Wednesday, April 29, 2009

NAACP supported Homeowner Mortgage Rescue Restructuring bill scheduled for vote tomorrow by US Senate!

JUDICIAL SUPERVISION RESTRUCTURING OPTION COULD SAVE MILLIONS OF HOMES

THE ISSUE:
In the United States today one home is foreclosed upon every thirteen seconds. Home foreclosures have hit the African American community especially hard: for decades predatory, sub-prime loans (which have led to many of the foreclosures) were targeted at African Americans and other racial and ethnic minorities. In 2006 and 2007, at least half of all the home loans sold to African-Americans and at least 40% of all the home loans that Latinos received where subprime. These disparities occurred even when people of color had similar qualifications to white applicants. It has been reported that communities of color will lose an estimated $213 billion of wealth as the result of foreclosures due to abusive subprime lending. For this reason predatory lending and home foreclosures have been and continue to be a major civil rights issue in America today.

We clearly need a multi-pronged approach to solving our Nation's foreclosure crisis and getting many of these homeowners into sustainable, long-term mortgages that accurately reflect the true market price of the home. One way to do this, at no cost to U.S. taxpayers, is to enact a minor reform of our nation's bankruptcy laws. Currently, if an individual files for bankruptcy, a judge cannot require a financial institution which is foreclosing on that person's home to renegotiate the loan to attempt to make it more reasonable and sustainable so that the person, and their family, can stay in their home. The subprime lenders who created this foreclosure crisis are able to seek relief through bankruptcy as well as investors, but homeowners trying to save their primary residence cannot.

Senator Richard Durbin (IL), who has been a long-time champion addressing this issue, is scheduled to offer an amendment on Thursday, April 30 to allow judges to require loan modifications. His proposal would help close the loophole and allow impartial judges to require lenders to enter into loan modification negotiations with a person facing bankruptcy. Court supervised loan modifications are a major solution to help families avoid foreclosure while still paying a market-rate mortgage for their home. It is estimated that if enacted this legislation could reduce coming foreclosures by 20% -- amounting to 1.8 million homes at no additional cost to taxpayers or investors.

Many foreclosures today could be avoided, although this is not happening because we are currently relying on lenders to voluntarily enter into modification negotiations. As a result, only 3.5 percent of delinquent subprime loans received modifications in August 2008 – and in many cases, these "modifications" actually increased the borrower's monthly payments. Clearly, current voluntary efforts to avoid foreclosures are insufficient, and we need to give judges who are dealing with homeowners facing foreclosure more power.

Many of the impending foreclosures are unnecessary because the homeowner could afford to pay a market rate mortgage, for the full current value of the house – an outcome that is far preferable to foreclosure for homeowner and mortgage lender alike. All the lender would have to do is to modify the loan to make it economically rational, and sustainable. The Durbin amendment would result in more mortgage modifications and fewer foreclosures, and could be a key tool in stemming the foreclosure crisis.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

NAACP calls for swift enactment of expanded Hate Crime prevention legislation

Legislation is currently scheduled for House floor action TODAY! (4-29-09)



THE ISSUE
Hate crimes remain a festering and horrifying problem in the United States. This form of domestic terrorism is designed to intimidate whole communities on the basis of personal and immutable characteristics – and can spark widespread neighborhood conflicts, even damaging the very fabric of our society. Although there are laws on the books that help deter hate crimes and protect their victims, significant gaps remain unfilled. Sadly, the number of hate crimes in America continues to increase, and the number of "hate groups" (an organization that promotes hate or violence towards members of an entire class of people, based on characteristics such as race, religion, gender, or sexual orientation) in the United States increased to 926 in 2008, up 54% since 2000.

Currently, the federal government is allowed to intervene in the investigation and prosecution of hate crimes only if they occur on federal property or if the victim was participating in one of six very specific activities, such as voting. The "Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act" (H.R. 1913, introduced by Congressman John Conyers, MI) would expand existing hate crime prevention laws and allow the federal government to assist the local authorities in the investigation and prosecution of crimes motivated by hate, regardless of where or what the victim was doing at the time the crime occurred. It would also expand the definition of a hate crime to include those motivated by the victim's disability, gender or sexual orientation and it would provide money to states to develop hate crime prevention programs.

In short, this proposed hate crimes prevention legislation would allow the federal government to work with state and local authorities to prevent or, if necessary, punish hate crimes to the fullest extent possible. States will continue to play the primary role in the prosecution of hate crime violence, however H.R. 1913 will compliment state statutes and assist states in securing the very complicated and expensive cases through prosecution.

H.R. 1913 is scheduled to be considered by the full House of Representatives tomorrow, Wednesday, April 29. We must encourage all of our elected representatives to support this bill and to oppose any weakening amendments.


