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The Fire This Time: Anthology features a new generation of authors speaking out on race

By Hope Wabuke, The Root

In 2011 Jesmyn Ward won the National Book Award for her novel Salvage the Bones, an exploration of one black family’s experience during the 12 days leading up to, and after, Hurricane Katrina. Ward is also the author of the novel Where the Line Bleeds and the memoir Men We Reaped, a deeply felt accounting of the lives of five black men destroyed by experiences with racism in America.

Now Ward has compiled an anthology of some of the most innovative and compelling contemporary writers of color—mostly black—writing on the black experience in America. Titled The Fire This Time: A New Generation Speaks About Race in homage to James Baldwin’s seminal classic The Fire Next Time, Ward has given us a profound, necessary work of depth and insight.

“After George Zimmerman shot and killed Trayvon Martin on February 26, 2012, I took to Twitter,” begins Ward in her introduction to The Fire This Time. Ward simply didn’t have anywhere else to go to find community to share her frustration, anger and fear. Pregnant and remembering the lives of her brother and several friends who had been killed by similar acts of racial violence, Ward was overwhelmed with the knowledge that Trayvon’s killer would go free.

When looking at pictures of Trayvon, Ward saw a child—legally and biologically—who had been killed by a grown man. “And then I realized that most Americans did not see Trayvon as I did,” writes Ward. “Trayvon’s sable skin and his wide nose and his tightly coiled hair signaled something quite different for others like Zimmerman and the jury and the media outlets who questioned his character with declarations like He abused marijuana and He was disciplined at school for graffiti and possessing drug paraphernalia [and] saw Trayvon as nothing more than a wayward thug.”

However, when Twitter proved too ephemeral, Ward found solace in rereading her favorite author, Baldwin, and an idea was born. Ward decided to gather other writers and thinkers to craft the words that a “black boy who lives in the hilly deserts of California” or a “girl in rural Missouri could pick up at her local library and, while reading, encounter a voice that hushed her fears.” Ward’s goal for The Fire This Time is for the book to become for today’s youths what Baldwin’s book meant for her—for this book to be the comforting voice telling you that you are loved and valued and worth something in a world that enacts hate and violence upon you simply because of the color of your skin.

Ward has assembled a stellar cast of authors: National Book Critics Circle Award-winning poet Claudia Rankine, author of Citizen: An American Lyric; Guggenheim fellow Jericho Brown; cultural critics and best-selling authors Kiese Laymon and Daniel Jose Oldér; Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Isabel Wilkinson, author of The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America’s Great Migration; Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Natasha Trethewey; and award-winning authors Edwidge Danticat and Honorée Fanonne Jeffers, among others.

Rankine’s contribution, “The Condition of Black Life Is One of Mourning,” showcases the brilliance that made her lyric poem Citizen one of the best books of the decade. Here, Rankine articulates the special pain held by black parents of black children: the fear that one’s child will become the next victim of racial violence. “There really is no mode of empathy that can replicate the daily strain of knowing that as a black person you can be killed for simply being black,” writes Rankine.

The esteemed Wilkerson gives us the essay “Where Do We Go From Here?” a succinct analysis of the backlash that follows any level of black achievement, as well as a thorough accounting of redlining, Jim Crow and the history of ongoing, systemic violence against blacks in America. “There was a lynching every four days in the early decades of the twentieth century,” Wilkerson writes. “It’s been estimated that an African American is now killed by police every two or three days.”

Of special note is “Blacker Than Thou,” Kevin Young’s exploration of blackface, pop culture, Rachel Dolezal and American identity. “Sinking feeling,” declaims Young midway through his essay: “blackfaced person always occupies a bigger stage than a black one.” Indeed, Dolezal, a white woman, was offered a lucrative book contract to write about the experience of being a black woman in America.

Another piece of particular interest is Laymon’s “Da Art of Storytellin’ (a Prequel),” which looks at the human cost of racial discrimination in the workplace. Laymon’s aging grandmother worked at a chicken plant in Mississippi for 30 years—one of the few jobs available to black women at the time. Here, Laymon’s tribute to his grandmother turns into a meditation on the black body, black love, black creativity and honoring our ancestors.

Yet, as well curated as this anthology is, one cannot help wishing for more essays and voices to delve into. If there is anything to quibble at with this anthology, it is that the ending comes too quick. The smaller structure is no doubt a deliberate stylistic choice, given Ward’s choice to model the work after The Fire Next Time, itself a slim volume. But with the terrifying times we are living in, the subject matter is timely, relevant and nearly inexhaustible. Still, there is no doubt that The Fire This Time is a powerful, rewarding read that gets to the heart of what it means to be black in America today.

