Florida Courier - March 20, 2015

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MARCH 20 – MARCH 26, 2015

VOLUME 23 NO. 12

WHY AMERICA’S RACE PROBLEM WON’T GO AWAY
 Scholars and activists say that racism is woven into the cultural fabric of America, and that the Obama administration has done little to help change that fact. BY CHARLENE MUHAMMAD NATIONAL CORRESPONDENT THE FINAL CALL

SELMA, ALA. – In remarks commemorating the 50th anniversary of “Bloody Sunday,” the 1965 civil rights march from Selma to Montgomery, Ala., President Obama declared racism and intolerance unmasked in Ferguson, Mo., no longer exists on the same wide scale and in the same way – though America’s race problem remains.

a tree, but he can never sign with me,” young White male voices rang out on a bus trip. They have since apologized. “We can’t shake the problem of race in this country, because race is intrinsic to what America is. America will be racist for probably the rest of the time the United States is the United States,” said Dr. David Horne, professor of Critical Thinking and African History, and former chair of the Pan African Studies Department at Cal State University-Northridge.

Revelations of racist chants by members of a college fraternity and police shootings of unarmed Black men clearly show hatred for Blacks remains deeply woven into the fabric of America, activists and scholars said. Fallout continues over the University of Oklahoma chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE) fraternity since a video of members American as apple pie The University of Oklahoma singing a racist song about lynchdisbanded the fraternity, expelled ing Blacks went viral. “There will never be a nigger two members, and the national in S-A-E. You can hang him from chapter revoked its charter.

Coming up short – again

Amidst continued struggles to maintain voting rights, protests to end shootings of unarmed Black males by police and a constant press to lower the jobless rate for African-Americans, a new report this week announces that Black America is still not receiving nearly half of its economic fair share. “The State of Black America,” issued annually by the National Urban League, unveils statistical indexes comparing the AfricanAmerican and Latino communities to the White community.

FLORIDA | A3

Crist won’t run for office in 2016 NATION | A6

Students suing Tennessee over voter-ID law Famous walker dealing with drama over money, ex EVENTS | B3

The Kinsey Collection: Re-Discovering America

ALSO INSIDE

See PROBLEM, Page A2

Jazz in the Gardens has become one of Black Florida’s largest events and celebrates its 10th anniversary this year. Florida Courier photojournalist Kim Gibson was there in 2011 when Ron “Mr. Biggs” Isley of the Isley Brothers took the stage. Tickets are still available at www.jazzinthegardens.com or via Ticketmaster.

Annual evaluation

SNAPSHOTS

duct tape and zip ties. He was blindfolded and given so much alcohol that he died within a few hours of the hazing, according to media reports. “Race and racism are intrinsic to America. They are as American as apple pie,” Dr. Horne told The Final Call. “Any way she’s sliced, whether it’s a theoretical look at

Miami Gardens marks 10 years of ‘Jazz’

FROM THE TRICE EDNEY NEWSWIRE

See STATE, Page A2

Although condemnation was swift and the school and fraternity leaders said racism would not be tolerated, news surfaced that 19-year-old Charles Desdunes’s mother filed a $25 million lawsuit against SAE at Cornell University, after it allegedly hazed the aspiring doctor to death in 2011. According to reports, the son of Haitian immigrants died after his hands and feet were tied with

JAZZ IN THE GARDENS 2015

‘State of Black America’ issued this week

For the last 39 years, the National Urban League has issued a such reports. Every report finds a different way to tell the same story: that the quality of life of Blacks, and now Latinos, is consistently lower than that of White Americans, particularly with regard to economics, income, jobs, and wealth. The 2014 report, “One Nation Underemployed: Jobs Rebuild America,” noted that both unemployment and underemployment were multiple times higher for both Blacks and Hispanics. “Underemployment” is defined as those who are jobless or working part-time jobs but who want to work full-time. The 2015 report – scheduled to

OLIVIER DOULIERY/ABACA PRESS/MCT

President Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder attended the 32st Annual National Peace Officers’ Memorial Service in Washington, D.C. in 2013.

PHOTO BY KIM GIBSON / FLORIDA COURIER

State Senate committee OKs online voter registration take effect Oct. 1, 2017 –instead of Jan. 1, 2016, months before a presidential election in which Florida is again expected to be a key swing state.

FROM THE NEWS SERVICE OF FLORIDA

TALLAHASSEE – The Senate Ethics and Elections Committee approved legislation Tuesday that would allow Florida voters to register online – but only after the looming 2016 presidential election. The bill (SB 228) would allow Floridians with driver’s licenses or state-issued identification cards to submit applications online, using signatures on file with the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, as long as the voters’ names and dates of birth match the agency’s records. Otherwise, the system would fill out a form that could be printed and taken to the office of the local supervisor of elections.

More secure Sen. Jeff Clemens, a Lake Worth Democrat who is spon-

Not political

FLORIDA COURIER FILES

Online voter registration may happen in Florida if bipartisan support holds during this year’s legislative session. soring the bill, said the new system would actually be more secure than the current process for registering to vote, especially when compared to registration drives. “If you think about it, these applications now go directly from your computer to a supervisor of elections through the DHSMV

instead of, again, being handed to a third party that’s out doing voter registration, where we don’t really actually know what happened to those applications,” Clemens said after the meeting. The panel approved the measure on a bipartisan, 7-2 vote. Following an amendment by the committee, the legislation would

Clemens brushed off questions about whether the change was politically motivated, noting instead that Secretary of State Ken Detzner is set to update the state’s voter rolls, and the DHSMV is also expected to overhaul its technology system. “The fact that we’re able to move the bill out of committee in a pretty positive way, I think, is a good thing,” Clemens said. “I take the secretary of state at his word that they have a lot of irons in the fire right now and they’ve got to make sure we have the correct amount of time in order to be sure we establish a secure system.”

COMMENTARY: CHARLES W. CHERRY II: RANDOM THOUGHTS OF A FREE BLACK MIND | A4 COMMENTARY: DR. SINCLAIR GRAY: THE DOUBLE-EDGED SWORD OF RACISM | A4


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