News & Views
 
January 31, 2008

What The Heck is "Equality" Anyway?

Constitution

iStockphoto.com

Okay, here's a thought. Is "equality" between blacks and whites, men and women, and... well, between anyone really the goal of civil rights policy? What does it even mean to be equal?

When we talk about equality, we're often talking about two things. One is, according to our Constitution, the concept that "all men are created equal." The other concept is equality of opportunity, which has to do with issues like educational equity.

Let me go to the second issue first. Today on our show we took a few different cuts on the issue of equality.

First we spoke with Ward Connerly, who's successfully pushed to end race and gender based admissions and hiring programs. After transforming the political landscape in states including California and Michigan, he's now targeted five more states for ballot initiatives. (We got a bit salty with each other, too. Take a listen.)

We also spoke with Shanta Driver of By Any Means Necessary, which is a coalition battling Connerly's organization. She argues that black and Latino students, among others, have lost ground.

So, take a listen for yourself. Is ending race and gender-based affirmative action fair, or does it prevent long-term educational equality?

(For some historical background, check out our conversation today with three men whose families were involved in a court case that helped launch "Brown v. Board," the case that legally desegregated schools.)

Okay, let's get to the second point. Are people actually "equal?" The question hinges on whether "equal" means "same."

It's clear that we all bring different gifts to the world, and have different struggles. You can be born rich, poor, with physical challenges, and on and on and on. So when advocates call for equality, do they really mean that we should all end up in the same place? That, for example, all people should have a college education? (That's an argument I heard from analysts from the powerful Gates Foundation.) Or do they mean we should all have the same chance to do these things?

We don't always make these distinctions when we talk about equality, and maybe that's one reason -- just one among many -- that we still find ourselves fighting with each other instead of fighting to make things better.

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Kilpatrick Takes to TV to Plead for Forgiveness

Kwame Kilpatrick

Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick and his wife, Carlita, cast their votes in Detroit's mayoral election in 2005.

Bill Pugliano, Getty Images

News Headlines: Jan. 31, 2007

Talk About It:
AP: Mayor Pleads for Forgiveness on TV -- "Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick pleaded for forgiveness from his wife and constituents Wednesday in an emotional but carefully worded televised speech, avoiding direct mention of racy text messages that appear to contradict his sworn denials of an affair with a top aide."

Is this too little too late? Should Kilpatrick step down?

Election 2008:
Reuters: Obama Faces Super Tuesday Challenge with Hispanics

L.A. Times: Schwarzenegger Likely to Back McCain

Nation:
Reuters: Judge Tosses Katrina Lawsuit Against Engineer Corps

CNN: Most Middle-Class Still Can't Buy a House

L.A. Times: Cross-Racial Shootings Spark Fear in Calif. Town

AP: W.Va. May Offer Gun Training in Schools

Washington Blade: Gay Outing Campaign Roils D.C. Baptist Church

AP: Army Suicides Up 20 Percent in 2007: Report

World:
New York Times: Power Failures Outrage South Africa

BBC: South African Police Arrest 1,500 in Church

AP: Opposition Lawmaker Killed in Kenya

Op-Ed:
Clarence Page: Clinton's Hispanic Edge Over Obama

McClatchy Newspapers: How Kenya's Election Was Rigged

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January 30, 2008

Judge Dismisses Katrina Suit Against Army Corps

From the AP: A federal judge threw out a key class-action lawsuit today against the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers over flooding from a levee breach after Hurricane Katrina.

The judge's decision reportedly relies on the Flood Control Act of 1928, which was passed after the Mississippi floods of 1927. The Act granted immunity to the federal government when levees and other flood control projects fail.

What do you think of the judge's decision? Should an 80-year-old piece of legislation still be applicable today?

Click here to see video of the Mississippi River flood of 1927 shot by the Signal Corps.

In contrast, here's video of Hurricane Katrina flood waters hitting a levee:

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Tiger Woods: Obama Is 'Articulate'

When Joe Biden said it, it was a major faux pas. But Tiger Woods would agree -- in part -- with his characterization of Barack Obama.

Said Woods: "I've seen him speak. He's extremely articulate, very thoughtful."

Read the rest.

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CBC & Endorsements: Where They Stand

Barack Obama -- according to the Associated Press -- is the first sitting member of the Congressional Black Caucus to run for president in more than 30 years.

