Turning Earth Day Black!

 

Turing Earth Day Black!

Environmental Injustices Affecting The Black Community and Earth Day

You think of Earth Day and you think of white folks planting trees and other such fluff. What you need to know is that African Americans, especially those of us in the highly populated areas of Mother Earth are the ones who need to be vigilant about Earth Day, every day!

What Is Earth Day?

Short version…April 22, 1970, Gaylord Nelson-Governor of Wisconsin declared Earth Day, a way to call the nation’s attention to the issues of Earth and our need to be better caretakers of it.

This year’s theme is “A Billion Acts of Green.”

Why?

“Black Americans are disproportionately exposed to environmental injustices and life-threatening pollutions and toxic hazards. These dangerous problems are local, statewide, regional, national and international. In Harlem, South Central Los Angeles, Southside Chicago, Houston, Philadelphia, Detroit, Cleveland, St. Louis, New Orleans, and in just about every other place in America where we reside, we find ourselves disproportionately with high rates of asthma and other respiratory diseases, multiple forms of cancer, and other sicknesses that are directly related to harmful exposure to environmental hazards in the air that we breathe, as well as in the water and food that we consume.”

 Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis, Jr.

There are many reports that link the food we eat to the ever changing hormonal imbalance our young girls especially, are facing. PMS (Premenstrual Symptoms) or worse PMDD (Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder), cause ongoing depression, anger and rage, difficulty concentrating, overeating, and fatigue to name a few. You may also notice that our young girls are bigger and “curvier” than ever before. How many times have you walked passed a young woman and noticed that she is built like a full grown woman? This has also been linked to the hormones found in our food and water supplies that can cause lifelong imbalances in all of us.

Think of all the toxins farm animals are injected with and that our fresh produce is really jacked up with hormones to make it bigger, grow faster, and be more appealing to the eye. We are poisoning ourselves while we think we are eating healthy. In fact some of our produce and bottled water is as cancer causing as a lit cigarette! We read about lead poisoning and our water supply and the connections to cancer every day!

We can’t even swim in Lake Michigan but yet we are exposed to its effects every day. As soon as it gets warm where do we all head? You really want to know what MMSD has swimming around in those “overflows” and sewage dumping that we keep side stepping?

What are we as a community doing to ward off some of the toxins we are exposed to especially in big metropolises like Milwaukee? Earth Day is OUR chance to remind the entire community about the need to be good stewards of our planet. It is not a white issue at all. It is definitely a black issue as well. It’s an “everybody” issue! We all need to work together to begin making our urban areas safer.

Another case-in-point for you:

“Did you know that many of the growing lists of so-called “learning disabilities” that affect too many of the children in the Black American community maybe environmentally related to exposures from lead poisoning and other toxic substances laced in many of our neighborhoods?”

 Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis, Jr.

This is indeed scary! Is it any wonder why our kids are falling so far behind? If they live and breathe toxins every day and can’t focus, how can we expect anyone to teach them anything?

So How Do We Make Earth Day Black?

Taking Earth Day and making it Black must remain a priority issue for us. It does not have to be trivial, stupid, or a labor of wasted time. In fact families can use the time to do something useful and unifying like planting that tree or starting a garden, or cleaning up. When is the last time you saw a young person walking around your neighborhood with trash bags and gloves and repairing the damage some of their friends cause? How many people do we see littering all over the place but we keep on walking and think what a horrible person?

Do you talk to your kids or young people, or even talk to some of us “adults” about how we livin’? Does the inner city have to look like one big garbage can filled with trash and blight everywhere? Can we unite to call our mayor and aldermen to find grant money to spruce up that abandoned building we all know is sitting there, over a decade, with no promise of anything to come? Can we petition for a park or a place for us to begin gardening or co-ops? We have grants for everything else under the sun! We can use this day to teach our youth that they are not just responsible for themselves, but teach them that they are global citizens. What happens in Japan happens in our backyards too! This is a good time to build community and remind ourselves of our pledge to Kwanzaa the seven guiding principles that should be worked on every day of our lives.

If you are looking for event s in your area, please visit “earthday.org”

And let us not forget to send a shout out to Growing Power a nonprofit entity with an emphasis on this African American community which helps people grow, process, market and distribute food in a sustainable manner. They did just receive a major grant to help move them and us forward. We need to see more of this kind of “out of the box” thinking in this city!!