Saturday, April 25, 2009

The Wichita Branch NAACP to launch a "Parent-Ally" Initiative


Families currently involved in the Child Welfare system have the right to request and appoint up to two Parent Allies, who are then empowered to attend court hearings with, provide detailed and qualified assistance to, and advocate in support of the Parents. In order for a person to serve as a Parent Ally in Sedgwick County, they must first complete a training session administered by the Sedgwick County Permanency Coordinating Council. The Wichita Branch is now assembling a pool of volunteers who will attend the training and serve as Parent Allies.

If you are interested in gathering more information or volunteering to work on this effort, Click HERE to sign up on our Wiki Page... 

Friday, April 24, 2009

Wichita NAACP Complete Count committee now seeking volunteers


At our General Membership meeting, we were joined by Mr. Eloy Gallegos from the Census Department who came and brought information on how we could partner with the Census Bureau to ensure a complete count in the 2010 Census. The Wichita Branch will launch a community awareness campaign about the census, detailing why it's important, what the data is used for, and explaining the census forms.

The Census bureau is also looking for workers who would be willing to serve as enumerators. These are the people who will go out and knock on the doors of houses that do not return their census questionnaires. If you would be interested in participating in this effort; either by assisting with the community awareness campaign, or by serving as an enumerator, please click HERE to visit the Wichita NAACP Complete Count Committee Wiki page and sign up by leaving your name and contact information.

In the 2000 census, 74% of Kansas household responded to the census questionnaire. But in the predominantly African American and Hispanic North and Northeast parts of Wichita, the response rate was only 50%. Please join us and help ensure a Complete Count...

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Get your tickets now for the Wichita NAACP WIN Committee Spring Dance! Saturday May 9th


On Saturday, May 9th, the Women in the NAACP (WIN) committee will host a Spring dance honoring the women in our lives.  The dance will be held at the Beech Activity Center at 9710 E. Central from 8 until 12.

This dance is a fundraiser to support the constantly growing NAACP Youth Council. While we originally started with 5 children, the Wichita NYC has now grown to 52 youths, with a book club, two full debate teams, a chess team, and a liturgical dance team. The funds raised during this event will be used to support the youth through the purchase of additional books and materials for the book club, and to defray the costs of taking the youth on a return trip to the historic site of Nicodemus Kansas, and to the NAACP Centennial convention in New York City this July.

So please, come on out and enjoy some old-school/grown folks music with DJ Leonard Jackson and the NAACP, Celebrate the Women in your life, and show your support for the Wichita NAACP Youth Council...


What: Spring Dance "Celebrate the Women in your Life"
When: Saturday May 9th
Where: Beech activity Center (9713 E. Central)
Cost: $25.00

Food, Cash Bar, and Door Prizes
Music by DJ Leonard Jackson

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Racism vs. Race-ism: The changing language of Race in America


I’ve always been fascinated by words… Like how the word “Dialogue” once a Noun and Verb, lost it Verb form early in the 20th Century and is now poised to reclaim it. Or how words like “enormity” used to describe an act of extreme wickedness, can somehow soften over time to now commonly describe anything that is ‘large in scale’. The process is simple enough; common usage over a long enough period of time results in a redefinition of the word. Our language is constantly shifting and reinventing itself by the words we speak…

I have also been fascinated by the power of words. I’ve marveled at how the assimilation of a given word, phrase, or slogan has the power to construct, modify, or retard mental imagery and ideas. Just think “War on Terror”, “Forced Busing”, “Tax and Spend”, “Illegals”, "Special Rights" or “Culture War”…

In a sense, words are weapons in a war of ideas. A well turned phrase can incite or pacify ones passions, inspire or discourage action, or can stimulate or halt discussion. When it comes to the language of Race, the latter pair, the ability to stimulate or terminate discussion is foremost.

There is a perceptible shift in our National dialogue on race. We are experiencing a move away from definitions that describe the relationships of different groups of people to newer definitions designed to stifle discussion by negatively characterising discussion, dissent, or protest.

Consider the word "Racism".
The American Heritage Dictionary defines Racism as: a belief or doctrine that inherent differences among the various human races determine cultural or individual achievement, usually involving the idea that one's own race is superior and has the right to rule others; a policy, system of government, etc., based upon or fostering such a doctrine; discrimination. The definition describes a hierarchial belief system and the use of this belief system as doctrine or the basis for policy.

But this is far different from our contemporary uses of the word. I googled blogs and articles that used the word 'Racist' and found these quotes:

McCook Daily Gazette "Frankly I don't care about race the way Democrats do, but race is apparently the single issue to black Americans. So important was race, I contend that they acted as racists."

"I don't believe that the American Presidency is the place for affirmative action. Obama is the affirmative action President. Affirmative action is racism. You cannot have respect for a person who gets a job they did not earn."

Ubersite "It seems to me that black people are more racist. Just the fact that their always bitching about racism is racist. I believe fully in equality."