But that doesn't mean the entire group is backing him. Among CBC members, here's how the support breaks down:

Hillary Clinton Supporters:
Sheila Jackson-Lee (TX)
Stephanie Tubbs Jones (OH)
Kendrick Meek (FL)
Corrine Brown (FL)
Alcee Hastings (FL)
Yvette Clarke (NY)
Charles Rangel (NY)
Gregory Meeks (NY)
Edolphus Towns (NY)
Emanuel Cleaver (MO)
Dianne Watson (CA)
Laura Richardson (CA)
Maxine Waters (CA)
David Scott (GA)
John Lewis (GA)
Donald Payne (NJ)
Donna Christian-Christensen (VI)

Barack Obama Supporters:
Bobby Scott (VA)
Danny Davis (IL)
Bobby Rush (IL)
Jesse Jackson, Jr. (IL)
Barbara Lee (CA)
Artur Davis (AL)
Gwen Moore (WI)
William Lacy Clay (MO)
Elijah Cummings (MD)
Sanford Bishop (GA)
Hank Johnson (GA)
John Conyers (MI)
Keith Ellison (MN)
Bennie Thompson (MS)
Chaka Fattah (PA)
Al Green (TX)
Al Wynn (MD)

John Edwards Supporters:
Mel Watt (NC)
G. K. Butterfield (NC)
Eddie Bernice Johnson (TX)

Not Committed:
Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick (MI - CBC Chairwoman)
Eleanor Holmes Norton (DC)
Jim Clyburn (SC)
William Jefferson (LA)

Related: Waters Cites 'Proposals' in Clinton Backing
More: Congress' Black Women Favor Hillary

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John Edwards, Rudy Giuliani Set to Quit Race

John Edwards

Former Sen. John Edwards speaks at a post primary campaign rally in Columbia, South Carolina.

Eric Thayer, Getty Images

News Headlines: Jan. 30, 2007

Talk About It:
AFP: Edwards Hands White House Race Over to Clinton, Obama -- "In a stunning decision Wednesday, John Edwards dropped out of the Democratic White House race transforming it into a straight fight between bitter rivals Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama."

Related: Why He Never Caught On
Flashback: 'In It for Long Haul'
More: Edwards Campaign Blog

Read the political tea leaves on this one: to whom will Edwards' supporters go? Which candidate -- if either -- do you think he will endorse?

Election 2008:
New York Times: McCain Is Florida Victor; Giuliani Set to Exit the Race

CNN: Jimmy Carter Praises Obama

L.A. Times: Clinton 'Triumphs' in Florida, Sort Of

Chicago Sun-Times: Obama Cuts Rezko Ties

Nation:
Fox TV (Kansas City): Black Homicide Rate Highest in Missouri

Philadelphia Inquirer: State Police Urged to Add Minority Troopers

AP: Study Ties Soldiers' Maladies to Stress

World:
AP: Hungry Haitians Resort to Eating Dirt

New York Times: Dissident's Arrest Hints at Olympic Crackdown

AP: Mike Tyson Stirs South African Protests

People:
Bloomberg: Jessye Norman Hosts Black Music Festival

Op-Ed:
Maureen Dowd: Seeing Red Over Hillary

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January 29, 2008

Programming Note: Maxine Waters on Weds. 'N&N'

Maxine Waters

Congresswoman Maxine Waters poses during a post-Grammy party in 2005.

Frederick M. Brown, Getty Images

On tomorrow's show, Farai Chideya will speak with Congresswoman Maxine Waters about her endorsement of Sen. Hillary Clinton.

In the one-on-one, Waters reveals that she also fielded calls Sen. Barack Obama's campaign before making her decision, shares whether she worries about backlash from her constituents, offers insight on the so-called "black/brown" political divide, and explains why she thinks Hillary Clinton is the best person to lead the nation.

So be sure to check out Wednesday's show and come back to share your thoughts.

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Got a Dollar Bill, Y'all?

Dollars

iStockphoto.com

The House approved a $146 billion economic stimulus package today, which calls for one-time tax rebates for many Americans.

More from the Washington Post: "Under the House [economic stimulus] plan, most workers would receive $600 from the government, $1,200 for couples, plus $300 per child. Eligibility for the full check would be capped at $75,000 in adjusted gross income for individuals, $150,000 for couples. Workers with at least $3,000 in earned income last year but too little earnings to pay income taxes would receive $300, along with $300 per child."

So ... if you got a rebate from Uncle Sam, what would you do with it? Would you spend it? If so, how?

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Democrats Court Crucial Latino Vote

Latino Voters

Latino voters learn how to caucus at the Obama campaign headquarters in Des Moines, Iowa.

