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October 18, 2012

  • The NorthStar’s Week in Black History

    The NorthStar’s Week in Black History October 19 through October 25 October 19 1949 ----- Peter Tosh, given name Winston Hubert McIntosh, reggae singer-songwriter, musician and founding member of The Wailers, was born in Grange Hill, Jamaica.  As both a member of a band and as a solo performer, he brought international attention to reggae music.  A political activist as well as a performer, Tosh was dubbed "the Malcolm X of reggae music." Tosh was raised by an aunt and learned to play guitar at an early age, imitating perfectly guitarists he saw perform.

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  • Activists Attend Ceremony in France Naming Street for Mumia Abu-Jamal

    Activists Attend Ceremony in France Naming Street for Mumia Abu-Jamal by Linn Washington, Jr. Bobigny, France – Native American activist Bill “Jimbo” Simmons was among the 100-plus people attending a Saturday ceremony naming a street honoring imprisoned African-American activist/journalist Mumia Abu-Jamal in this city located six miles from the center of Paris.

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  • Black Detroit Homeowners Sue Morgan Stanley Over Mortgages

    Black Detroit Homeowners Sue Morgan Stanley Over Mortgages by Frederick H. Lowe Five African-American homeowners on Monday sued the investment banking firm Morgan Stanley, charging that the company encouraged one of the nation’s worst subprime lenders to issue mortgages to borrowers who were certain to default because of the loans’ high debt-to-income ratio.

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  • Highest Court Clears the Way for Early Voting for All in Ohio

    Highest Court Clears the Way for Early Voting for All in Ohio The United States Supreme Court on Tuesday boosted early voting in Ohio ahead of the Nov.

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  • Federal Judges Clear S.C. Photo-ID Law But Not for 2012

    Federal Judges Clear S.C. Photo-ID Law But Not for 2012 A three-judge federal panel has approved South Carolina’s new voter-ID law, but not for the 2012 presidential election.

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  • Andrew F. Brimmer Dies

    Andrew F. Brimmer Dies He was the first African American on the Federal Reserve Board Andrew F. Brimmer, the first African American to serve on the Federal Reserve Board, has died. Dr.

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  • Blacks Must Use Economic Might

    Blacks Must Use Economic Might by A. Peter Bailey (TriceEdneyWire.com) --- Now that the end of the presidential campaign is nearly upon us, it is time to state once again that when it comes to promoting and protecting our individual and group interests in this country, we, as black people, have an extremely powerful -- not influential -- but powerful weapon that we don’t use effectively.

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  • Health Care is a Civil Right

    Health Care is a Civil Right by Julianne Malveaux (TriceEdneyWire.com) --- Our Constitution offers us “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness," but we can’t pursue anything if we are unhealthy.

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  • Bain Sends Illinois Jobs to China

    Bain Sends Illinois Jobs to China by Rev. Jesse Jackson, Sr. (TriceEdneyWire.com) --- Dot Turner has worked at what is now Sensata Technologies in downstate Freeport, Ill., for 43 years. The company does sophisticated work creating sensors for automobiles.

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  • Statue of Civil-Rights Icon Fannie Lou Hamer Unveiled

    Statue of Civil-Rights Icon Fannie Lou Hamer Unveiled Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from the Afro American Newspaper (TriceEdneyWire.com) --- She is remembered across the world as the woman who was “sick and tired of being sick and tired.” On Oct.

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  • Pullman Porter Blues Premiers in Seattle

    Pullman Porter Blues Premiers in Seattle by Susan M. Miller Seattle Repertory Theatre opened its 50th season September 27 with the world premiere of Pullman Porter Blues, a new musical by Seattle playwright Cheryl L. West.

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  • Nas’ Atlanta Pad Sold at Auction for $348,500

    Nas SunTrust Bank, the mortgage holder on rapper Nas’s home, has foreclosed on the living space and sold it at auction.

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  • Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith to Host Fundraiser for President Obama

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  • Christian College Investigates D’Souza’s Alleged Affair

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  • An Energized Barack Obama Changes The Race

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  • Trial Date Scheduled in the Murder of Trayvon Martin

    Trial Date Scheduled in the Murder of Trayvon Martin George Zimmerman is scheduled to go on trial June 10th for the shooting death of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin. Judge Debra Nelson set the date on Tuesday morning following a brief hearing.

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  • Roland Warren to Step Down as Head of the National Fatherhood Initiative

    Roland Warren to Step Down as Head of the National Fatherhood Initiative Roland C. Warren, president of the National Fatherhood Initiative, is leaving the organization to head another nonprofit agency.

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"This Is My Vote"

National Baptist Voter Push Criticized as Mediocre

by Maynard Eaton and Carrie L. Williams
ATLANTA (TriceEdneyWire.com) --- Despite the fervent tones and solemn faces of the nation’s highest-ranking black Baptist leaders as they preached the importance of voting on Election Day, Nov. 6, the National Baptist Convention, USA, is being criticized for falling short of presenting a unified action plan by the close of its annual conference last month.