The articles and commentaries from which these quotes were culled suggest a new context in which racism (for the sake of clarity I will present this new idea as "Race-ism") is synonymous with race-consciousness. Thinking about, speaking about, or dealing with Race in any detailed or deliberate manner is "Race-ism". Oddly enough, in this context, comments clearly indicative of the type of hierarchial belief system the dictionary definition of the word "Racism" describes, are often passed off as non-racist or even anti-racist. This is possible because if Race-ism = Race consciousness, then claiming personal indifference towards race and racial issues would make one non-raceist regardless of the tone and tenor of one's comments. It is only in this context that people could describe President Barack Obama, a summa cume laude graduate of Harvard Law, a former Constitutional Law Professor, and former US Senator as nothing more than an Affirmative Action President, or "Barack the Magic Negro", while simultaneously declaring their statements to be non-raceist on the basis of their personal dispassion.

When we do engage the subject of Race, our conversations seem to evince a growing segregation of ideas, visions, and understandings. The chasm grows as new definitions seek to supplant old understandings and we dutifully avoid the courageous conversations necessary to repair the breach. Is Institutional Racism a lingering blight on our society that must be challenged and eliminated? Or is it a thing of the past, existing now only in the rhetorical ramblings of racial-hustlers and opportunists? The answer depends largely on who you ask.

A real tragedy of Race in our contemporary society is that it has become such a polarizing subject that at its very mention, it causes us to reflexively retreat to our ideological battle positions, thereby preventing us from truly listening to each other and understanding each others concerns. Any real understanding is impeded and we find ourselves unable to move beyond this stasis because of our refusal to 'dig deeper' and to give real consideration for opposing views. It's as though we fear that any substantive examination of the cauldron of race might uncover some degree of our own complicity thereby introducing a cognitive dissonance that would be psychologically traumatic.

"Race" is ideological "sausage"; we indulge, but with no real or sustained interest in understanding it's origins or composition. In fact, we consciously recognize that truly examining and understanding the phenomena of race would be disturbing. So instead, we ignore the deep and foundational issues, choosing to focus on the trivial, such as on how many blacks are on a specific TV show or the existence of BET. And any incident, immediate or remote, that hints at a larger underlying issue sparks an immediate and passionate response. All the while the chasm grows.

I've noted a few terms whose colloquial usages are seemingly based on new or alternative definitions:

RACE-IST = someone who talks about race or racism [see:diversity],
RACE-ISM = Any action taken containing or suggestive of a racial component or consciousness.
EQUALITY = the 'neutral' state reached no one speaks about race, racism, discrimination, inequality, or unfairness,
RACE CARD = any discussion that suggests an act of racism, racial discrimination, or race consciousness, negatively directed towards Blacks; whether modern or historical,

In its contemporary colloquial context, to even Talk about Racism, is to exhibit Race-ism.

Therefore, when groups like the NAACP protest or speak out against a perceived wrong or injustice, people are not necessarily motivated to act, nor are they motivated to make change. In fact by changing definitions, our society is insulates itself against criticisms and charges of racism by creating a virtual reality wherein inequality doesn't exist as long as nobody talks about it. (It reminds me of an old B-movie named 'Mystery Men' about a group of superheroes with useless super-powers, one of whom could turn invisible, but only as long as nobody looked at him)

But as these subtle semantic shifts move us towards a social environment that is increasingly hostile to critical analysis and societal introspection, we are really losing something of value... We've made tremendous progress in this country on racial issues in far more visceral and violent times than these. Yet progress has never come as a by-product of silence, apathy, or indifference. We've never moved forward, by simply closing our eyes and "moving on". Change is only achieved by those who are willing to look honestly and critically at where we stand, looking hopefully and optimistically at where we must go, and working passionately and deliberately to get us there. In this light, the shift in our national dialogue is clearly counter-productive.

We are faced with a myriad of solvable problems, but solving them will require our attention and it will require honest dialogue. Not for the purpose of assigning blame (there's enough blame to go around on all sides), but these courageous conversations are desperately needed so we can complete the work of designing solutions.

We need to talk about the fact that Public school districts with large minority populations receive nearly $1,000 less per pupil. We  need to talk about the recent data showing that within primarily minority school districts, approximately 78 percent of teachers do not teach in their accredited subject area. We need to talk about the fact that when white and black youths are arrested for the same crime and with similiar criminal records, minorities are three times more likely to be incarcerated than whites. We really need to address the seemingly permenant disparities in unemployment rates and the linkages to disparities in sickness and deaths from treatable diseases and afflictions as 52% of minorities are currently without health insurance...

But when race matters are equated with race-ism, when discussion of racial issues is characterized as race-ist, and when enumerating racial disparities is dismissed as the race-card, the creative conversations necessary to resolve these issues is impossible.

