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THE GREENSBORO TIMES Further from the Dream > from page 1


instructed prosecutors to impose the toughest penalties wherever they can. Most social measures and indicators, research and studies show Blacks lag far behind Whites, are more prone to illness and chronic diseases like obesity, diabetes and high blood pressure; are last hired and first fired; and when compared to Whites without a college education, for example, Blacks with a college degree still earn less income, have less social mobility and garner considerably less wealth. Whether it’s life expectancy, earning potential, sentencing, arrests or incarceration, Blacks don’t fare well either. According to the Census Bureau, Black families in America earn $57.30 for every $100 in income earned by White families. Meanwhile, for every $100 in White family wealth, Black families hold just $5.04. White households, on average, have 10 times more wealth than Blacks. In a New York Times story detailing a 2017 Yale study, researchers found Americans and higher-income Whites, in particular, vastly overestimate progress toward economic equality between Blacks and Whites. Also they said, Americans believe that Blacks and Whites are more equal today than they truly are on measures of income, wealth, wages and health benefits. And they believe too, that more historical progress has occurred than is the case, suggesting “a profound misperception of and unfounded optimism” regarding racial equality. The Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, asserts that President Trump is not the problem, but is a symptom of America’s moral sickness. America, he has said often, is in the midst of a Third Reconstruction. “We’re witnessing a fundamental changing of our demographics around the world,” said Rev. Barber, former president of the North Carolina NAACP and president and senior lecturer of Repairers of the Breach during a speech in January. “We see extremist policies in America today and it’s driven by the growing blackening and browning of America and a fusion of every creed, color and class.” “Those who embrace the Make America Great Again slogan are willing to work hard and cheat to undermine what is evolving in America,” said Rev. Barber. “This is White hegemony and White nationalism strengthened by enormous wealth.” “We are getting farther away from actualizing Dr. King’s dream. Men lie, women lie, but numbers don’t lie,” said Rev. Kyev Tatum, president of the Fort Worth Southern Christian Leadership Conference. “If you look at in 1968, those sanitation workers were striking for three reasons: One, they were making 70 cents per hour. Two, they were being called boy, instead of being called a man; and three, the working conditions was so unsafe that men were being tossed inside and behind their trucks and dying because no one in the city said anything. Fast forward to 2018 … we’re still seeing issues where African Americans, especially men in Fort Worth, making less than 33 cents on the dollar, the highest unemployment rate since slavery when we had free labor,” he added. “Dr. King’s dream has turned into a nightmare,” said Student Minister Abdul Sharrieff Muhammad of the Nation of Islam in Atlanta. “Atlanta as we speak right now is a nightmare. Not only is the unemployment rate


NASCAR > from page 1


marking his return to the NCWTS following a three-year hiatus. He came in 15th place at Daytona International Speedway. In a statement released earlier this month, Harville-Lebron called


it an “honor” to partner with Stenzel and the NCWTS team, Copp Motorsports. “This team truly exemplifies diversity, that is sure to attract a younger multicultural fan base. It’s an honor to announce that Stenzel is now a part of this racing family.”


In addition to granting opportunities to people of color, Harville-


Lebron wishes to see more become sports owners, particularly of NASCAR teams. “It’s important for our culture to push generational wealth to our children. It’s important to lead by example. All too often our children see negative images of our culture and I think it’s very important for people of our culture actually succeeding in business,” she said.


