name of Johannes Mehserle. Grant was 22-years old at the time of his death, and the shooting was captured by cell phone cameras and disseminated throughout the Internet. Adding insult to injury, the Grant family just found that there will be no African American jurors in the trial of grant's shooter.


Jack Bryson, whose sons were with Grant the night he was killed, was angry about the jury selection.


"This is like a slap in the face," Bryson told The Associated Press. "This case came all the way to Los Angeles after the judge in Alameda County said they couldn't get a fair and impartial jury there.
"This is the best you can do, and you did this in two days. We could've stayed back in Oakland for this."

Click to read




African American Scholar Angry Over Black Professors Being Excluded

by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Syracuse University

Dr. M. Cookie Newsom

is the Director for Diversity Education and Assessment at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She is also a trouble maker and an angry black woman, which is likely going to cause her serious problems with her colleagues (we talked yesterday about how being angry can get a black person into serious trouble). Dr. Newsom, however, has good reason to be angry. In a recent interview with Diverse issues in Higher Education, Dr. Newsom stated in plain language that most major universities are not serious about diversifying their faculty and that this hurts all students, especially students of color.
"The dismal truth is academe doesn’t really want a racially-diverse faculty," Newsom said during a faculty diversity presentation at the American Association of University Professors’ (AAUP) annual national conference in Washington, D.C. "It’s totally a myth."

Dr. Newson based her conclusions on statistics and data she collected which shows that most major universities are good at documenting plans to increase faculty diversity, but most of it’s nothing but lip service.

Click to read more.




Monday, May 17, 2010

Black New from AOL - 5/16/10

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Tobi Oyedeji, Standout High School Player, Dies in Head-On Collision

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The Latest Duh Study: CNN Doll Study Shows Black, White Kids Have Bis Toward Light Skin

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Tyler Perry's Credit Cards Stolen, Thief Racks Up Nearly $30,000 in Charges

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Makeup Artist Pat McGrath Collaborates With CoverGirl and LeSportsac

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Watch clips from Boris Kodjoe's new TV series, NBC's 'Undercovers'

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Haiti Prosecutor Wants Prison Sentence for US Missionary Laura Silsby

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River of Blessings




Monday, April 26, 2010

Dr. Boyce Watkins on TheGrio - 4/27/10




Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Dr. Boyce Watkins on AOL Black Voices - 3/23/10

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Tea Partiers Deny The Use of Racial Slurs

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Rush Limbaugh Back Pedals on Pledge to Leave the Country

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Michael Steele Looks Even Worse as a Black Man Defending Tea Partiers

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Police Officers Charged with Beating Celebrated with Free Beer

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Jesse Jackson Jr. Presides Over The Health Care Debate

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Young Mom's Body Found in Bed Frame of a Hotel Room




Monday, March 22, 2010

Dr. Boyce Watkins: Michael Steele Bows to the Tea Baggers

by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Syracuse University

The Tea Party Protesters might need a little bit of brand management to overcome the growing perception that they represent a racist, homophobic, extremist fringe of disgruntled voters. The most recent incident of very bad PR came this week, as a small group of Tea Party protesters gathered on Capitol Hill and yelled "n*gger" and "f*ggot" at members of Congress as they walked past the crowd. The group has taken heat for the actions of those who don't know how to be cordial in their discourse, and it's not good for the Republican Party.


Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele was put in yet another awkward position, trying to defend that which is not defensible. A man who appears to be disrespected at every turn by his own party, Steel dismissed those using the n-word within the Tea Party group as "idiots out there saying stupid things." Of course, Steele was not in a position to dismiss the Tea Partiers themselves, likely because they would have put him in a pile with the other black people they hate the most.

Click to read




Saturday, February 20, 2010

Black Social Commentary from TheGrio – 2/20/10

Monday, February 1, 2010

Cynthia McKinney Breaks Silence about Government Killings

They shot this Black man in his genitals and in his back.  It sounds like a hate crime to me.  How else could one describe it?
Well, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, it was self-defense.  But how many times have we heard self-defense by cops used as a cop out? 