When will we ever talk about employment law and the 'shifting standards' that make discrimination cases virtually unwinnable? When will we really talk about immigration policy as it applies to all nations? Will we ever discuss the concept of "excess death" and it's roots?  Are we prepared to talk about why the gap in white and black unemployment rates never closes? Are we ready to talk about how teacher union contracts and how they impact the academic achievement gap?

I think THIS is what Attorney General Holder was speaking about when he spoke of our nation's cowardice in soberly and forthrightly addressing racial issues; before he too was shamed back into silence.

But what about us... Can we talk?

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

NAACP Issues Report on Discriminatory Lending Practices


This report, "Discrimination and Mortgage Lending in America: A Summary of the Disparate Impact of Subprime Mortgage Lending on African Americans," provides an overview of the NAACP's groundbreaking lawsuit against 13 of the nation's largest mortgage lenders and the impact of predatory lending on African Americans throughout the nation."

Saturday, April 18, 2009

The US will Boycott the UN Conference on Racism


Washington has confirmed it will boycott a UN forum on racism in Geneva next week because of differences over Israel and the right to free speech.

On April 15th, the NAACP, NAACP Legal Defense Fund, and the National Urban League, sent a letter to President Obama urging that he rescind that decision. [Click HERE for the Organizations letter to President Obama]

The state department said the proposed text of the conference's guiding document remained unacceptable despite having been amended significantly. The US and Israel quit a similar forum in Durban in 2001 when its draft document likened Zionism to racism. In the 110th Congress NY Representative Peter King

The five-day Durban Review Conference is due to open on Monday. EU diplomats were still consulting on Saturday on whether to attend the conference. Canada and Israel said earlier that they would not attend. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who has stirred outrage by repeatedly calling the Holocaust of the Jews a "myth", is the only prominent head of state so far scheduled to attend.

The state department said it was "with regret" that the US had decided to boycott the conference. "The text still contains language that reaffirms in total the Durban Declaration and Program of Action [DDPA] from 2001, which the United States has long said it is unable to support," the Obama Administration said in a statement. "Its inclusion in the review conference document has the same effect as inserting that original text into the current document and re-adopting it."

Internal debate has raged in the administration for weeks on whether to attend, the Associated Press news agency reports from Washington. Pro-Israel groups vehemently opposed participation while human rights advocates and organisations like TransAfrica and members of the Congressional Black Caucus thought it was important to attend.

Immediately after the announcement, Democratic Congresswoman Barbara Lee, who heads the black caucus in Congress, said the group was "deeply dismayed" by the boycott. "This decision is inconsistent with the administration's policy of engaging with those we agree with and those we disagree with..." she said. "The US is making it more difficult for it to play a leadership role on UN Human Rights Council as it states it plans to do. This is a missed opportunity, plain and simple."

Thursday, April 16, 2009

New Civil Rights Institute Opens at Emory University

The James Weldon Johnson Institute for Advanced Interdisciplinary Studies at Emory University was officially launched recently with a reception at the university. Named for James Weldon Johnson, author, composer, educator, lawyer, diplomat, and pioneering leader in the modern civil rights movement, the Johnson Institute is the first institute at Emory University established to honor the achievements of an American of African descent. Through its sponsored research and public programming, the Johnson Institute is one site within Emory University where members of the Emory community are challenged to reflect upon and examine the shifting, complex meaning of race and difference in history, culture and civil society in both a national and global context.

The mission of the Johnson Institute is to foster new scholarship, teaching, and public dialogue that focuses upon the origins, evolution, and legacy of the modern civil rights movement from 1905 to the present and its points of intersection with other social movements such as the Women’s Movement, the Gay and Lesbian Movement and the Human Rights Movement.

The Johnson Institute is also the home of the Alice Walker Literary Society. This author society is a collaborative project between Emory University and Spelman College. The papers of Alice Walker, the prize-winning novelist and activist, are part of the African American Collection of the Manuscript, Archives and Rare Book Library (MARBL) of Emory University. The first public exhibition of papers and other memorabilia from the extraordinary archives of Georgia-born Pulitzer Prize winner Alice Walker will open at Emory University Thursday, April 23.

The institute is under the direction of Rudolph P. Byrd, the Goodrich C. White Professor of American Studies at Emory. A graduate of Lewis & Clark College, Professor Byrd earned a Ph.D. at Yale University. He has been on the Emory University faculty since 1991. Previously he taught at the University of Delaware and Grinnell College. He is currently writing a biography of Ernest J. Gaines.

NAACP Legal Defense Fund Files Brief in Challenge to Use of Race in University Enrollment

On Monday, April 13th, the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund (LDF) filed a friend of the court brief in federal district court in Austin, Texas in the case of Fisher v. Texas. This case represents the first federal challenge to the use of race in a university admissions process since the Supreme Court's 2003 decision in Grutter v. Bollinger.