Scott Olson, Getty Images

News Headlines: Jan. 29, 2007

Talk About It:
Wall Street Journal: Two Plays for Latino Vote -- The battle among Democrats for the Latino vote is kicking into high gear. Sen. Hillary Clinton is counting on Latino voters to play a decisive role as several big states vote Feb. 5. Sen. Barack Obama is battling to overcome Sen. Clinton's lead and decades of hostility between Latinos and African-Americans in some major cities."

As the article puts it, "Blacks and Latinos have been at odds for decades in neighborhoods like South Central in Los Angeles, where the population has shifted from black to Hispanic."

And as Clinton pollster Sergio Bendixen told The New Yorker: "The Hispanic voter -- and I want to say this very carefully -- has not shown a lot of willingness or affinity to support black candidates."

Accepting that "the Latino vote" is no more monolithic than "the black vote," how do you think this block of voters will impact the election?

Election 2008:
AP: Rep. Waters Endorses Clinton | Kansas Gov. Endorses Obama

New America Media: Fla. Voters May Use Numerous Forms of ID

AP: McCain, Romney in Florida Showdown

Nation:
Washington Post: Realities Push Bush's Big Ideas Into Background

AP: Racist Displays Persist at Minn. College

New York Times: Charges Dropped for 22 Arrested on Way to Wake

World:
National Post (Canada): Blacks Against Proposed Afrocentric School

New York Times: Opposition Politician Is Killed in Kenya

Op-Ed:
John McWhorter: Booker T., the Original Sellout Reconsidered

The AJC: Don't Dash the Dream; Be an American in Full

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January 28, 2008

'News & Notes' Meets the Press

Meet the Press

Byron York of the 'National Review' (center) speaks as he is interviewed by moderator Tim Russert during a taping of 'Meet the Press' with Chuck Todd (left) and Maureen Dowd.

Matt May, Getty Images for Meet the Press

If you listened to Friday's show and caught Sunday's Meet the Press, you might have been surprised to hear -- like we were -- moderator Tim Russert mention part of a conversation on our show about the role of race in the Democrats' bid for the White House.

Russert quoted Ron Walters, director of the African American Leadership Institute at the University of Maryland, who said:

"The only way that [Obama] is going to get elected ... is to try to neutralize race. And when you're talking about Bill Clinton, in so far as they try to blacken Barack Obama, what they do is play on to the divisiveness of the racial sector. ...The objective of the Clinton campaign is to make him blacker, which is to say to call out his blackness and therefore, to complicate his constituency which is predominantly white."

Go back and take a listen to the full interview.


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Presidential Campaigns on the Hunt for Delegates

Sen. John McCain

Republican presidential hopeful Sen. John McCain speaks during a town hall meeting in Lady Lake, Florida.

Alex Wong, Getty Images

News Headlines: Jan. 28, 2007

Talk About It:
New York Times: Races Entering Complex Phase Over Delegates -- "The presidential campaign is entering a new phase as Democratic and Republican candidates move beyond state-by-state competition and into a potentially protracted scramble for delegates Congressional district by Congressional district. The shifting terrain is influencing the strategies of candidates from both parties."

What's your reaction to the results of South Carolina's primary? What do you think Florida holds for the GOP?

Election 2008:
Washington Post: In S.C., Black Vote Was Vital, But Not Whole Story

New York Times: Jackson: Not Upset by Clinton Remarks | Toni Morrison Endorses Obama

Fox News: Huckabee on Romney's Fried Chicken Moment

Washington Post: Kennedy Endorses Obama In Blow to Clinton

AP: Indicted Obama Fundraiser Rezko Arrested

Philadelphia Inquirer: In Fla., Age Is an Issue for McCain

Nation:
Politico: Final Bush SOTU Unlikely to Yield Surprises

The AJC: 10,000 African-American Baptists Confer in Atlanta

Newsday: Immigrant-Rights Group Reaches Out to Blacks

Detroit Free Press: Kilpatrick Chief of Staff Quits Post Over Texts

Washington Post: Black Historical Figures Get Their Due

World:
New York Times: Ethnic Violence in Rift Valley Is Tearing Kenya Apart

AFP: EU Launches Chad, CAR Peacekeeping Mission

Money & Finance:
New York Times: 'Washington Post' Starts Online Magazine for Blacks

AFP: Blacks See 'Financial Apartheid' in Subprime Crisis

AP: New Home Sales Plunged by Record Amount in 2007

People:
Black Voices: Ruby Dee Wins First SAG Award

AP: Sears' Lewis to Step Down As CEO

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January 25, 2008

Broadway's 'Color Purple' to Close in February

COlor Purple

Singer Fantasia on stage during the curtain call of The Color Purple in New York.