“We’re tired of having to figure out how to talk to our kids and teach them that America sees them as less, and that she just might kill them,” Ward writes. But Ward is hopeful that the act of speaking and writing will lead to change and a better future—one where “black boys can walk to the store and buy candy without thinking they will die” and “cops see twelve-year-old black boys playing with fake guns as silly kids and not homicidal maniacs.”

WNBA reverses fines against players for BLM protest shirts

By Charise Frazier, NewsOne

In an effort to stand behind players who decide to speak on social justice issues, the WNBA announced plans to rescind the $500 fines against players from the New York Liberty, Indiana Fever, and the Phoenix Mercury, according to NBC News.

League president Lisa Borders announced the decision via Twitter on Saturday after being faced with mounting pressure as the nation turned a watchful eye on the subject surrounding work policies, censorship, and police brutality.

Tensions between players and the organization rose throughout the month of July after the Minnesota Lynx wore black shirts stitched with the words, “Change starts with us. Justice & Accountability,” written in white on the front.

On the back were the names of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile, two Black men shot at the hands of police, as well as the Dallas police shield to honor the five officers killed a day after Castile. The words “Black Lives Matter” were scrawled beneath the shield’s emblem.

After the Lynx made national headlines, other players followed suit and wore similar shirts with the hashtag, “Black Lives Matter.”

In response, the league sent out a memo reminding players of rules regarding uniform violations. Players continued with their silent protest against league wishes and were slapped with a fine, including a $5,000 penalty against participating teams.

On Thursday at a post-game news conference, the Liberty and Fever refused to take questions on any subject other than Black Lives Matter.

Tamika Catchings, president of the players’ union, issued a statement. Frustrated at the organization’s decision to fine players, especially after the WNBA openly supported the victims of the Orlando Pulse shooting, she said:

“Instead of the league taking a stance with us, where they tell us they appreciate our expressing our concerns like they did for Orlando, we’re fighting against each other.”

Other players like the Liberty’s Tina Charles vented their frustration on social media, impassioned by their platform to speak out on social justice issues.

Many other athletes have also stepped up, lending their voices to the issue of police brutality incited by a call from NBA star Carmelo Anthony.

Kaine, says H!

By Jessica Hopper, ABCNews.go.com

Name: Tim Kaine

Party: Democrat

Date of Birth: Feb. 26, 1958

Age: 58

What He Does Now: U.S. Senator from Virginia. Elected in 2012. Serves on Armed Services, Budget, Foreign Relations and Aging Committees.

What He Used to Do: Kaine served as Democratic National Committee chairman from 2009 to 2011. He served as governor of Virginia from 2006 to 2010, as lieutenant governor from 2002 to 2006, and as mayor of Richmond from 1998 to 2001. He was first elected to office in 1994 as a Richmond City Council member. He has said he ran for council because he thought the governing body was too racially divided. He got his start as a lawyer handling civil rights and fair-housing cases as well as representing death row inmates. He attended the University of Missouri and Harvard Law School.

Hometown: Born in St. Paul, Minnesota but raised in a Kansas City suburb

Family Tree: Kaine was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, to Albert and Kathleen Kaine. He is the eldest of three boys. He was raised in Kansas City where his father owned a metalworking shop. His mother was a home economics teacher. He met his wife Anne Holton at Harvard Law School. They married in November 1984 and have three children: Nat, Woody and Annella. Kaine’s father-in-law, A. Linwood Holton, is the former Republican governor of Virginia, and Kaine has called him his “political mentor.” Kaine’s wife, Anne, is currently the Virginia secretary of education.

Key life/career moments:

While at Harvard Law School, he took a year off in 1980 to be a missionary in Honduras and help run a small vocational school there. It is there where he perfected his Spanish. He still speaks Spanish fluently. Kaine has called the experience in Honduras “searing.” He said it taught him that “struggle” is part of life. His exposure in Honduras to overwhelming poverty helped shape his future and his determination to serve others. Kaine has also said that it led him to his wife, Anne, and that the two of them set out to make “reconciliation” the mission of their lives.

In the Senate, he has made a name for himself by sometimes butting heads with his friend, President Obama, when it comes to the role of Congress in giving the president authority to deploy military force and declare war.

Kaine was vetted in 2008 as a potential running mate for Obama. Of the outcome of Obama’s decision, he told a Virginia NBC affiliate, “The president told me at one point, he said you know, you are my heart pick and Biden is my head pick … Sometimes I go with my heart, sometimes I go with my head.”

As governor of Virginia, he dealt with a Republican-controlled General Assembly that blocked several of his primary goals, including expanding early education and repairing the state’s transportation system. During his governorship, he also dealt with an economic crisis and the mass shooting at Virginia Tech. Following the mass shooting, Kaine’s leadership resulted in statewide mental health reforms. He also banned smoking in Virginia restaurants. He told the Washington Post his biggest regret was not finding more money for roads. Since he’s left the governorship, some of the $160,000 he’s received in gifts has come under scrutiny. Some have described his biggest accomplishment as governor as delivering Virginia for a Democratic presidential candidate for the first time in over 40 years.