“It’s all rhetoric, it’s all talk,” said the Rev. Dr. Joseph L. Williams, co-pastor of the Atlanta-based Salem Bible Church East and West, with a congregation of approximately 5,000. “If there was some kind of activity going on at this convention where people could learn, where information was shared, and they were able to be truly nonpartisan, I would be the first person to stand up and clap,” he said in an interview.

Rev. Dr. Joseph L. Williams
Rev. Dr. Joseph L. Williams
The NBC leadership initially gave the impression of a collective action plan when the presidents of all five major black Baptist church organizations appeared on stage together at an opening press conference. The organizations represented were the Lott Cary Foreign Mission Convention, the National Progressive Convention, the National Baptist International Convention of America, the National Missionary Baptist Convention, and the National Primitive Baptist Churches.

The collective organizations, representing at least 12 million parishioners, acknowledged the need for voter turnout in the likelihood of voter suppression and intimidation at the polls. Yet, no specific strategy was announced to battle voter suppression.

“This is not so much about my leadership, as much as it is about the corporate leadership here in this room that is fully aware of the voter suppression that is taking place in the United States,” said the Rev. Julius Scruggs, president of the National Baptist Convention, USA, which is based in Nashville, Tenn. Scruggs was responding to media commendations for his role in corralling all of the national black Baptist leaders.

Rev. Julius Scruggs
Rev. Julius Scruggs
When pressed by the media about what specific actions black faith leaders were taking --- singly or collectively ---the answers were vague and vacuous.

"I ride a motorcycle and lead a caravan of people to the polls," said Rev. Gregory Moss, president of the Lott Cary Foreign Mission Convention and a Charlotte, N.C., pastor.

NBC President Scruggs made only passing mention of a potential collective gathering to discuss further action plans amongst the presidents. But he provided no details, only indicating that the NBC would partner with the NAACP’s voter-mobilization efforts.

There were no visible listings of additional voter-education/registration activities having taken place at the NBC, not on the online convention schedule at the NBC website, nor on the convention events schedule posted onsite at the Georgia World Congress Center.

Meanwhile, mounting voter suppression evidence has surfaced across the nation as other leading black organizations such as the NAACP, the National Urban League and the Congressional Black Caucus Annual Legislative Conference focused strongly on voter registration and get out to vote strategies during their annual meetings this summer.

According to the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law, more than two dozen new voter laws have passed in 19 states since 2011. Though some of the controversial voter-ID laws have been overruled in court challenges, many remain on the books as civil -rights leaders and voting activists have sought to educate the electorate, and set up voter-protection plans.

Joseph was not alone in his observation that there appeared to be no aggressive strategy articulated during the Baptist’s convention.

The Rev. Dr. Jamal-Harrison Bryant, the AME pastor of Baltimore's Empowerment Temple, who is traveling the country registering voters in his “Empowerment Movement," said he attended the Baptists’ press conference to support.

“What they have done after that, I have no clue,” he said in an interview this week. “I don’t know what they have distributed out to their local body, but I was there at the press conference and I think that they’re in line to push the vote out in November. But I don’t know what their strategy is.”

Following the mid-September conference, a letter was posted on the National Baptist Convention USA’s website, generally encouraging pastors to get their congregations out to vote. But, the “Dear Pastor” letter was not from a top leader of NBC or any of the other leading Baptist organizations. Rather it was from the vice president at large of the National Baptist Congress of Christian Education, the Rev. Jesse Voyd Bottoms.

“We want to thank you in advance for your willingness to help your church members fulfill their God-given duty as citizens to register to vote and then to vote. We have the opportunity to positively impact the direction of our country,” the letter begins. “The goal of our voter-registration initiative is to equip evangelicals to be ready to vote this November. Just imagine the impact believers could have on the character of our elected leaders, the direction of our government and the moral climate of our nation if we are all able to cast an informed, biblically based vote each election. By not voting in each election we fail to carry out our Lord’s command to be ‘salt and light’ to the culture in which we live.”

The letter announced that NBC had called for a major registration drive between Sept. 23 and Oct. 7. “The National Baptist Convention has spearheaded a grassroots voter-registration, education and participation effort among thousands of Bible-believing churches across America calling for 100% registration,” it states. “The objective of our initiative is to register thousands of previously unregistered, but qualified, people of faith, and to promote awareness of the immediate and long-term importance of voting.”

Joseph, nationally recognized as one of the top 40 young pastors under 40 by the Baptist’s Informer Newspaper, speculated that the motive behind the leaders uniting was simply a show of force.

“When we see these major black institutions coming together at the NBC, it’s almost like a front of sorts,” he said after the convention. “It’s their way of demonstrating political and social consciousness, to convince their individual organizations and members of their relevancy. There is no contiguous partnership between all of them.”


Trice Edney News Wire Editor-in-Chief Hazel Trice Edney contributed to this story.

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