President Bush signed legislation on July 30 that triples U.S. funding to fight AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis around the world. The five-year, $48 billion plan renews a program credited with saving millions of lives in Africa alone and is widely seen as one of the major achievements of the Bush presidency. Bush said the program, launched by him in 2003, "is the largest commitment by any nation to combat a single disease in human history."
While the efforts of Bush to combat AIDS around the world should be applauded, a recent article by CNN reveals that AIDS is the leading cause of death among black women between 25 and 34, and the second-leading cause of death in black men from 35 to 44 in the U.S. The alarming data suggests that the AIDS epidemic among African-Americans in some parts of the United States is as severe as in parts of Africa. For example, in Washington D.C., more than 80 percent of HIV cases are among black people, that's one in 20 residents. If this is the case, why is President Bush signing a bill to allot funds to third world countries when the epidemic is overwhelmingly prevalent in the U.S.?
http://www.cnn.com/2008/HEALTH/conditions/07/29/black.aids.report/index.html#cnnSTCText
Thursday, July 31, 2008
Negative Campaign Ads by McCain
Will negative campaign ads help McCain? Recent ads have called Barack Obama a celebrity, and compared him to Britney Spears and Paris Hilton. Another ad suggests that Obama “made time to go to the gym, but cancelled a visit with wounded troops.” One study points out one-third of John McCain’s ads refer to Obama negatively. On the other hand, 90% of Obama’s ads don’t even mention John McCain.
These negative ads feed the perception of McCain as an angry candidate. Even some Republicans don’t think this strategy is such a good idea. Former top McCain strategist John Weaver called the celebrity ad “childish” and “tomfoolery”, while other Republicans have called it “unprofessional,” “absurd and juvenile.”
These negative ads feed the perception of McCain as an angry candidate. Even some Republicans don’t think this strategy is such a good idea. Former top McCain strategist John Weaver called the celebrity ad “childish” and “tomfoolery”, while other Republicans have called it “unprofessional,” “absurd and juvenile.”
Sunday, July 27, 2008
Secret Service For Obama and McCain
The Associated Press reports that "the Secret Service has asked for an extra $9.5 million to cover unexpected costs of protecting the presidential candidates during what has turned into a historic year for the agency’s campaign security job."
According to the AP story, the service already had anticipated a strain on its pocketbook, budgeting $106.65 million for the 2008 campaign cycle, up from $73.3 million in 2004 (at the time, a record).
What the service didn't expect was an unusual amount of campaign-related travel by Barack Obama and John McCain outside U.S. boundaries.
Also incurring additional costs for the Secret Service, the AP noted, is Obama's decision "to accept the Democratic nomination at Denver’s Invesco Field at Mile High -- an open-air, 76,000-seat stadium -- instead of the 20,000-seat Pepsi Center, which is the site of the party’s national convention."
According to the AP story, the service already had anticipated a strain on its pocketbook, budgeting $106.65 million for the 2008 campaign cycle, up from $73.3 million in 2004 (at the time, a record).
What the service didn't expect was an unusual amount of campaign-related travel by Barack Obama and John McCain outside U.S. boundaries.
Also incurring additional costs for the Secret Service, the AP noted, is Obama's decision "to accept the Democratic nomination at Denver’s Invesco Field at Mile High -- an open-air, 76,000-seat stadium -- instead of the 20,000-seat Pepsi Center, which is the site of the party’s national convention."
Saturday, July 26, 2008
An Open Letter to Racism (Re-Post: 9/28/07) ---WILLIAM HOSTON
Dear Racism,
I have missed you. Thank you for overtly coming back into my life. While I know that you were here in spirit, your noticeable presence has been absent. When I am in your presence I better understand our relationship, know how to handle our differences, and can work to make our relationship more tolerable. But when you are at a distance, it seems like I don’t know you anymore.
I have longed to see you. In fact, I contacted your Uncle Bill (O’Reilly) last week and we met for lunch. We went to Sylvia’s a small soul-food place in Harlem, New York. He was impressed that the black-owned restaurant that primarily caters to black patrons was such a fine dining establishment. Uncle Bill was amazed at the fact that “there wasn’t any kind of craziness at all” and “there wasn’t one person in Sylvia’s who was screaming MF'er I want more iced tea.”