Please support them in this major undertaking!

http://www.growingpower.org/

More about African American Environmental Efforts Can Be Found Here:

The Grio

http://www.thegrio.com/specials/earth-day/

I leave you with some statistics to help us all understand the damage of Asthma because we all know someone with it. It is one of the largest infiltrators of the Milwaukee African American yet we have some power to change its destructive course if we start to focus on Earth Day and its immediate impacts on our community in particular. Over 3 million African Americans have Asthma and we are 3 times more likely to die from it. Asthma thrives in large part because of our quality of life, or lack thereof.

Peace Family,

WW

Asthma and African Americans

• In 2009, about 2,380,000 African Americans reported that they currently have asthma.

• African American women were 30% more likely to have asthma than non-Hispanic White women, from 2001-2003.

• In 2006, African Americans were three times more likely to die from asthma related causes than the White population.

• From 2003-2005, African American children had a death rate 7 times that of non-Hispanic White children.

• African Americans had asthma-related emergency room visits 4.5 times more often than Whites in 2004.

• Black children have a 260% higher emergency department visit rate, a 250% higher hospitalization rate, and a 500% higher death rate from asthma, as compared with White children.

• Children in poor families are more likely to ever have been diagnosed with asthma.

http://minorityhealth.hhs.gov/templates/content.aspx?ID=6170

 

African Americans & Asthma

African Americans have the highest asthma prevalence of any racial/ethnic group. The current asthma prevalence rate among Blacks was 38 percent higher than that for Whites. African Americans account for 26 percent of the 4,200 deaths attributed to asthma in 2001. African Americans were three times more likely to die from asthma than Whites.

http://blackdoctor.org/content.aspx?counter=96

 

A Black American Earth Day

By Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis, Jr., NNPA Columnist

http://keyconversationsradio.com/?p=1888

 

Top 10 Environmental Issues Affecting Urban America

By Talia Whyte

http://www.thegrio.com/slideshow/the-top-ten-environmental-issues-affecting-america.php

 

Earth Day turns 40 this year, but many African-Americans have never seen environmentalism as a priority until recently. With Van Jones and Majora Carter becoming household names, green is now the new black. Here is a list of 10 environmental justice issues affecting the black community that should be given full attention by all Americans.

1. Air pollution

Air pollution is a serious problem in communities of color, as poor air quality can contribute to a host of health problems.

2. Industrial Sites and Illegal Waste Dumping

Most communities of color live near power plants, oil refineries or waste management facilities. Industrial waste that is not disposed of appropriately (or legally) can get into the water system and land used for housing and agriculture.. Improper waste dumping creates a host of health problems, ranging from asthma to lung cancer.

3. Mercury Exposure

Fish is an important source of animal proteins and other nutrients, but it can also contain a high percentage of mercury emissions generally from incinerators, coal-burning power plants and other industrial sites, which can have a devastating effect on people of color.

4. Water Safety

Water is considered a fundamental human right, but many communities of color lack safe drinking water, swim near waste-contaminated beaches and live near polluted flood waters.

5. Transit Justice

Public transit is used at a higher rate by more people of color and low income communities than whites.

6. Food deserts

Communities of color are more likely to live in “food deserts” — areas where communities lack access to supermarkets and other sources of affordable, nutritious foods necessary for maintaining a healthy diet. Food deserts play a major role in poor health and environmental degradation.

7. Urban Green Space

As more skyscrapers and industries find homes in urban areas, less green space becomes available, especially for communities of color.

8. Lead poisoning

Lead poisoning is possible the most damaging environmental injustice.

9. Climate Change and Basic Living

The growing climate change problem means that people of color and low income communities will soon have to pay more for basic necessities.

10. Heat in the City

Since most people of color live in inner cities, they are twice as likely to die in a heat wave, and suffer from more heat-related stress and illnesses.

Liberalism: The New Crack

 

This story is worth sharing.

Peace Fmaily,

WW

 Liberalism: The New Crack

by John Hayward 

Posted 04/18/2011 ET

http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?print=yes&id=43000

[This article originally appeared as the cover story for the April 18th issue of HUMAN EVENTS newspaper.]

Early in his legendary “I Have A Dream” speech, Martin Luther King, Jr. assessed the unhappy situation of black Americans, a century after their emancipation.  It is the darkest passage in a speech blazing with radiant imagery and uplifting messages of hope:

One hundred years later, the Negro still is not free. One hundred years later, the life of the Negro is still sadly crippled by the manacles of segregation and the chains of discrimination. One hundred years later, the Negro lives on a lonely island of poverty in the midst of a vast ocean of material prosperity. One hundred years later, the Negro is still languished in the corners of American society and finds himself an exile in his own land. And so we’ve come here today to dramatize a shameful condition.