Bryan Bedder, Getty Images

The Color Purple will end its run on Broadway on Feb. 24, bringing the Oprah Winfrey-produced musical to a close after over 900 performances, the AP reports. The 1985 film adaptation of the Pulitzer Prize winning novel by Alice Walker, starred Winfrey in an Oscar-nominated performance.

The $11 million musical has reportedly earned $103,000,000 since its opening in 2005.

But why do think it is closing down? Are less people going to the theater due to economic stress? Or do you think that it's American Idol winner Fantasia Barrino's fault, as the folks at SOHH speculate:

While the show grossed over one $100 million in it's two-year stint, it seems the the show experienced a surge of ticket sales/losses when Fantasia signed on to play the well-known character of Celie. Most of the shows ticket losses were due to Fannny canceling over 50 performances. For those of you who've never been to a Broadway show, when the star is a no-show the ticket holder is entitled to a complete refund if they don't care to see the understudy.

What do you think?

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The TRIFECTA of Dems: And YOUR Vote

Sens. John Edwards and Hillary Clinton

Sens. John Edwards and Hillary Clinton photographed on the campaign trail.

Getty Images

So, we played you our interviews with Senator Hillary Clinton and Senator John Edwards today.

We got the three big Dems ... including Senator Barack Obama from yesterday's show. (The above links will take you to full audio and text transcripts of the interviews.)

So, who are you planning to vote for, if I may so boldly ask? I mean, really ... Democrat, Republican, Independent: who are you for? Hit us up with a comment on the blog because it strikes me that we have a lot of information now about both what candidates have said (though they're often, well, politic) and how they make us feel (which is something we talked about on today's show).

Let
Us
Know

Anyhow, here are a couple of important moments from our interviews with Senators Clinton and Edwards.

We got down to dolla dolla bills, y'all, with Senator Edwards.

Q: If you don't perform well in South Carolina, will you drop out of the race? What do you plan to do after South Carolina's primary, if you don't come in at least second?

A: I'm in this for the long haul, and the causes that I've engaged in -- speaking for the people who don't have a voice, speaking for the uninsured, for people who live in poverty, for our veterans, for the men and women serving in Iraq --- those are the causes of my life. And they're not going away, I'm in it for the long haul.

Q: Are you running out of money?

A: No, actually. Here's the amazing thing that's happened. Since the first of January, we raised a record amount online, on the Internet and as a result, the money won't be the issue. We have plenty of money.

And Senator Clinton got personal with us:

Q: We actually spoke with actress Victoria Rowell. She's written a best-selling book about growing up in the foster care system. She's stumping for you.

A: Isn't she wonderful?

Q: Absolutely. And she talked about your commitment, not just with Marian Wright Edelman, but providing free legal services in child abuse cases when you were getting your law degree at Yale. Why is this kind of work important to you?

A: I think that it initially was important because my mother had such a very difficult life, and if she had been born at a later time, I believe that she probably would have been put into the foster care system because her parents essentially abandoned her, and her grandparents were very unwelcoming. Basically, she had to leave their home when she was 13 to go to work in someone else's home just to be able to have a safe place to live and to try to be able to make some way in her life. They let her take care of their children, but she had to get up and get the other children off to school, and they let her go to high school. So I really saw at a very early age, that despite my comfortable, secure upbringing in my family, that wasn't the case for so many children. It just became the cause of my passionate commitment here in public service to do what I can to give every child the chance to live up to his or her God-given potential.

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January 24, 2008

We Get HEAT from Obama; Edwards Next

We are on fire down here in South Carolina ... hitting the road, working long hours (we wrapped yesterday at 2 AM), and talking to the candidates stumping for Saturday's Democratic Presidential primary.

Tomorrow, we'll have Sen. John Edwards. We actually talked to him today after the show about issues, including whether he'll drop out of the race if he doesn't win South Carolina and whether his campaign is running out of money. (I'll leave the answers as cliffhangers!)

Today we got to speak to Sen. Barack Obama, whom polls (and you never know with polls!) favor to win on Saturday. You can hear OR read the full interview with Senator Obama here.