He started his career as a civil rights attorney, handling death penalty and anti-discrimination cases. One case Kaine discusses frequently is Richard Whitley’s appeal of his death sentence. Kaine was then a young lawyer and Whitley had been convicted of slashing the throat of a Virginia widow and raping her twice.

What You Might Not Know About Him:

He has attended a black Catholic Church, St. Elizabeth Catholic Church, for 30 years. The Richmond church hosted his wedding in 1984 and the baptism of his three kids. For years, Kaine was a tenor in the men’s choir until politics prevented him from making weekly rehearsals. Kaine reportedly loves to sing.

He made history by being the first person to give a full Senate floor speech in Spanish during the debate over the so-called gang of eight bill in 2013.

He had a lot of inner turmoil as governor when it came to the death penalty. When the state executed someone, he reportedly would stay in his office with an open line to the death chamber, and his staffers said he was at times emotional.

He travels with three harmonicas and has played with Boyd Tinsley, Bruce Hornsby, Ricky Skaggs, Dan Tyminski and the Cary Street Ramblers.

He’s never lost an election in his career, although as Democratic National Committee chairman he failed in 2010 to deliver victories in the gubernatorial races of Virginia and New Jersey where respective candidates Creigh Deeds and Jon Corzine lost.

His basement neighbor in the Russell Building when he first got to the Senate: Ted Cruz

He called himself “boring” in a June 2016 interview with Meet The Press

What He Has Said About Clinton:

He endorsed Hillary Clinton in May 2014 at a Ready for Hillary breakfast. Politico reported that she called personally to thank him.

In June 2016, he said, “the reason I’m helping Hillary, I encouraged her to run in May of 2014, because I could telescope forward and see some of the challenges that this nation would be facing. And I decided that by reason of character, by reason of background, and experience, but also especially by reason of results, she would be the most qualified person to be president in January of 2017.”

Kaine’s abortion stance is not as liberal as Clinton’s. He has said that personally, as a Catholic, he is pro-life but does not believe the government should intrude into a woman’s right to choose.

What He Has Said About Veepstakes:

He told ABC News on July 5, 2016: “The only role I’m playing is trying to help her win Virginia. I have lived in Virginia long enough to remember when we were a state that didn’t matter in presidential politics. It is now nice to be in a state that matters a lot so the work that I can do to be helpful to her is just right here at home.”

In December, 2015, he reflected on the VP speculation swirling around him both in 2008 and now. He told the Richmond Times-Dispatch: “My gut told me eight years ago that wasn’t how I was going to make my contribution,” he said. “My gut tells me now the way I’m going to make my contribution is right here in the Senate.” Kaine added, “I want to be John Warner, is what I want to do.”

In April 2016, he told MSNBC’s Morning Joe, “And I have a great feeling that I’m going to be on that podium with Hillary Clinton when she’s taking the oath of office, but I’m going to be sitting with the other senators.”

In May 2016, he told David Gregory: “My gut doesn’t feel much differently this time than last”

In June 2016, he told Meet The Press, “People will speculate, but I have got one job and one job only right now, and that is to work hard for Hillary Clinton so she can win and especially in Virginia, that’s the area where I have been helping her and that’s the area where I’m going to help her.”

On July 11, 2016, he told MSNBC: “You know, I mean, it’s interesting, I was speculated about 8 years ago, and it’s nice to be speculated about, I’m not going to pretend otherwise….Well in my gut 8 years ago, I didn’t think it was going to go that direction, and I’ve gotta say, in my gut right now I kinda feel like I’m going to stay in the Senate and continue to battle on armed services, foreign relations, and budget issues that make me a happy senator every day. So speculation is fine, but I got a job to do and for the Hillary campaign, the best thing I can do is hopefully help her win in Virginia. Virginia’s a key state and I’m looking forward to campaigning for her and making sure she wins Virginia.”

Source: http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/tim-kaine/story?id=40280767

Why black men fear that any police encounter could go awry

By Jesse J. Holland, Associated Press

Charles Kinsey held his hands in the air and shouted to police that the autistic man sitting on the street next to him wasn’t dangerous. A few seconds later, he felt a bullet rip into his leg.

The therapist, who is black and works with people with disabilities, was rounding up a patient who had wandered away from a facility when he was ordered by police officers to lie on the ground. Kinsey imagined that “as long as I’ve got my hands up, they’re not going to shoot me. This is what I’m thinking. Wow, was I wrong,” he told a television station.

The shooting in Florida earlier this week illustrates the longstanding fear among black men that almost any encounter with police can go awry with potentially deadly results, even when a person follows every law enforcement command.