The better part of five decades has passed since that speech was delivered, the Civil Rights Act was signed, and Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society was engineered.  Sadly, Dr. King’s diagnosis could be pronounced again today, with only a few minor changes.

That lonely island of poverty is still there, lost in the tides of material prosperity.  The unemployment rate for black Americans is almost ninety percent higher than for whites, whose have it bad enough in today’s jobless economy.  The Census Bureau reports the average per capita income of blacks to be only $18,000 per year, compared to over $30,000 for whites.  The rate of home ownership is about 20% lower for blacks, while they own a mere 5% of small businesses.


The corners of American society remain a place of exile.  Black illegitimacy rates hover above 72%, which is more than triple the rate for whites or Asians… and more than triple what it was at the beginning of the Great Society era, when most black children were raised in two-parent households.  Blacks represent about 13% of the American population, but account for 36% of all abortions.  They suffer disproportionately from violent crime, with about half of all homicide victims being black.  There are areas where the high school graduation rate for black males is well under 25%.

Most of these social and economic indicators have been getting worse, year after year, despite a vast amount of money and energy poured into the black community by liberal programs.  Perhaps “despite” is not the right word… for much of black America’s plight is caused by the Big Government programs intended to help them.

Blacks suffer much collateral damage from the collapse of urban America.  Big cities have been wrecked by decades of liberal control.  Cities like Detroit have been virtually destroyed as high taxes, stifling regulations, and public-union dominance killed businesses or drove them away.  Black Americans have traditionally been concentrated in urban areas, ever since the Great Migration of the nineteenth century, although recent Census data suggests they are beginning to move away from dying blue-state cities.  It’s not hard to see why a population that tends to live in those cities would experience high rates of crime and unemployment.

The urban mindset, which looks for centralized solutions to big problems, does black America no favors… especially when combined with the toxin of generational welfare dependency.  Every black American is born into a system which regards his or her life as a problem to be solved, rather than an opportunity to be explored. 

Large populations tend to respond to social incentives and penalties.  The Great Society subsidized a landscape of broken homes, in which the acid of an entitlement mentality dissolves ambition.  This has done more damage to the black community than any diabolical plan hatched by dimwits in white sheets could possibly inflict.  A black child of the Fifties faced a formidable enemy in racial discrimination… but a black child in today’s America faces an even more relentless enemy when he looks at the empty seat where his father should be sitting.

The system of dependence and futility built around black Americans needs them to survive.  It will not easily let them escape.  Black children find themselves trapped in a failing public education system, which has vast amounts of money and political clout available to keep the doors chained shut.  The District of Columbia Opportunity Scholarship voucher program for disadvantaged kids, which was shut down by the Obama Administration but may soon be re-authorized by Congress, enjoys 74% support from the community.  That didn’t stop Obama from killing it without any of his customary dithering or fanfare. 
Black Americans have the misfortune to be one of the largest political collectives in the American electorate.  The Democrat Party depends on collecting 85% or more of a substantial black turnout for its political survival.  In order to keep these voters motivated and properly bundled, black leaders and white liberals sell a narrative of hopelessness.  That is the only logical conclusion to draw, when told that getting through life is impossible without the maternal protection of a vast government.  It’s the end result of denying there can ever be a permanent triumph over racism, and even temporary victory is impossible for individuals.  Only a desolate life could be shaped entirely by the hatred of others.

Hope flourishes in response to opportunity.  A decade of rapidly expanding government has crushed opportunity beneath its bulk, and this is especially devastating to the fragile hopes of underprivileged minorities.  The cost of labor has been artificially increased.  Regulatory barriers have been placed before business formation.  Investment capital has been made scarce.  Even the dream of home ownership was cruelly perverted into a financial time bomb, which detonated when liberal ideology saddled eager minority homeowners with debts they could never repay.

The endless class warfare rhetoric of the Left teaches its clients to hate their own aspirations, and turn away in disgust from those they should be studying.  No greater disservice has ever been done to the poor than convincing them to make enemies of the people who might wish to hire them.  Replacing ambition with resentment is equivalent to handing a sledgehammer to a drowning man. 

No deviation from liberal orthodoxy is allowed – the Left slanders no one as viciously as a black conservative.  The clients of liberalism are reduced to making increasingly angry demands for diminishing increases in a bankrupt quest for “social justice.”  Unacceptable results are protected by making alternative solutions unthinkable.  The result is a vicious cycle of political addiction.  Liberalism is the new crack.