high, but when you drive down MLK Avenue, all you see is homeless people.” Ms. Hunt said she recently watched a clip of Dr. King where he talked about the disadvantages enslaved Blacks faced when they were emancipated. “He was saying that when we came out of slavery, Whites got millions of acres and Black people got nothing,” she said. “The ex-slaves were freed with nothing, no land, no 40 acres and a mule, no resources. What he said was so relevant that it could have been said last night. Today, it’s the same old bullshit. We know he got killed for illuminating issues of poverty.” “I would argue that racism was an instrument used as a way of oppressing us and keeping poor White people disorganized,” said labor organizer and activist Bill Fletcher, Jr., former president of TransAfrica Forum and a senior scholar with the Institute for Policy Studies. “Racism is important for White people. It misleads them in terms of what they’re told the source of their problems are,” he said. “Hopefully over time White people will appreciate moral appeals, but we have to win by them by showing how they’re also getting screwed over by the system. Trump won every category of Whites.” Mr. Fletcher and educator Dr. Gerald Horne credit sustained and systematic repression against Blacks from the federal government with blunting and almost destroying Black forward progress.“The internationalist Paul Robeson was beaten in submission. They chopped down the tallest tree and left all the smaller trees frightened,” said Dr. Horne, whose latest book is titled, “The Apocalypse of Settler Colonialism: The Roots of Slavery, White Supremacy, and Capitalism in Seventeenth-Century North America and the Caribbean.” “Our community utilizes a lot of bluster to obscure and hide the fear we have. I think there are little pockets of activity but we need big pockets,” he said. Mr. Fletcher agreed and echoed Dr. Horne’s comments about the federal government targeting Black leaders. “There was repression—our leaders killed and organizations destroyed,” he said. “We thought we had won. We looked at victory as a permanent state of affairs. We have to fight and always fight or those victories will disintegrate.” Despite the litany of woes Blacks endure, Mr. Fletcher, who said he’s a socialist, is “cautiously optimistic” about Blacks attaining Dr. King’s dream. Stephon Clark and Saheed Vassell have joined the roll of Blacks killed by police, along with Korryn Gaines, Alton Sterling, Natasha McKenna, Philando Castile, Meagan Hockaday, Walter, Scott, Eric Garner, Tamir Rice, Gabriella Nevarez and Rekia Boyd and almost countless others.In almost every case, the cops involved were not indicted or charged.“Part of the reason we’re in such difficulty is because we don’t think globally,” said Dr. Horne. “A lot of our leaders don’t even have a passport. Also, we have no allies. Historically, we’ve had to depend on durable allies who disappear at the most inopportune moments.”Dr. Horne said the times Blacks have had success, such as the 1954 Board v. Brown Supreme Court decision, the United States was under pressure to make some accommodations.


Ms. Hunt, Mr. Fletcher and Dr. Horne said young activists give them hope.


“The Movement for Black Lives and the Dreamers have really been a shot in the arm. It’s been very inspirational,” Mr. Fletcher said. “A lot of people, Baby Boomer and Gen X’ers are beaten down then you see young people rising up.”


“I hope young people lead us, if not, our goose is cooked. Let’s hope,


too, that the Resistors are successful in 2018 or 2020,” he concluded with a wry chuckle.


Demetric Muhammad, author of “Was Dr. King a Black Muslim,” says Dr.


King’s message was reduced to a dream because Dr. King had revolutionary ideas that America’s leaders feared.


“And in 1966, Dr. King met with the Honorable Elijah Muhammad in


February, and that signaled that he was leaving his commitment to ‘white liberal ideas’ and solutions,” argued Demetric Muhammad.


So, here’s a man, said Demetric Muhammad, that was supposed to be


celebrating the signing of the Civil Rights Act, but he was melancholy, he was despondent, he was reflective and pensive.


“We achieved the greatest thing we could ever achieve when we elected a


Black man for president for two terms. That was the greatest achievement that you could get from voting and yet in his eight-year term, our community regressed and not progressed,” said Demetric Muhammad


Many are beginning to open their eyes to the idea of separation, proposed by the Nation of Islam, he observed.


Look at the major cities in America where immigrants have settled, he


said. They live inside these cities, but they have a dual-reality, one that is a part of American society and one that is separate from American society, continued Demetric Muhammad.


“These are the people who if you’ll notice they come to America, they’re


not too particular about voting and politics,” he said. “They understand the power of unity and economics and they’ve realized that all they have to do is take a few families, move into a neighborhood, and in a few years, invite another family to move into that neighborhood, pool their resources. Open up a restaurant with the food they like to eat from their home country, open up a school and teach their culture, pool their resources and stop renting and buy property, and this is the immigrant model of separation.


TheHBCUAdvocate.com College Scholarships from A-Z


“These are people that are getting more out of the American economy and


American society than Black people have received for more than 400 years,” he concluded.


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