Police are known to pull their triggers “no matter how you follow their directions,” emphasized Isaial Murray, a black 28-year-old construction worker in Detroit.

Some black men question why police seem to avoid using deadly force on dangerous white suspects, like Dylan Roof, who is charged with killing nine African-Americans last year in a church in South Carolina, but are quick to point a gun at blacks.

“I see incidents with a white person with a gun on their hip and … they don’t pull their gun. They pull their Taser to calm them down,” said Travis Haynes, 35, of Orlando, who is black. “But when it comes to a black man, the first thing they do is draw their gun.”

On Monday in Florida, officers ordered Kinsey and the patient, who was sitting in the street playing with a toy truck, to lie on the ground. Kinsey, 47, got down on the pavement and put his hands up while trying to get the patient to comply, North Miami Assistant Police Chief Neal Cuevas told The Miami Herald.

An officer then fired three times, striking Kinsey in the leg, Cuevas said.

Police were responding to reports of a man with a gun threatening to kill himself, and the officers arrived “with that threat in mind,” the chief said. No gun was recovered.

The 27-year-old patient was not harmed. Police have not released the name or race of the officer who fired but said he’s been placed on administrative leave, which is standard procedure.

The latest shooting comes after two black men were killed at the hands of police in Louisiana and Minnesota. Alton Sterling died July 5 during a scuffle with two white Baton Rouge police officers at a convenience store where he was selling CDs, as he had done for years. The officers were responding to a call of a man threatening someone with a gun. They have said they found a gun in Sterling’s pocket.

That shooting, captured on cellphone video, provoked widespread protests about police treatment of the black community.

It was soon followed by the death of Philando Castile, who was legally registered to carry a gun and told an officer that he had a weapon during a July 6 traffic stop in a St. Paul suburb. Then the officer fatally shot him. Moments later, in a live Facebook stream, his girlfriend said the officer had asked for Castile’s license and shot him when he moved to retrieve it.

Rick Blanding, a black 28-year-old window cleaner in Detroit, said he follows orders whenever confronted by police.

“You got to understand you’re dealing with two sides,” he said, citing people on the right and wrong sides of the law. “Whenever police stop me, I follow their instructions. Do I trust them? Some. I fear for my life with some.”

Police need to acknowledge this feeling among African-American men and work to find a solution, said Chuck Drago, a white former police chief in Oviedo, Florida.

“Perception is reality. If people believe that, then we as the police have to do something to prove that wrong,” Drago said. “There’s a lot of ways to do that, but we can’t ignore it. We can’t say: ‘It’s not true. You’re mistaken.'”

Following those two deaths, 10 law enforcement officers were fatally shot in attacks in Dallas, Baton Rouge and in a Michigan courthouse.

Police have historically been used against minority communities to enforce slavery, Jim Crow and segregation laws, said Victor E. Kappeler, the white dean of the College of Justice and Safety at Eastern Kentucky University. The recent deaths of black men have only increased that mistrust.

“This is the way it’s always been,” said Bishop T.D. Jakes, speaking at a panel last month in Washington, D.C. For generations, blacks have been reluctant to call authorities for help because “we have never felt safe with the police.”

The mistrust has led many families to warn their teenage sons about how to act in encounters with the police. But parents worry that even the most polite behavior will not be enough save their children’s lives.

Don A. Brazelton, a black father in Washington, D.C., said he has warned his 18-year-old son, Don, at Howard University about treading carefully with police if he’s ever pulled over.

“Don’t raise your voice. Be respectful. Put your driver’s license on the dashboard Hold your hands out the window,” Brazelton said. “But even in that case … that’s not often going guarantee a positive outcome.”

There seems to be an overwhelming fear of black men, driven by mass media, that causes police officers to use deadly force, added Rick Anderson, a black retired Boston firefighter with two sons working as deputy sheriffs in in Massachusetts and Alabama.

Police aren’t “shooting because they are evil. They are shooting because they are scared,” Anderson said. “They see the slightest thing going on, and they are scared to death.”

MONEY MATTERS: Markets have been on some bull — which is good

By Charles Sims Jr., Special to The New Tri-State Defender

When the latest bull market for U.S. stocks reached the five-year mark on March 10, 2014, only five bulls had lasted longer. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index posted a gain of 177 percent for the five-year period.

The current bull followed on the heels of the Great Recession and the worst stock market decline since the 1929 stock market crash. The most recent bear market began in October 2007; the S&P 500 fell 57 percent before hitting the bottom on March 9, 2009.

In typical fashion, investors who sold stocks during the downturn may not have participated fully in some of the subsequent bull market gains. A recent Morningstar study found that emotional trading practices had a negative effect on investment returns over the last decade. For the 10-year period ending December 31, 2013, investor dollars returned an average of 2.5 percentage points per year less than the average mutual fund’s performance, largely because people have a tendency to buy high and sell low.

