Monday, October 14, 2013

American Refugee

Sometimes I feel like a refugee in America.

The unemployment rate for African American males or men like me stands at 14.5 percent, which is twice that of white men due to racism and too few black-owned businesses. African Americans often faced opposition when attempting to start companies in the past,  causing most to integrate or seek opportunities elsewhere. Black Wall Streets or Harlem-like communities across the country, for example, were routinely singled out because of jealousy or claims of wrongdoing. They were harassed in many instances or burned to the ground.

The legal system also conspires against men of color in this country.  Black males are constantly profiled by overzealous law enforcement officers and everyday citizens like neighborhood watchman George Zimmerman,  who was found not guilty of the shooting death of an unarmed black teenage boy whom he hounded.  As a result,  at least half of all African American males between the ages of twelve and thirty-four have spent time behind bars, away from their precious families.

Finally,  my voting rights have been trampled upon over the years.  For example,  the U.S. Supreme Court recently gutted the 1965 Voting Rights Act,  while Republicans,  like Democrats a generation ago,  have instituted measures to dilute the voting strength of minorities, like voter I.D. laws and extreme Gerrymandering.

But harping on the past or blaming the system is not the answer when at least half of African American youngsters do not complete high school, and black-on-black crime is through the roof. To be liberated, African Americans must up their game against incredible odds.

The Lost Republicans August 2013

The Republican Party has done an about-face in recent years.  The party was formed in 1854 as an antislavery alternative to the Whig and Democratic Parties and nominated Abraham Lincoln in 1860 as its first presidential candidate.  After his assassination in 1865,  members pushed for far-reaching change in the South during Reconstruction to aid the newly freed slave. Nearly a hundred years later, in the 1950s and 1960s,  the G.O.P. backed Civil Rights,  a balanced federal budget, and created the Interstate Highway System to better ship goods and military hardware across state lines.  But in the Twenty-First Century,  The Grand Old Party has backtracked or changed course on critical issues.  Conservatives supported deficit spending during the Bush Administration by backing two costly wars abroad.  They even went along with voter ID laws at the height of the 2012 election despite repeated warnings that doing so could dilute minority voting strength in swing states like North Carolina,  Florida, and Ohio.  Finally,  modern Republicans have vehemently opposed President Obama,  seemingly out of spite,  which has undoubtedly slowed the economic recovery.  If the Republican Party doesn't mend its broken ways and take a lesson from the past,  it could lose again in 2016.

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Booker Wins New Jersey Primary

Booker pulled it off in a crowded field to win the Democratic nomination for the U.S. Senate in a special election in
 New Jersey.  His next step is to defeat the Republican nominee,  businessman Steve Lonegan,  in  
 October to fill the vacancy created by the death of U.S. Senator Frank Lautenberg.  If elected,  he can fulfill a dream of rebuilding the Garden State with jobs and other programs and from there to the White House.  Only time will tell.




Corey Booker 's U.S. Senate Run (June 2013)

Democrat Corey Booker, the energetic mayor of Newark, New Jersey, has announced his intention to run in New Jersey's special U.S. Senate election to fill the seat left vacant by the death of Senator Frank Lautenberg.
 
If he wins, he will become the first African American elected to the United States Senate since Barack Obama in Illinois in 2004.

Like Obama, he possesses charisma and style that drive voters to the polls.  He came out of nowhere to win his first office, a seat on the Newark City Council, back in 1998.  He then embarked on a grassroots effort to become mayor of the city in 2006 and again in 2010, similar to Barack Obama's successful run for President of the United States in 2008.  While in office, he has pursued a middle-class agenda like Obama's concerning jobs, housing, and crime prevention.

But will he be able to compete or hold his own like Barack Obama on the national stage?  Booker's strongest on local issues like law enforcement and public education in a struggling city he has helped to rebuild.  He was even on the front lines during Hurricane Sandy and later made history when, according to published reports, he rescued a homeowner from a burning house.  But can he go up against a top-notch Republican or Democrat on issues like the Middle East, the federal deficit, or the war in Afghanistan?  If not, the race could slip away from him in a solidly blue state.

To win, he must enhance his knowledge of current events yet play up his down-home persona.  It would guarantee him the suburban vote and the support of hardcore cities like Trenton and Patterson as a pathway to victory.

Mark Richt

Mark Richt has served with dignity as the head football coach of the University of Georgia for the past twelve years.

When the Georgia Bulldogs lost the S.E.C. championship game of 2012 to the University of Alabama, he didn't go berserk on the sideline despite its bizarre ending.  It went down to the wire as Chris Conley was tackled on the five-yard line after catching a deflected pass from quarterback Aaron Murray.  Time then expired before Georgia could get off another play.  Instead of acting like a jerk the way some coaches would have done, he simply packed up his team and headed back to Athens.

When UGA endured a crushing defeat to Clemson University in their 2013 season opener, Mark Richt took the high road.  Even after his team blew a second-quarter lead, Coach Richt stayed calm.  With the heartbreaking loss, the university dropped from five to eleven in the polls before rebounding the following week against SEC powerhouse South Carolina to the credit of their top leader, Mr. Richt, the strong, silent type, like legendary head coach Vince Dooley before him.

Finally, in the game against North Texas State University, when the Mean Green shocked Georgia with a third-quarter 21 to 21 tie, Richt didn't blow his stack. He remained confident that the Bulldogs would pull it out in the end.  As a result, UGA scored twenty-four unanswered points to break the stalemate and win 45 to 21 in a driving rainstorm.  Like in the past, the victory was due to a capable head coach.

Mark Richt deserves much kudos for being level-headed, which is why he is the senior coach in the Southeastern Conference.


A Crucial Decision

  America is on the cusp of electing a new president with two main contenders vying for the highest office in the land. One has distinguishe...