In his Lincoln-Douglass Dinner speech last month, black freshman Congressman Allen West (R-FL) summed up the situation: “It has been almost 50 years since President Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society and many in the black community are still waiting.  Many of the same problems of the 1960s remain today. For too long, the choice has been to give a handout instead of a hand-up.  Liberal politicians continue the same old tired policies of dependence on big government – always the promise that government will solve your problems. We are indeed creating the Nanny States of America.”

The answer is not a policy, but rather the elimination of policies that keep black Americans from finding their own answers.  Like every other segment of the American population, they hold ideas beyond the imagination of central planners, and can find opportunities invisible to government bureaucrats.  The sum of liberal race theory is the assertion that minorities cannot compete in a hostile, racist world.  There was a day when systemic discrimination was an obstacle to competition… but it’s time for us to break the cycle of political addiction by recognizing that day has passed. 

There is, and will always be, racism in every society on Earth.  Racists no longer have power in the United States.  It is no longer necessary to deploy massive, intrusive, expensive government power to battle their phantom memory.  Martin Luther King, Jr. and the other heroes of the civil rights movement were not just brave and determined, they were victorious.  What service is rendered to the black community by denying their victory?

The policies that benefit black Americans are the same policies that benefit all Americans.  The black middle class was growing rapidly before the current recession.  Remove the barriers government has placed before business formation and growth, and the black middle class will resume its upward trajectory.  What does any free man, of any color, need more than a decent job, offered and accepted willingly… or the chance to build a business that offers such jobs to other men?

Every subsidy is also an incentive, something liberals freely admit when they talk about the alleged social benefits of their favorite policies.  If we remove the subsidies for promiscuous behavior and broken homes, we will eliminate a poisonous incentive that has done terrible harm to the intended beneficiaries.  Name a social pathology, and rest assured it is worse among illegitimate children, especially in the inner city.  Black America needs its fathers back.

Our public school system produces inferior educations at fantastic expense.  It says minority children cannot be properly educated without even greater expense.  It’s long past time to let competitive private educators accept that challenge.  The graduation rate for the D.C. Opportunity Scholarship Program was 91%.  That’s thirty points higher than D.C. public schools could manage.

In a recent column, black conservative author and radio host Larry Elder pointed out that Ronald Reagan’s much-vilified “tax cuts for the rich” and “trickle-down economics” cut the unemployment rate for blacks from 20% in 1982 down to 11% in 1989.  Under Barack Obama, by contrast, the black unemployment rate is over 15%.  The Reagan years also saw black-owned businesses grow by 38%, which was more than triple the robust growth for all American business.  And yet, Reagan is smeared as a racist because he opposed affirmative action programs.  Even those who believe in the necessity of those programs should be open-minded enough to concede that by doing the right thing for all Americans, Reagan’s economic policies did a stunning amount of good for black workers and business owners.

The most revered moment in Martin Luther King’s speech was his dream that his children would live in a nation where they would “not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.”  To be conservative is to have boundless faith in the content of their character… and the character of their fellow citizens.  It is time to do away with policies that assume our character is corrupt.  No one ever broke an addiction without faith.
John Hayward is a staff writer for HUMAN EVENTS, and author of the recently published Doctor Zero: Year One. Follow him on Twitter: Doc_0. Contact him by email at jhayward@eaglepub.com.

Milwaukee Black Conservative People Rally

Sorry for the late notification but here is a new organization of Black Conservatives who are holding a rally tomorrow Saturday, April 16 at I.D.C. located at 2567 N. 8th Street in Milwaukee between 2-5 pm details are here on the following link:  C P R

Milwaukee Black Conservative People

1st TAX DAY POLITICAL RALLY

Saturday, April 16th from 2pm to 5pm


April 14 (Milwaukee) – There is newly formed conservative group in Milwaukee.  The
Milwaukee Black Conservative People (MBCP) is having a TAX DAY POLITICAL RALLY this Saturday, April 16th, and they intend on making it an annual event for the city.

Guest speakers for this initial rally include Pastor David King, Reverend C.L. Bryant, and Wisconsin State Representative Don Pridemore.


MBCP believes conservatism is a Red, White, and blue issue to be practiced by all Americans locally, regionally, statewide, and nationally.   Reaching out, they are inviting other local conservative and Tea Party groups to participate in this inaugural event.