A bull market is often defined as a period in which asset prices rise 20 percent or more without a drop of 20 percent in between. A price decline of 20 percent is called a bear market.

Room to run?

The terms “bull” and “bear” are also used to describe the positive or negative outlook of individual investors.

Some bearish investors believe central bank policies have helped sustain the bull market, and that stocks could suffer as the Fed cuts back on monetary stimulus. Moreover, price increases have outpaced earnings growth, making stocks more expensive relative to corporate profits. The S&P 500 traded at about 16 times earnings over the past year, which is about twice the level five years ago.

On the positive side of this perpetual argument, bulls point out that the stock market has been rising from generational lows and could climb further if economic growth picks up speed.8 Stock prices generally reflect economic conditions and the financial performance of individual companies.

Volatility resumes

The S&P 500 posted a 32 percent total return for 2013, the largest in 16 years. Thus far in 2014, the stock market has been bumpier. The S&P 500 index experienced 11 market swings of 1 percent or more through mid-March. By and large, these sell-offs and relief rallies were in response to news about monetary policy, the Ukrainian conflict, and signs of economic weakness in China and other fragile economies.

Even professionals have a difficult time predicting market turning points, so investors may hinder themselves by changing course based on current events or recent performance.

Though it may be human nature to be wary of stocks during a bear market, a long bull market might tempt investors to invest too aggressively. For this reason, you might want to pay less attention to the market’s ups and downs and stick with a long-term strategy based on your time horizon, risk tolerance, and financial goals.

The return and principal value of stocks fluctuate with changes in market conditions. Shares, when sold, may be worth more or less than their original cost. The S&P 500 is an unmanaged group of securities that is considered representative of the U.S. stock market in general. The performance of an unmanaged index is not indicative of the performance of any specific investment. Individuals cannot invest directly in an index. Past performance is no guarantee of future results; actual results will vary.

NOTE: Mutual funds are sold by prospectus. Please consider the investment objectives, risks, charges, and expenses carefully before investing. The prospectus, which contains this and other information about the investment company, can be obtained from your financial professional. Be sure to read the prospectus carefully before deciding whether to invest.

(Charles Sims Jr., CMFC, LUTCF, is President/CEO of The Sims Financial Group. Contact him at 901-682-2410 or visit www.SimsFinancialGroup.com.)

Young African American entrepreneur that owns and operates an independent telecommunications company now holds 4 U.S. patents

By BlackNews.com

Tallahassee, FL — 26-year old Freddie Figgers became one of the youngest African-Americans to own and operate an independent, U.S.-based telecommunications company when he launched Figgers Communications.

When he was just 9 years old, Freddie was given a non-functioning computer to take apart and fix. At the age of 13, he went to work as a computer technician and network and administrator, and at 16, Freddie Figgers launched a computer repair business. The same year, Figgers Computers, Inc., was born. He now holds 4 U.S. patents and continues to forge ahead.

The young inventor and software engineer has taken a passion for working on electronics and a dedication to helping others to create a series of services and products that seamlessly provide solutions for everyday needs. For instance, his Figgers F1 phone encourages safe driving by disallowing incoming or outgoing texts when it detects motion over 10MPH.

Outside of Figgers Communications, Freddie has even helped physicians with an invention that helps doctors monitor patients remotely, and in banking with his debit card fraud protection software.

Figgers Communications offers cell phone service plans and mobile broadband plans with nationwide coverage starting at $15 per month without annual contracts. For more details about the company, visit www.Figgers.com

Former NFL coach Dennis Green dies at 67

By Genetta Adams, The Root

Former NFL coach Dennis Green, who led the Minnesota Vikings and Arizona Cardinals over 13 seasons, died Thursday night from complications of cardiac arrest, according to ESPN. He was 67.

In 10 seasons with the Vikings, he led the team to eight playoff appearances and reached the NFC Championship Game twice, in 1998 and 2000. In 1998 he also led the team to its best record In franchise history at 15-1. He ranks second in franchise history, behind Hall of Fame legend Bud Grant, in games coached, wins and winning percentage, according to ESPN.

Green coached the Cardinals from 2004 to 2006. in 2006, while in Arizona, Green gave one of the most memorable postgame rants on Monday Night Football after his Cardinals blew a 20-0 halftime lead to the Chicago Bears. “They are who we thought they were and we let ’em off the hook!” Green yelled before storming out of the room.

Julianne Malveaux: ‘Are we better off?’

By Kam Williams, Special to The New Tri-State Defender

Kam Williams: What inspired you to publish “Are We Better Off?”