Well, what about Amadou Diallo?  Amadou Diallo was murdered on February 4, 1999 by New York Police Department (NYPD) cops who mistook a wallet for a gun.  They claim that they thought he was going to shoot them and so they shot him in self-defense.  One officer fell as if he had been shot.  41 bullets later, Amadou Diallo had been shot 19 times.  Young Amadou was only 24 years old.  He could survive the itinerant life of an African trading family, moving from Africa to Asia, but he couldn't survive the mean, racist streets of America.  And the killer cops went free.  Diallo's mother and step-father settled with the City of New York for $3 million in a lawsuit alleging wrongful death, racial profiling, and violation of Amadou's civil rights.


Click to read.

Julianne Malveaux: The Loss in Massachusetts is Not What You Think

Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley was a lousy candidate who ran a lousy campaign and lost her bid for Ted Kennedy's Senate seat as a result. Instead of preserving 60 filibuster-proof votes for Democrats, she handed the Massachusetts senatorial seat to Republican Scott Brown on a silver platter. And, as they are entitled to, Republicans are celebrating, dubbing the extremely conservative Mr. Brown as "41" and suggesting that his election signals a Republican resurgence.

Too many will see this as the waning of President Obama's influence, but that's not necessarily the case. Martha Coakley ran a lousy campaign. While Scott Brown was retail politics, she was wholesale. While he was "the people's candidate", out shaking hands and exuding personality, she was uptight and uncommunicative. It probably ought not matter, but in sports-obsessed Boston she described a Red Socks pitcher as a Yankee fan, exhibiting not only ignorance of sports, but also of her base. She disdained hand shaking and was good for a series of bloopers, which she later described as "jokes". She is so out of touch that in a post-election interview, she said she would not have done anything differently!

Click to read.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Black News from TheGrio – 1/28/10

Saturday, January 9, 2010

Senator Harry Reid Refers to Obama’s Negro Dialect

Reid apologized Saturday for remarks he made about then-candidate Barack Obama.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid apologized Saturday following reports he had privately described then-candidate Barack Obama during the presidential campaign as a black candidate who could be successful thanks in part to his “light-skinned” appearance and speaking patterns "with no Negro dialect, unless he wanted to have one."

Journalists Mark Halperin and John Heilemann reported the remarks in their new book “Game Change,” which was purchased by CNN Saturday at a Washington-area bookstore. The book is slated for official release next Tuesday.

“He (Reid) was wowed by Obama's oratorical gifts and believed that the country was ready to embrace a black presidential candidate, especially one such as Obama - a ‘light-skinned’ African American ‘with no Negro dialect, unless he wanted to have one,’ as he said privately. Reid was convinced, in fact, that Obama's race would help him more than hurt him in a bid for the Democratic nomination," they write.

“I deeply regret using such a poor choice of words,” Reid said in a statement to CNN. (Update 3:15 pm:Reid spokesman Jim Manley tells CNN that the senator also called President Obama Saturday afternoon to apologize for his remark.)

“I sincerely apologize for offending any and all Americans, especially African Americans for my improper comments.

 

Click to read.

Friday, January 8, 2010

Black News Blast – 1/8/10

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Man Allegedly Locks 7-Year old Daughter in Dryer, Turns it On

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Audra McDonald: Already Off to a Great Start for 2010

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Creating The Good Life--Day 2

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Around the Web: Keyshia Cole Engaged or Married, Beyonce and Gaga Reunite Again, Gary Coleman Hospitalized & More

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Luv Coach Q&A: Polygamy

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Kanye West Compares Himself to Maya Angelou

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J-Boog from B2K Speaks Up on His Domestic Violence Allegations

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Notable/Quotable: Damon Dash on Jay-Z Going Corporate

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Lee Daniels Edges Clint Eastwood for DGA Nomination and History

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Gilbert Arenas Gun Incident: How Serious is the Gun Charge Anyway?

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Black Journalists Fight for Census Bureau Funds: Black People Must Be Counted

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The G-Spot: Rumor or Real?

  • The G-spot isn't exactly the GPS-spot; navigation for it doesn't exist and directions to its ... Read More
  • By Mason Jamal on Jan 7th 2010 4:01PM | Comments (4)

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Ex-NBA Star Jayson Williams in Trouble Again

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Two Girls, 12 and 14, Rob a Bank and Are on the Run

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Viola Davis: Academy Award Nominee to Join Denzel Washington in 'Fences' on Broadway

  • As of late, Viola Davis has been a fixture on the big screen -- earning an Academy-Award nomination ... Read More
  • By Bridget Bland on Jan 7th 2010 2:22PM | Comments (1)