The MBCP Political Rally is in the parking lot of the I.D.C., 2567 North 8th Street, Milwaukee, from 2:00 PM to 5:00 PM, and indoors the event of poor weather conditions.  This provides a common gathering area for the groups to meet and greet with one another to promote future events.


The
Milwaukee Black Conservative People is the first minority founded and directed Tea Party type group in Wisconsin, but join a growing national trend that actively pursues conservative principles and legislation.  The group seeks to work in concert with other groups to promote conservativism in education, business, and faith while promoting greater personal responsibility during the exercising of our civil rights.


For more information please call Apostle David D. King (414) 519-6207.


Milwaukee Black Conservative People-1st Tax Day Rally

Milwaukee Black Conservative People

1st TAX DAY POLITICAL RALLY

Saturday, April 16th from 2pm to 5pm

April 14 (Milwaukee) – There is newly formed conservative group in Milwaukee.  The Milwaukee Black Conservative People (MBCP) is having a TAX DAY POLITICAL RALLY this Saturday, April 16th, and they intend on making it an annual event for the city. 

Guest speakers for this initial rally include Pastor David King, Reverend C.L. Bryant, and Wisconsin State Representative Don Pridemore. 

MBCP believes conservatism is a Red, White, and blue issue to be practiced by all Americans locally, regionally, statewide, and nationally.   Reaching out, they are inviting other local conservative and Tea Party groups to participate in this inaugural event. 

The MBCP Political Rally is in the parking lot of the I.D.C., 2567 North 8th Street, Milwaukee, from 2:00 PM to 5:00 PM, and indoors the event of poor weather conditions.  This provides a common gathering area for the groups to meet and greet with one another to promote future events.

The Milwaukee Black Conservative People is the first minority founded and directed Tea Party type group in Wisconsin, but join a growing national trend that actively pursues conservative principles and legislation.  The group seeks to work in concert with other groups to promote conservativism in education, business, and faith while promoting greater personal responsibility during the exercising of our civil rights.

For more information please call Apostle David D. King (414) 519-6207.

Are Blacks Still Called To Serve Their Country?

Are Blacks Still Called To Serve Their Country?

With the honoring of the Civil War (beginning 150 years ago this week), one might compare what the military has become now as opposed to back then. In this comparison, we honor those who served our nation and our people, but do we still feel the need to serve as our ancestors once did?

Of course in the Civil War era we truly had something to fight for-OUR FREEDOM!! Now, it is all about the oil! And that is not worth dying for, nor is taking over regimes, serving UN interests, or forcing our will down the throats of other countries because we are America and we are democracy and you should be too!!!

By the way some countries laugh at our petty little political dramas and wonder how we can let 2 parties dictate our lives when really they are all in it together for the money, but that’s for another Wednesday!!

So in correctly remembering the past and our part in it, I submit the following link from Black Agenda Report which provides some historic audio and video which I encourage you to take advantage of.

“ As Jesse Jackson Jr. observed some years ago, most of the Civil War memorials and observances and much of the available history presents the war as mainly a quarrel between honorable white men on both sides.” 

http://blackagendareport.com/content/civil-war-and-reconstruction-era-1845-1877-free-openyale-audiovideo-course

Looking Forward

As we march forward where are Blacks and the country as a whole on the subject of serving their country in this THE most patriotic of jobs? Do we still heed the call to serve, defend, and protect, or are we seeking employment or college funding only? Why aren’t we outraged that we still do not rank higher in the military? Do they think Colin Powell is the only one who can lead? Apparently this story isn’t too big because even I can’t find many articles that are recent on the military and racism, but we know it exists.

 

“Blacks have made great strides in the military since it was integrated 60 years ago, but they still struggle to gain a foothold in the higher ranks, where less than 6% of U.S. general officers are African-American.”

http://www.usatoday.com/news/military/2008-07-23-blacks_N.htm

The numbers of Black in the military are similar to the Black population in the USA, usually ranging in the 19% area. Recently the numbers have dipped a bit lower. As a parent, of course I don’t want to see my kids heading to fight in wars that don’t concern us and I am sure that is what parents thought during the Viet Nam and other wars. What are we getting out of the military other than education and/or a steady paycheck and at what cost?

There is great pride to be found in our history with the military. However in this current military where do we fit in and should we?

Peace Family,

WW

Military History of African Americans:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_history_of_African_Americans

Military Resources- Blacks in the Military (From National Archives):

http://www.archives.gov/research/alic/reference/military/blacks-in-military.html