The challenge was launched in 2008 by two white students who were denied entry to the University of Texas at Austin (UT). UT admits students through two separate policies. Most students are admitted under the Top Ten Percent Plan, which guarantees admission to UT to all Texas students in the top ten percent of their high school class. The remainder of students are admitted under a holistic admissions process that considers race as one of many factors in a student's application file. Plaintiffs argue that the Top Ten Percent Plan generates a sufficient number of minority students on campus, and that UT should be prohibited from considering race as a factor in its holistic admissions process.

The brief, filed on behalf of LDF, the Black Student Alliance at the University of Texas at Austin (UT) and several African American students who are enrolled or who would like to enroll at UT in the future, emphasized that the percentage of African American students on the UT campus remained very low in the years before UT began considering race in its admissions process. As a result, UT students did not receive the educational benefits of diversity, including enriched classroom discussion, understanding of people of different backgrounds, and preparation for work and leadership in a diverse society – all of which are vitally important to our Nation's future.

Noted LDF President and Director-Counsel John Payton, "We believe that when the consideration of race was taken out of the equation, all students were deprived of the important learning and life opportunities that come from exposure to people with viewpoints and backgrounds different than ones own. It is our hope that the court will allow UT to continue its important effort to create a campus where the benefits of racial diversity flourish, and where the isolation that African American students have experienced in the past comes to an end."

Sunday, April 12, 2009

The Smithsonian holds public vote on designs for National Museum of African American History and Culture

The Smithsonian Institution has revealed six architectural designs vying to become the National Museum of African American History and Culture. The concepts—from boxy to spiral-shaped (like the inside of a conch shell, really), geometric to organic—certainly run the gamut. And there’s no shortage of special features, like outdoor amphitheaters, panoramic windows showcasing views of other monuments and roof gardens. The designs, photographs and models are on display at the Smithsonian Castle until April 16.

A jury, headed by the museum’s director Lonnie Bunch, will be selecting the winning design in mid-April. Construction of the museum, which will be located on a five-acre plot near the National Museum of American History and the Washington Monument, is scheduled to begin in 2012 and be completed by 2015.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Time to Dream Big: a letter from NAACP President Benjamin Todd Jealous

The repeal of New York state's Rockefeller drug laws - laws that locked up tens of thousands of people, mostly African Americans and Latinos, for low-level possession or dealing - signals a perfect storm for changing our expensive, ineffective, and discriminatory drug laws.

A confluence of state fiscal crises, reduced fear of crime, and the steady drumbeat of voices for prison reform contributed to make this moment. States like California, with dangerously overcrowded prisons, are modifying their "Three Strikes" laws, adopting smarter sentencing policies similar to New York. Some states are letting prisoners go early to save money. We are at a rare moment when voices advocating an end to mass incarceration -- urging alternative sentencing and ending the practice of using prisons to lock up the mentally ill and the addicted -- are resonating with the public and lawmakers.

This moment reflects an important window in our history. It's the time to dream big. The economic and political shifts open the door to advance policies that we thought would take decades to win. Overturning the draconian drug laws in New York was one of many battles predicted to take at least five more years to win, but the political shifts-- reflected in the election of President Obama --and the unprecedented fiscal crises brings us a unique opportunity for change.`

The struggle to end the "lock 'em up and throw away the key" policies that resulted in the U.S. jailing more of its citizens than any other industrialized country has just won a significant victory. But like all struggles, we have to keep moving forward until we achieve the comprehensive change our country needs. Now is the time.

For over 35 years, families in New York were plagued by the notorious Rockefeller drug laws. The policy, which included long mandatory prison sentences for first-time non-violent drug offenders, resulted in major drug lords often going free while non-violent first offenders got harsh sentences. The rule was particularly harsh for African Americans and women. By 1990, 61 percent of all female prisoners in New York were committed for a drug offense, compared to 32 percent of men. Mothers who needed drug treatment were thrown in jail for sentences as long as 20 years, torn from their families and leaving their children to fend for themselves in the foster care system. African Americans and Latinos constituted 94 percent of the total population of drug felons in New York, while whites were 5 percent.

In fact, according to the AP, overturning the Rockefeller laws is expected to save $250 million per year at a time when the state is grappling with a projected budget hole of $17.7 billion. New York spends $45,000 annually per inmate, while treatment costs $15,000.

After decades of protest by civil rights and civil liberties groups and impacted communities, the law was repealed earlier this month. In addition to saving money, it will usher in an era of smarter crime polices. The new approach will send most non-violent drug offenders to drug courts where they have access to treatment, and implement a new law creating a drug "kingpin" offense for "organized drug traffickers who profit from and prey on drug users" and new crimes for adults who sell drugs to children. The new laws right the backward impact of the previous law that seemed to target the victims with prison and let the "bad guys" go free.

Now, instead of unemployed teenagers or girlfriends coerced into carrying drugs getting the harsh sentences, the major drug dealers will go to prison and the drug addicts will get treatment.