Julian Malveaux: People will be talking about the Obama legacy for decades, and I wanted to include my voice in the analysis of this presidency. This is a column collection, or as one colleague called it, “history in real time,” recounting my perspective on the highs and lows of this presidency from an African-American perspective. More than simply a column collection, the book has a substantial introduction that frames the Obama presidency, explores the way Obama was treated by the political establishment and also how this first black president treated “his” people. In the epilogue, I use numbers to tell the story of African-American gains and losses during this presidency.

KW: How did you decide which articles to include in the book?

JM: Wow! … It was quite a process to narrow more than 400 columns down to 80. I write weekly, though, and I don’t always write about President Obama, so that was the easy elimination. Sometimes, I repeat myself, and that was a second elimination. I worked with a team, including a great editor who, as the project came together, suggested other additions and eliminations. …

KW: Well, are we better off after eight years of Obama?

JM: The economy is better than the one President Obama inherited, and unemployment is lower, but the unemployment rate gap remains large. Black child poverty is higher. As I write in the epilogue, “Yes we can. No he didn’t. President Obama didn’t push black people backward, but he missed the opportunity to move us forward.”

KW: In the introduction, you ask, “How does President Obama treat his people?” before criticizing him for not reciprocating the overwhelming support he’s received from the African-American electorate. You say, “He scolds instead of uplifts, and offers tepid gestures to our needs.” What do you think he could have done in terms of jobs, housing and education?

JM: If some of the recovery money had gone to cities instead of states, the urban population, read “black” and “brown,” would be better off with recovery jobs. While the banks got big bailouts, a sizeable chunk of African-American wealth evaporated because so many people lost homes. Some of the federal programs to help homeowners were never fully implemented. And President Obama’s pick of Arne Duncan as Secretary of Education was abysmal. Cutting HBCUs was unconscionable. Implementing new regulations on Parent Plus loans, which cost HBCUs 28,000 students, was hostile.

At the same time, it is important to note that, except for his first two years, which were a missed opportunity, President Obama faced rabid opposition from the Republicans. Indeed, as soon as he took office, Sen. Mitch McConnell announced that his top priority was to deny President Obama a second term. The president did introduce a jobs bill that could not clear Congress. The Republicans simply would not work with him.

KW: What about all the black-on-black violence in so many inner cities across the country. Do you really think the president could have put a dent in it from Washington, DC? After all, his own chief of staff, Rahm Emmanuel, became mayor of Chicago, and the body count has only escalated there?

JM: President Obama’s choice of Rahm Emmanuel as his chief of staff was questionable, and perhaps cover-ups around the police violence against black people in Chicago is reflective of Mr. Emmanuel’s values. Did Rahm Emmanuel serve President Obama or did he serve himself as he prepared to run for mayor of Chicago? I don’t use the term black-on-black violence, since I’ve never heard the term white-on-white violence. Most violence is intra-racial, and much of the violence in African-American communities is a function of drug availability, joblessness and poverty. Obviously these conditions predate the Obama presidency and the president has limited ways to dent this violence. But funding war weapons in cities, as opposed to more community policing, is not the solution.

KW: What about the issue of blacks as the victims of violence by police and vigilantes like George Zimmerman? Do you think Obama could have done more for Trayvon Martin than to say that he could’ve been his son?

JM: President Obama did put together a task force on 21st Century Policing, led by Philadelphia police chief Charles Ramsey, to look at some of these issues after Ferguson. The task force didn’t produce any earth-shattering findings but it suggests that this matter is on the president’s radar screen. However, this is an issue that persists. In the first week of July, we already saw two black men killed by police in questionable circumstances, Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and Philando Castile in a Falcon Heights, Minnesota.

Trayvon Martin could have been any of our sons, so I was not especially moved by that remark of President Obama’s. He intended, I think, to say that he took Trayvon’s death somewhat personally. He might have said more about “stand your ground” laws and how they give vigilantes a pass. And he might say more about these rogue cops and their license to kill. Although he was in Poland to participate in the NATO conference, President Obama did respond well to the back-to-back killings, as well as to the attacks on Dallas police officers that followed. I especially appreciated hearing the President affirm that “black lives matter” and that it means that some citizens are feeling more pain, and experiencing more negative effects than others, and he offered up the stats. He also indicated that black lives matter does not negate the fact that blue lives matter. He ably walked the tightrope, here, between affirming both black life and police life.

KW: It seems that Obama will be better remembered for LGBT than African-American civil rights. If Trayvon had been transgender, do you think the Attorney General would have charged George Zimmerman with a federal crime?

JM: Let me answer the question another way. The President became quite emotional about transgender student rights, threatening to pull Department of Education funds from school districts that do not comply with federal regulations. Black children are suspended from school three times more than white children are, and there is no evidence that black children are three times as unruly. Has the President ever threatened to pull the Department of Education dollars from a school with these disproportionate suspensions? African-Americans have rarely been the beneficiaries of Presidential rhetorical excess.