I love talking to Uncle Bill because we can have a variety of discussions. I told him about a friend of mine in West Virginia whom was held captured for a week and sexually abused, beat, stabbed and called racial slurs. He couldn’t believe that a family of six, all white, would abduct a 20-year-old-African-American female and do these awful things to her. My friend’s mother told me, “I don’t understand a human being doing another human being the way they did my daughter.”
Uncle Bill didn’t seem fazed, so I began to ask his opinion on the racially charged case in Jena, Louisiana where Mychal Bell, a 17-year-old African-American male was tried as an adult after the beating of a white student when he was only 16. What preceded this incident was the hanging of three nooses from a tree traditionally occupied by white students. Again, Uncle Bill didn’t seem concerned.
I also asked him did he believe race played a role in the slow evacuation efforts following Hurricane Katrina. This time he looked at me in disgust.
All Uncle Bill wanted to talk about was the Michael Vick case and how O.J. Simpson continues to garner national attention. I told him that while I do not condone dog fighting, is the Vick case really about dogs? As for O.J., is white America still disgruntled that the criminal justice system in which they created failed them? He got a chuckle out of that and said that he was glad that black people are “finally” beginning to “think for themselves.”
Uncle Bill’s opinions are so insightful and I absolutely love how he blames the culture of rap music for many of the social ills of society and uses implicit racial messages to make his points about African-Americans. He is not deliberate like Don Imus but subtle in his conversations on race.
I have missed you. Thank you for overtly coming back into my life. While I know that you were here in spirit, your noticeable presence has been absent. When I am in your presence I better understand our relationship, know how to handle our differences, and can work to make our relationship more tolerable. But when you are at a distance, it seems like I don’t know you anymore.
I have longed to see you. In fact, I contacted your Uncle Bill (O’Reilly) last week and we met for lunch. We went to Sylvia’s a small soul-food place in Harlem, New York. He was impressed that the black-owned restaurant that primarily caters to black patrons was such a fine dining establishment. Uncle Bill was amazed at the fact that “there wasn’t any kind of craziness at all” and “there wasn’t one person in Sylvia’s who was screaming MF'er I want more iced tea.”
I love talking to Uncle Bill because we can have a variety of discussions. I told him about a friend of mine in West Virginia whom was held captured for a week and sexually abused, beat, stabbed and called racial slurs. He couldn’t believe that a family of six, all white, would abduct a 20-year-old-African-American female and do these awful things to her. My friend’s mother told me, “I don’t understand a human being doing another human being the way they did my daughter.”
Uncle Bill didn’t seem fazed, so I began to ask his opinion on the racially charged case in Jena, Louisiana where Mychal Bell, a 17-year-old African-American male was tried as an adult after the beating of a white student when he was only 16. What preceded this incident was the hanging of three nooses from a tree traditionally occupied by white students. Again, Uncle Bill didn’t seem concerned.
I also asked him did he believe race played a role in the slow evacuation efforts following Hurricane Katrina. This time he looked at me in disgust.
All Uncle Bill wanted to talk about was the Michael Vick case and how O.J. Simpson continues to garner national attention. I told him that while I do not condone dog fighting, is the Vick case really about dogs? As for O.J., is white America still disgruntled that the criminal justice system in which they created failed them? He got a chuckle out of that and said that he was glad that black people are “finally” beginning to “think for themselves.”
Uncle Bill’s opinions are so insightful and I absolutely love how he blames the culture of rap music for many of the social ills of society and uses implicit racial messages to make his points about African-Americans. He is not deliberate like Don Imus but subtle in his conversations on race.
Racism, the real reason that I contacted Uncle Bill is because he reminds me of you. They say that absence makes the heart grow fonder. I am glad that we are still together.
William T. Hoston is an Assistant Professor at Wichita State University in the Department of Political Science.
Labels:
Barack Obama,
Bill OReilly,
Op-Ed,
William Hoston
Political Disgrace
Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick and his chief of staff lied about their sexual relationship last summer at a police whistle-blower trial that cost the cash-strapped city more than $9 million. The mayor is now fighting a Free Press effort to learn about what role secret text messages played in the mayor's decision to settle the cases.
Friday, July 25, 2008
O'Reilly Doesn't Like Rappers
Bill O’Reilly has responded to Nas’ protest at Fox headquarters, calling the demonstration nothing more than a publicity stunt.