New York Governor David Paterson should be applauded for his longtime support for ending these cruel drug laws. Just before lawmakers agreed on repeal, he cited the example of a female drug addict who was arrested 60 times over 25 years. After being successfully treated for her addiction, she became a drug counselor. That's the wisdom of the new policy.

BTJ

The Crisis of Aspiration: Why so many community efforts seemingly fall short


A couple nights ago, I attended a program sponsored by the County Health Department that dealt with the subject of Health Disparities. The program consisted of a film (“Are inequalities making us Sick?”) and a group discussion. The film (which is excellent) described at great length and detail how social factors and influences directly affect public health. The group discussion thereafter was reminiscent of the hundreds if not thousands of ‘community’ conversations that take place in cities across the country.

“We need to focus on Economic Development”. “We need to focus on Education”. “We need to focus on Discrimination”. “We need to stop doing so much talking and start acting”. “We need to figure out how to get the folks who need to hear this information in the room”.

Thankfully, the conversation was short… if we had talked for another hour or so, we almost certainly would have gotten to, “We need to get everybody’s name and number”. “We need to schedule a date for us all to come back together”. “We need to see what type of funding is available”. etc…

One thing that I reflected on after the meeting was that, in this meeting as in countless others, we had a room filled with informed and well-meaning people, deeply concerned about the status of our community and who were willing to sacrifice their time to try and make a difference. And this dynamic is replicated in cities and counties all across the country… So with the hearts and hands of so many who are willing to work towards a better future, why do we continue to lag behind in most social indicators? Whether were talking about infant mortality, low birthweight babies, life expectancy, net worth, home ownership, educational attainment, graduation rates, college attendance, entrepreneurship and business ownership… How could the efforts of so many concerned citizens seemingly fall short?

...I have a theory...

I offer this theory for critique and discussion because I am genuinely interested in finding or designing a more effective method of Social Change. I want to see us eliminate the achievement gap; I want to see us graduate all of our youth; I want to see us transform the anger and frustration within our community into a positive force that propels us towards our highest potential. But I believe that getting there will require fresh eyes, and new approaches. To wit, I offer these ideas for your consideration.

My theory revolves around the ideas of choice, aspiration, behaviors, and consequence. My theory asserts that we seem to fall short in our efforts because typically our efforts address outcomes rather than causes. We fight to modify the effects without challenging the choices. Certainly we talk often enough about choices in community work, but I would posit that we should look further ‘upstream’. Let me give you a few examples…

So often, when we discuss the changes we’d like to see in our community, we focus on behaviors. “If we could just get the boys out of the gangs and into something positive.” “If we could just get these kids focused on their education.” “If we could just keep these babies from having babies.” “if we could just get rid of the Thug/Gangster/Goon mentality.” “If we could just get the parents more involved.” Etc… Even Bill Cosby’s lauded diatribe was almost entirely behavior based. In his speech to an NAACP function he said, “We are not parenting. Ladies and gentlemen, listen to these people, they are showing you what’s wrong. People putting their clothes on backwards. –isn’t that a sign of something going on wrong? Are you not paying attention, people with their hat on backwards, pants down around the crack. Isn’t that a sign of something, or are you waiting for Jesus to pull his pants up? Isn’t it a sign of something when she’s got her dress all the way up to the crack…and got all kinds of needles and things going through her body. What part of Africa did this come from?”

Implicit in this approach is the belief that behavior is a choice that can simply be modified. It is true, if youth are exhibiting anti-social or negative behaviors, then they will likely experience negative social outcomes. So on this basis, we design programs, talks, and approaches to encourage and nurture better and more productive behaviors. Again, the premise is that better ‘behaviors’ will create better ‘outcomes’. Youth camps, youth programs, sports leagues, biddy-basketball, after-school programs, competitive activities… are all designed to get children involved with “doing” something positive. And while these programs have had a wonderful influence on a great number of children across the country, still I would suggest that our communities ‘return on investment’ has been meager. We still lag in the social indicators I’d mentioned previously, and in the case of the Academic Achievement gap, there are ominous signs that perhaps we are moving backwards. Now why is that?

Consider this: When I was a teen, I aspired to be a famous rapper. That was my vision and my dream… I spent time visualizing myself on stage, with albums, and video’s, and I sought a path to realize my goals. You wouldn’t catch me hanging around kids that weren’t into hip-hop. You wouldn’t catch me without a radio or without my beatbox Craig (cause in back in the 80’s every good rapper had a guy who would beatbox for him when needed). My decisions, my choices were based on the idea of attaining my goals. At that time, seemingly all famous rappers were from New York, so me and my friends learned to speak with fake New York accents. We wore fake gold, spoke with constructed accents, wore Addidas sneakers, Kangols and Gazzals… We hung out in certain places, went to certain parties, dressed a certain way etc etc… but was our behavior the choice? I would argue that the Goal/the Aspiration was the choice, and the behavior was the outcome.