Also on today's show, our team went down to Dillon, S.C., to talk about failing schools in the "Corridor of Shame"... the poor rural schools along Interstate 95 in South Carolina. Check out our special report. As we were leaving town after doing our reporting, Sen. Obama was just coming to town for a rally and repeat visit to Dillon.

So when I got to talk to him today, I asked: What would it take to make sure that all of the underperforming schools in America, including ones in the Corridor of Shame, became excellent schools?

The Senator said that it would take $18 billion dollars. So I asked him where that money would come from. He replied:

Well what we're going to do is delay or cut programs that I don't think are as high of a priority. ...There are a host of ... programs at the federal level that I think are less of a priority than making sure that students get a good education.

We also asked the Senator about the debunked allegations that he went to a radical madrassa, or Islamic school. He was capital N, capital H -- Not Happy -- about the question. In fact, before he answered it, he actually gave me some serious grief about even posing the question. But he did finally answer, saying in part:

The unfortunate thing is that it gets repeated and its completely false.I went to a secular school in Indonesia which happens to be a country that is majority Muslim. I am a Christian, have been a Christian. And we're now seeing emails that are being distributed repeated ly as part of a smear campaign or political strategy which insults not only me and my Christian faith, but also tries to stir up anti-Muslim sentiment. And I think that's the kind of politics that people of weary of. It doesn't solve problems. It doesn't focus attention on healthcare and education and what we're going to do about the troops in Iraq. And that's the kind of campaign I intend to run, one that focuses on the problems we face, and I'm confident that the American people will understand that these kinds of scurrilous reports and rumors have been debunked and we will continue to debunk them.

This whole race is HOT ... and so is getting to cover it. This is my fourth round of presidential election coverage, and each time you feel a surge of energy, a bit of juice from chasing the story. And voters seem to be on fire about participating in the election, as well. It could be a year that breaks voter turnout records ... stay tuned on that one.

By the way, in case you're an undecided voter, like some of the students we interviewed, you can have a fun time with Vote Chooser. It lets you, duh, choose who you should vote for. And though it may not be scientific, it's a good time ... and so is hitting the campaign trail.

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Detroit Mayor In Trouble for Some Textual Healing

Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick

Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick talks with the media in 2006.

Bill Pugliano, Getty Images

Records of text messages sent by Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick suggest that the he lied under oath about an intimate relationship with a city staffer, according to an investigation by the Detroit Free Press.

Kilpatrick denied in August that he had a sexual relationship with his chief of staff, Christine Beatty. The extramarital affair became public when a whistle blower revealed the allegations. Both Kilpatrick and Beatty claimed under oath that they were never together.

But the texts (the Free Press combed through 14,000 messages) show otherwise:

"I'm madly in love with you," Kilpatrick wrote on Oct. 3, 2002. "I hope you feel that way for a long time," Beatty answered. "In case you haven't noticed, I am madly in love with you, too!"
Other texts contain sexual content, like this exchange on April 8, 2003:
Beatty: "And, did you miss me, sexually?"
Kilpatrick: "Hell yeah! You couldn't tell. I want some more.

Both Beatty and Kilpatrick face up to 15 years in prison for perjury.

For more juicy details, check out the text messages here or refer to the timeline of events.

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Your Reaction: Obama Talks Education, Faith, Race

Barack Obama

Presidential candidate Barack Obama speaks at a campaign event in Sumpter, S.C.

Chris Hondros, Getty Images

News & Notes is still in South Carolina, broadcasting live from the state leading up to Saturday's Democratic primary. On today's show, Farai spoke with Ill. Sen. Barack Obama, following up on her first interview with him back in July.

During the Q&A, Obama explains his plans for improving the nation's public school system, addresses persistent rumors about his religious faith, and considers the role that race in playing in his bid for the White House.

Take a listen and tell us what you think.

Flashback: Obama on the War, Race and America's Future

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Warring Kenyan Leaders Meet

Kenya

Kenya's opposition leader Raila Odinga, on the right, with Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki in Nairobi.

Uriel Sinai/Getty Images

A brief meeting of Kenya's dueling presidential candidates may be the first step toward the end of civil unrest and violence in that country. A meeting between the sparring politicians brokered by Kofi Annan took place on Wednesday, The New York Times reports.

Mwai Kibaki won the presidency in a highly contested election, in which opposition leader Raila Odinga alleged corruption within the voting system.The conflict between the leaders poured into the streets, causing ethnically-based violence killing at least 650 lives and displacing more than 250,000 people.