“As you may have heard, that guy [Nas] is accusing Fox News of being a racist organization. This from a person that makes a living peddling the ‘n word’ and violent lyrics to his target audience of children and young adults,” O’Reilly stated last night on his show the O’Reilly Factor. “He is a real champ.”
“As you may have heard, that guy [Nas] is accusing Fox News of being a racist organization. This from a person that makes a living peddling the ‘n word’ and violent lyrics to his target audience of children and young adults,” O’Reilly stated last night on his show the O’Reilly Factor. “He is a real champ.”
Fox News: POLL RESULTS (July 2008)
Have you heard any of your friends and neighbors say there is something about Barack Obama that scares them?
Yes 49%
No 50%
Have you heard any of your friends and neighbors say there is something about John McCain that scares them?
Yes 36%
No 62%
Some people believe Barack Obama, despite his professed Christianity, is secretly a Muslim. Others say that is just a rumor and Obama really is a Christian as he says, and point out he's attended a Christian church for years. What do you believe -- is Obama a Muslim or a Christian?
Muslim 10%
Christian 57%
John McCain was held captive for five years in a North Vietnamese prisoner of war camp. Do you think that experience would make McCain a better president or a worse president?
Better 49%
Worse 11%
No Difference (voluntary) 33%
Do you think Barack Obama's trip to Iraq, Afghanistan and the Middle East is better described as a fact-finding trip or as a campaign event?
Fact-finding 19%
Campaign event 47%
Both (voluntary) 25%
Yes 49%
No 50%
Have you heard any of your friends and neighbors say there is something about John McCain that scares them?
Yes 36%
No 62%
Some people believe Barack Obama, despite his professed Christianity, is secretly a Muslim. Others say that is just a rumor and Obama really is a Christian as he says, and point out he's attended a Christian church for years. What do you believe -- is Obama a Muslim or a Christian?
Muslim 10%
Christian 57%
John McCain was held captive for five years in a North Vietnamese prisoner of war camp. Do you think that experience would make McCain a better president or a worse president?
Better 49%
Worse 11%
No Difference (voluntary) 33%
Do you think Barack Obama's trip to Iraq, Afghanistan and the Middle East is better described as a fact-finding trip or as a campaign event?
Fact-finding 19%
Campaign event 47%
Both (voluntary) 25%
Does McCain Connect With Young Voters?
Young conservatives are worried that Sen. John McCain is not appealing to their generation.
Many young Republicans indicate that Sen. Barack Obama -- the 46-year-old junior senator from Illinois -- is inspiring voters their age, but McCain -- the 71-year-old senator who has been in office since the early '80s -- is not.
One factor that has emerged is that McCain does not understand the importance of the internet. On MySpace, Obama has more than 427,000 friends, compared with less than 60,000 for McCain. Also, McCain has admitted he doesn't use e-mail.
In the upcoming presidential election, McCain must work to connect with young voters.
Many young Republicans indicate that Sen. Barack Obama -- the 46-year-old junior senator from Illinois -- is inspiring voters their age, but McCain -- the 71-year-old senator who has been in office since the early '80s -- is not.
One factor that has emerged is that McCain does not understand the importance of the internet. On MySpace, Obama has more than 427,000 friends, compared with less than 60,000 for McCain. Also, McCain has admitted he doesn't use e-mail.
In the upcoming presidential election, McCain must work to connect with young voters.
OBAMA & OSAMA
South Carolina State Senator Kevin Bryant said he "wanted to make people think."
Senator Kevin L. Bryant District 3 - Anderson Co.Contact Address:
(H) 104-A North Ave., Anderson, 29625
Cell (864) 202-8394
(C) 606 Gressette Bldg., Columbia, 29201
Bus. (803) 212-6024
E-Mail Address: BRYANTK@scsenate.org
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
Can Either Candidate Be Trusted?
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
JACKSON, SHARPTON NEED TO STEP ASIDE ---WILLIAM HOSTON
With all due respect, the Revs. Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton need to step aside and allow a new generation of black politicians and activists to emerge. The self-described "civil rights" politician-activists are making a mockery of themselves and the entire black community. Their respect in the black community has diminished (if not vanished), and it is safe to assume their respect is obsolete within the white political culture.
Recent comments by Jackson may even illustrate that he is not in support of the historical achievement of Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., as the first African-American Democratic presidential nominee.