Now during this time, I drank and smoked and participated in my fair share of negative social behaviors, but I didn’t perceive them as such. They weren’t negative to me because none of these things were detrimental to my goal. Things that most of society would view as negative or even anti-social, I enjoyed freely, because for me and the path I’d chosen, these issues were simply inconsequential. A brush with the law would not prohibit me from hip-hop fame; in a perverse sense it could actually enhance my street cred. Addictions to weed and cheap wine were not negative in my eyes, I saw weed and alcohol as beneficial in that they relaxed my inhibitions when I was onstage or performing.. Conversely, my education was NOT important to me. In my mind, academic success and failure were equally inconsequential. Neither was a requisite – neither was a concern. These behaviors were more than a series of individual choices; taken as a whole, they represent a template, one that I willingly adopted when I chose my goal.

Understanding this, I realized that when we see someone who seems to make chronically bad choices or who routinely exhibits anti-social behaviors, what is most likely is that we are seeing someone who has a far different aspiration or life goal that we simply can’t relate to. We project our aspiration and self-image onto that person, and in that context we see the resulting behaviors as destructive. But viewed through a radically altered lens, the same behaviors could actually seem neutral or even positive. The positive or negative value that we ascribe to a behavior is relative and it is determined by that behavior’s relationship to our aspiration. Behaviors that advance us towards our aspirational self image - we view as positive, those that threaten the attainment of our aspirational self-image - we view as negative.

Now, if standing before you was a 15 year old boy whose goal was to be the baddest Crip on 9th street, what do you think his behavioral template would look like? What behaviors would he find acceptable? How do you think he might feel about carrying a weapon? Spending a few months in the Juvenile detention Facility? Fighting? Being suspended or expelled?

Conversely, if a 15 year old child had a goal to become a Senator or President, consider how radically different their behavioral template might be? Would he/she drink alcohol? How might they view fighting? Suspensions or expulsions? Volunteer work? Educational attainment?

I believe that the crisis facing our community is a crisis of aspiration. Our goals and our aspirations are the Choice – behavior is the first level of outcome – consequence is the second level of outcome. When we attempt to mitigate consequences by challenging behavior, we ignore the aspirational goal that is the driver of both. It is akin to ignoring the inputs but hoping for a different output. Anti-social behavior is the symptom, not the disease. The disease is the lack of vision and the absence of a positive aspirational self-image. We’ve got help our children dream again. We’ve got to challenge the pimp, ho, and thug images they’re consuming through television, videos, and music. We’ve got to work with our children to build their aspirations to something worthy of their potential. We've got to focus our efforts on defeating the low expectations and negative self-images that imprison our youth in lives of mediocrity when they are capable of excellence. After school programs and summer jobs are vitally important, but they are no substitute for a dream. Dr. King gave us his dream, now it’s our turn to ‘pay it forward’.

What do you think? What are the other pieces of this puzzle?

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Ward Connely Watch: The California Appellate Court upholds Berkeley student-assignment plan - rejects bid from Connerly

Ward Connerly, the California businessman who launched successful anti-affirmative-action campaigns in nearly 10 states, was unsuccessful in his latest attempt to thwart a Berkeley, Calif., student-assignment plan to promote diversity in its schools.

The NAACP Legal Defense Fund (LDF), along with a coalition of civil rights groups including the ACLU of Northern California, the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights and the ACLU of Southern California, successfully represented a group of parents who intervened to protect the student assignment plan in Berkeley, California against the challenge from Ward Connerly's American Civil Rights Foundation. Berkeley's plan seeks to promote diversity in its schools by taking account of the demographics of the neighborhoods where students live, including parental education level; family income; and race and/or ethnicity."

The California Appellate Court ruled that Berkeley's new plan to weigh demographics of neighborhoods where students live, parental education levels, family income and race to further diversify its schools does not violate Proposition 209--the Connerly-authored constitutional provision that makes it illegal to grant privilege or preference based on race. The court's decision appropriately recognized the importance of school district efforts to bring students together across lines of race and class and to provide access and opportunities to students who live in areas of concentrated disadvantage. In 2007, the United States Supreme Court similarly recognized the importance of efforts to promote diversity and avoid racial isolation in schools in Seattle and Louisville, and the ability of school districts to take account of neighborhood demographics, including race, as part of those efforts.

"The constitutional provision prohibits unequal treatment of particular person and groups of persons; it does not prohibit the collection and consideration of community-wide demographic factors," said Justice Patricia Sepulveda, writing for the majority in the California Court of Appeals.

This is an important victory for those who understand the importance of a diverse learning environment and believe that opportunity should be equally afforded to all," said John Payton, NAACP Legal and Educational Defense Fund president and director-counsel.