KW: When you interviewed Obama, his staff wouldn’t let him talk about reparations. What did that tell you about him?

JM: This was in 2004, and it told me that President Obama intended to be very careful and noncontroversial in addressing race matters. It is now 2016, and I’m not sure that I’ve heard the President address that matter yet. I serve on the Institute of the Black World’s National Commission on African-American Reparations, and we have asked the President to, by executive order, establish a commission to study reparations. He can do this without Congressional approval. While I am not optimistic, I do hope that President Obama considers this in these waning months of his Presidency.

KW: In the book, you suspect that Obama’s image as a community organizer in Chicago might be more a “manufactured mythology” than a “gritty reality.” Have you done any research to determine whether he developed roots and maintained ties to folks he worked with in the hood?

JM: I’ve talked to dozens of Chicagoans who will only go off the record in talking about the manufactured mythology. The published record will show that many in Chicago have mixed feedback on the President’s role as organizer.

KW: You also talk about how outspoken critics of Obama, like Tavis Smiley and Dr. Cornel West, have ended up ostracized by the black community. Do you think this has a had a chilling effect, and did it make you less willing to disagree with the President?

JM: Tavis Smiley lost lots of corporate support after he was critical of President Obama, and Dr. West has lost some esteem. I think that Smiley and West come at the President somewhat differently though, and find some of West’s criticism too personal and base to be credible. Still, the way they were treated has caused many to bridle their tongues when discussing President Obama. I had my own challenges with the Obamaites when, in 2008, appearing on a program with Tavis and Cornel, I gave then-candidate Obama’s nomination acceptance speech a B. At the time I was President of Bennett College for Women, and actually had disgruntled members of the public write my board of trustees and faculty, and address me in ugly and disparaging terms, including black women calling me the N-word. Ugliness does not bridle my tongue, and while some of the consequences of being an honest critic of this President have been unpleasant, I can manage. Don’t get me wrong. As I write in the book, I do not regret either of my votes for President Obama, nor my support of him when he ran for the Senate before that. I get excited as I ever did when I see that black man on Air Force One. But I won’t settle for symbolism, and our President’s record should be open for analysis.

KW: Do you think the African-American agenda might have been placed on the Obama administration’s back burner because of a hesitancy on the part of black leaders to question or criticize the President?

JM: Absolutely! You will not get fed in your mama’s house if you do not bring your plate to the table. Some of our leadership has been so happy to be there that they haven’t pushed our agenda. I don’t know how many off the record conversations I’ve had with African-American leaders who would not be quoted and refused to make their sentiments public.

KW: What grade would you give Obama?

JM: Depending on the day of the week it varies. At the moment, though there are just a few months left in our President’s time in the Oval Office I’d like to give him an incomplete and hope he surprises me. Actually, overall he gets a solid B, but for his work with Black America he gets a low C, at best.

The 1 reaction everyone should have to Donald Trump’s RNC nomination speech

By Danielle C. Belton, The Root

Donald Trump is the GOP nominee. No more presumptive. He’s it. He’s the man. He’s the one the Republicans have quarterbacking their team this election season. Thursday night Trump gave a loud, boisterous, bleak speech where he gladly accepted the Republican Party’s nomination of him for president.

So this is real now. And Trump responded to this realness by giving a souped up version of the same stump speech he always gives, only longer (so long … the longest acceptance speech in decades clocking in at about an hour and 15 minutes) and louder (so loud … it was very “old man yells at cloud“). He didn’t go as far as Pastor Mark Burns who spoke earlier during the RNC Thursday night and was shouting “All Lives Matter” like he was at a church revival that’s theme was “false equivalency,” but he went far enough, touting himself as the “law and order” president, repeating the phrase over and over like he was getting a check from Dick Wolf.

Still there was one (maybe two) distinct reactions to be had to Trump’s speech, all which I can easily map out below with one, burning, searing question: How?

Trump brought up building that wall again. He also said he’s stop companies from sending jobs overseas. He also said he’d improve employment in the inner cities. He said he’d stop “illegal immigration.” He said he’d repeal “Obamacare.” He said he’d unite the country. He said we don’t win anymore, but we’ll win again. He said he’d do a lot of things, short of promising every American a pheasant in each pot and a pet pony in each garage. This all left folks with one burning question, “How Sway?”

Trump said: “The crime and violence that today afflicts our nation will soon — and I mean very soon come to an end. Beginning on January 20, 2017, safety will be restored.”

How?

Trump said: “First, my plan will begin with safety at home which means safe neighborhoods, secure borders, and protection from terrorism.”

How?