The vulgar comments made by Jackson -- that he wanted to castrate Obama -- show that there may be a certain amount of generational jealousy. We all know that Jackson's landmark presidential run in 1984 helped pave the way for the Democratic nomination of Obama. However, Jackson's recent tirade has led many to question whether he is jealous of Obama's progress toward becoming the first African-American president. Even Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., D-Ill., expressed his disgust with his father's comments, stating they "contradict his inspiring and courageous career."
The elder Jackson should be aware that his comments may provoke unsophisticated white voters to question their support for Obama. If an influential figure of the civil rights movement does not substantiate the success of Obama, then why should they cast their vote for him. Although Jackson apologized for his reckless comments, expressing that they were "crude and hurtful," the damage has been done.
Jackson and other black civil rights activists have condemned Obama for practicing deracialized politics and alienating the black electorate. Because of the historical injustices faced by blacks, they have questioned whether Obama will actually provide leadership for the black community as a whole.
What prompted Jackson's comments in the first place was the claim that Obama has been talking down to blacks while on the campaign trail. Jackson believes that Obama should speak at great length in his campaign speeches about how he will address the high levels of unemployment among blacks, housing foreclosures and continual violence plaguing the black community.
Obama's decision not to focus on race-specific issues and policies has defined his presidential campaign. Rather than focus on issues to improve the level of social and economic equality for blacks, he has strategically addressed universal issues such as the war in Iraq, universal health care and economic development, and he has taken a strong stance on coalition building.
Black leadership that emerged from the civil rights generation is being replaced with a "new breed" of leadership that represents a changing political philosophy. Jackson and others may feel that Obama's campaign strategy misrepresents the black political struggle of the 1950s and 1960s, but Obama is responding to the current political climate that these civil rights politician-activists have not embraced.
William T. Hoston is an assistant professor of political science at Wichita State University
Recent comments by Jackson may even illustrate that he is not in support of the historical achievement of Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., as the first African-American Democratic presidential nominee.
The vulgar comments made by Jackson -- that he wanted to castrate Obama -- show that there may be a certain amount of generational jealousy. We all know that Jackson's landmark presidential run in 1984 helped pave the way for the Democratic nomination of Obama. However, Jackson's recent tirade has led many to question whether he is jealous of Obama's progress toward becoming the first African-American president. Even Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., D-Ill., expressed his disgust with his father's comments, stating they "contradict his inspiring and courageous career."
The elder Jackson should be aware that his comments may provoke unsophisticated white voters to question their support for Obama. If an influential figure of the civil rights movement does not substantiate the success of Obama, then why should they cast their vote for him. Although Jackson apologized for his reckless comments, expressing that they were "crude and hurtful," the damage has been done.
Jackson and other black civil rights activists have condemned Obama for practicing deracialized politics and alienating the black electorate. Because of the historical injustices faced by blacks, they have questioned whether Obama will actually provide leadership for the black community as a whole.
What prompted Jackson's comments in the first place was the claim that Obama has been talking down to blacks while on the campaign trail. Jackson believes that Obama should speak at great length in his campaign speeches about how he will address the high levels of unemployment among blacks, housing foreclosures and continual violence plaguing the black community.
Obama's decision not to focus on race-specific issues and policies has defined his presidential campaign. Rather than focus on issues to improve the level of social and economic equality for blacks, he has strategically addressed universal issues such as the war in Iraq, universal health care and economic development, and he has taken a strong stance on coalition building.
Black leadership that emerged from the civil rights generation is being replaced with a "new breed" of leadership that represents a changing political philosophy. Jackson and others may feel that Obama's campaign strategy misrepresents the black political struggle of the 1950s and 1960s, but Obama is responding to the current political climate that these civil rights politician-activists have not embraced.
William T. Hoston is an assistant professor of political science at Wichita State University
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
Monday, July 14, 2008
Saturday, July 12, 2008
National Black Republican Association
The National Black Republican Association (NBRA) has released the following, “Bitter is what Obama called blacks and whites who love God. Racist is what Obama called his white grandmother who raised him and made sacrifices so Obama could get a good education and become a millionaire. Obama’s friends are terrorist Bill Ayers and Rev. Wright who said innocent Americans deserved to die on September 11th. Obama is an arrogant elitist who turned his back on poor blacks and his own country.”
Wednesday, July 9, 2008
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