Connerly's lawsuit challenged the most recent efforts of the Berkeley school district to integrate its schools; indeed Berkeley has been at the national forefront of such efforts for decades. In 1954, on the heels of Brown v. Board of Education, a citizens' commission was formed which concluded that Berkeley suffered from severe housing segregation that led to racial isolation in the schools. In 1968, the school district became one of the first in the nation to integrate its schools voluntarily. Over time and in light of the continued residential segregation in Berkeley, the school district continued to adopt and revise its student assignment plans to preserve integration in its schools, leading up to the 2004 plan successfully defended today.

The NAACP Legal Defense Fund has worked to dismantle racial segregation and ensure equal educational opportunity in our nation's schools for over six decades, representing African-American students in Brown v. Board of Education and numerous subsequent landmark school desegregation cases. Information about LDF's school diversity work can be accessed on this site, including a manual for parents, educators and advocates entitled Still Looking to the Future: Voluntary K-12 School Integration. 

Friday, April 3, 2009

Victory - The Kansas Legislature approves a new minimum wage!

Today, on the very last day and the last hour of the normal legislative session both chambers of the Kansas Legislature have agreed upon a bill to raise the Kansas Minimum wage to $7.25 effective Jan 1st, 2010. At $2.65 per hour, Kansas had the lowest minimum wage in the Nation.

But now, due to a well-run grassroots campaign led by the Kansas Action Network, Kansas finally has a minimum wage that matches the Federal Minimum wage. The Wichita Branch NAACP is proud to have been a member of the Raise the Wage coalition and we wish to publicly thank Mr. Jake Lowen of the Kansas Action Network for his excellent work and tireless advocacy on this issue.

You did great work Jake... And we thank you on behalf of our organization and our constituents. Your efforts have made a difference in the lives of thousands of Kansans...

KMyles to particpate in panel discussion with Archbishop Thabo Makgoba Saturday at Friends University

On Saturday, Wichita Branch President Kevin Myles will participate in a panel discussion with Archbishop Thabo Makgoba, the Anglican archbishop of Cape Town and head of the Anglican Church of Southern Africa, on the subject of "Restorative Justice".

Restorative Justice is a theory of justice that looks at repairing the harm caused by a criminal through a cooperative process of all those affected by the crime.

The Community forum will be held at Friends University at 10:00am in the Marriage and Family Therapy Building. The forum will explore how restorative justice and forgiveness principles might be better used in the Wichita-area community.

This will be the Archbishop's first visit to the United States since his installation.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Voter Empowerment Coalition - Candidates forum Sunday April 5th


Tuesday April 7th is the date of the General Election for School Board and City Council Candidates. On Sunday April 5th, the Voter Empowerment coalition will host our General Election Candidates forum, at 4:00pm at the Tabernacle Bible Church at 1817 N Volutia. This event is free and all registered voters are encouraged to attend.

Candidates for USD259
Betty J Arnold: District 1
Unopposed
-
Connie Dietz: District 2
Karen L Walker: District 2
-
Lanora Nolan: District 5
Peter V Grant: District 5
Julia Steil-Epperly: District 5
-
Lynn W Rogers: District 6
Jacqueline Bujanda: District 6

Candidates for Wichita City Council
Lavonta Williams: District 1
James Barfield: District 1
-
Jim Skelton: District 3
Charles Dahlem: District 3
-
Janet Miller: District 6
Bob Aldrich: District 6


If you'd like to confirm your voter registration status, find your assigned polling place, or view a sample ballot, you can do so by clicking here to visit VoterView.

You also have the option of Advance Voting, either at the Election Office, 510 N. Main St, or at any of the below listed sites on April 2 and 3 from Noon to 7:00 PM or April 4 from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM.

Advance Voting Locations
Bel Aire City Building, 7651 E Central Park Ave
Center for Health and Wellness, 2707 E. 21st St. N.
Church of the Holy Spirit, 18218 W. Highway 54, Goddard
First United Methodist Church, 560 N. Park, Valley Center
Grace Presbyterian Church, 5002 E Douglas Ave
Haysville Activity Center, 7106 S. Broadway, Haysville
Independent Living Resource Center, 3033 W. 2nd St. N.
Machinist Building, 3830 S Meridian - Saturday April 4: 1:00PM to 4:00PM only
Maranatha Worship Center, 888 S Webb Rd
Reformation Lutheran Church Parish Hall, 7601 E 13th St N
Sedgwick County Zoo Cargill Learning Center, 5555 Zoo Blvd
Sharon Baptist Church, 2221 S Oliver
St. Andrew's Lutheran Church, 2555 Hyacinth Lane
Westlink Church of Christ, 10025 W Central Ave
Woodlawn United Methodist Church, 431 S Woodlawn Blvd, Derby

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About This Blog

Jung/Myers Briggs

INTJ - "Mastermind". Introverted intellectual with a preference for finding certainty. A builder of systems and the applier of theoretical models. 2.1% of total population.
Free Jung Personality Test (similar to Myers-Briggs/MBTI)

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