Trump gave a shout out to Bernie Sanders and his supporters with this promise, and said: “Nobody knows the system better than me, which is why I alone can fix it. I have seen firsthand how the system is rigged against our citizens, just like it was rigged against Bernie Sanders. He never had a chance.

“But his supporters will join our movement, because we will fix his biggest issue: Trade deals that strip our country of jobs and the distribution of wealth in the country.”

How?

Then Trump was also like, I’m gonna protect the “EL BE GEE TEE KEW” community from ISIS and folks gave him a standing ovation.

It was the second, “Hey, we don’t really hate the gays” moment for the night, with the first delivered when Silicon Valley billionaire Republican Peter Thiel, who happens to be gay, spoke and got a lot of claps for it.

But Trump’s nomination speech, like every Trump speech, was completely devoid of solutions to the many, many problems Trump said was wrong with America. Not one detail was listed as to how he’d do anything he listed on this “Make America Great Again” check list. I guess if your ideas are that good you don’t want to give them away for free. Maybe making that sweet, sweet $400,000 a year as Leader of the Free World is just the incentive Trump needs to actually crack open his skull like Zeus and birth the answers from his forehead.

Trump did offer one “plan” of sorts though during his speech which caused me pause when I wasn’t simply thinking:

Trump said, “[O]ur plan will put America first. Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo.”

Mmm, nationalism. That’s never caused any problems. I hate to bring up the “F” word, but what a fascist thing to say, future “Dear Leader.”

Still, the speech played to the cheap seats, and by cheap, I mean racist. Former KKK grand wizard David Duke loved it!

Yup. When you’re getting kudos from a former Klansman you know you’re yelling up the right, far right, alt-right tree. And Trump really yelled at that tree Thursday night. Leaving little concern with how some might interpret what he had to say.

Still, all I want to know, even for the things the grand wizard here liked, how Sway. How? How? How?

You don’t have the answers, Trump.

KAM’S KAPSULES: Opening this week

By Kam Williams, Special to The New Tri-State Defender

BIG BUDGET FILMS

Star Trek Beyond (PG-13 for action and violence) 13th episode in the intergalactic, sci-fi franchise finds Captain Kirk (Chris Pine) and the crew of the USS Enterprise stranded on an uncharted planet after being forced to abandon ship following an alien attack. With Idris Elba as the new nemesis, and Zachary Quinto as Dr. Spock, John Cho as Lt. Sulu, Simon Pegg as Scotty, Zoe Saldana as Lt. Uhuru, Karl Urban as Bones and the late Anton Yelchin as Chekov.

Ice Age: Collision Course (PG for mild rude humor, action and scenes of peril) 5th installment in the prehistoric fantasy franchise finds woolly mammoth Manny (Ray Romano), ground sloth Sid (John Leguizamo) and smilodon Diego (Denis Leary) and company on an epic trek to prevent impending asteroid strikes inadvertently triggered by saber- toothed squirrel Scrat’s (Chris Wedge) pursuit of that ever-elusive acorn. Voice cast ensemble includes Queen Latifah, Jennifer Lopez, Simon Pegg, Michael Strahan, Keke Palmer, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Wanda Sykes, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Nick Offerman and Adam DeVine.

Lights Out (PG-13 for violence, mature themes, disturbing images, incessant terror and brief drug use) Haunted house horror flick revolving around a family which finds itself preyed upon by a malevolent ghost (Alicia Vela-Bailey) which only attacks in the dark. With Maria Bello, Gabriel Bateman, Alexandra DiPersia and Billy Burke.

INDEPENDENT & FOREIGN FILMS

Absolutely Fabulous (R for profanity, sexuality and drug use) Adaptation of the British TV sitcom revolving around a couple of flamboyant, aging fashionistas (Jennnifer Saunders and Joanna Lumley) who flee London for the French Riviera after creating a media storm by accidentally knocking now-missing supermodel Kate Moss off a balcony and into the River Thames. With Rebel Wilson, Joanna Lumley, John Hamm and Alexa Chung, with cameos by Jerry Hall and Joan Collins.

Don’t Think Twice (R for profanity and drug use) Ensemble dramedy about the emotional fallout vis- ited upon a fledgling, im- prov comedy troupe when one of its members (Kee- gan Michael-Key) gets a big break on a Saturday Night Live-type TV show. Cast members include Gl- lian Jacobs, Chris Gethard, Kate Micucci, Tami Sagher and the film’s writer/director Mike Birbiglia.

Don’t Worry Baby (Unrated) “Who’s the daddy?” dramedy about a philandering husband (Christopher MacDonald) who unknowingly cheats on his wife (Talia Balsam) by sleeping with the same woman (Dreama Walker) as their son (John Magaro), only to learn that one of them is the father of her daughter (Rainn Williams). With Tom Lipinski, Britt Lower and Phil Burke.