The meeting marked the first face-to-face interaction between the politicos since the the crisis began. Kibaki urged calm during the upheaval:

"I appeal to all Kenyans to remain calm and to shun violence as we endeavor to find solutions," he said. "I am confident that together, our experience, unity and determination will make it possible for us to overcome the challenges."

Do you think this meeting will yield any results? How should the international community react to the conflict in Kenya? Do you think lasting peace in Africa is possible, and what should be the first step to create it?

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AP: Super Tuesday Won't Be Coronation Day

Democrats & Republicans

istockphoto.com

News Headlines: Jan. 24, 2007

Talk About It:
AP: Super Tuesday Won't Decide Nominations -- "Don't look to crown any presidential nominees on Super Tuesday. The race for delegates is so close in both parties that it is mathematically impossible for any candidate to lock up the nomination on Feb. 5, according to an Associated Press analysis of the states in play."

What will happen if the contests continue all the way to the summer political conventions? Is it better or worse for our political system?

Election 2008:
AP: Giuliani's Florida Win Appears in Danger

New York Times: Rangel Remains in Clinton's Camp in Obama Battle

Boston Globe: 'Swift-Boated' Once, Kerry Helms Democrats' Armada

New York Times: Romney Leads in Ill Will Among G.O.P. Candidates

Nation:
AP: Congressional Leaders, Bush Reach Stimulus Deal

WLTX TV: Report: 46% of African American Households Don't Bank

Philadelphia Inquirer: Sundance Screens Film About Abu-Jamal

Indianapolis Star: About 80% of Black Babies Born to Unwed Moms

World:
AP: Tear Gas, Tension Limit an Opposition Protest in Zimbabwe

New York Times: Kenya Antagonists Meet, But Announce Little

Reuters: NBA Targets India With Promotional Event

Op-Ed:
Karen Russell: Whitewater v. Rezko: The Battle of the Billing Records

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January 23, 2008

Live from South Carolina

Right now, I'm typing this on my Blackberry as we drive down the Strom Thurmond Freeway (!!!) back toward Columbia, South Carolina.

We're coming from the city of Dylan, part of what's called the "Corridor of Shame." Poor schools whose students consistently fail Federal "Leave No Child Behind" tests are clustered along Interstate 95. That district is one of eight suing the state for better funding and support.

Mother & Daughter

Cynthia Thomas, (left), photographed with her daughter, Mikeya Murphy.

Devin Robins, NPR

We sat down with a mother and an eighth grader; plus the superintendent and the principal at the middle school in Dylan. You can tune in tomorrow (Thursday) to hear our special report, plus a conversation with top state politicians.

I have been fortunate enough to have driven across this country twice, both times with my sister, Sekai. On our last trip we got to do some fun, some sad, and some moving pieces for News and Notes. We got to visit the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, right across from the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church, where a white supremacist set a bomb and killed four little girls. Yet the museum tells a story of triumph, the story of black Americans (and non-black, as well) living through a period of outright terrorism. Folks survived it and transcended it.

Yet the old South lies restless and uneasy under the "New South," as so many marketers put it. Here in South Carolina lawmakers are debating whether to take down -- or at least add a contemporary commentary to -- a statue of "Pitchfork Ben."

Ben Tillman was a South Carolina governor and U.S. Senator in the late 19th century. He supported lynching African Americans and said black people who wanted the same rights as whites should be killed.

Recently, a State Representative introduced a bill to have the statue removed. One of our guests on today's show, law professor Danielle Holley-Walker (who blogs SCBlack Press.com) is actually holding a forum on the issue this week.

One of my favorite quotes in the whole worrld is from novelist William Faulkner. He said, "The past is not dead. In fact it's not even past."

I love this part of the country. It looks like home to me. Maryland limns the Mason-Dixon line and some of the foliage is similar, especially in the summer. And, as we discussed on air last week, there's now a musem in Baltimore dedicated to Maryland's black history. In so many places in the South, and beyond, there's a sense that we are "remixing" history so we can acknowledge how America's story was written, add new elements of knowledge, and come up with a vibrant way to discuss the foundations of American life.

This has been a magnificent day. We had our first live show at South Carolina ETV, a public television station that has extended true hospitality to us and the other NPR shows.

This presidential election is history in the making. Everyone has a chance to participate, even if you're not of voting age or can't vote. I mean, we're all in conversation about the future of the country ... and the impact of the past. One day people will look back at THESE times and the ripples we left and say the past isn't even past.

By the way, it looks like we'll get Senator Obama on the show again this week. Stay tuned!

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Report: 'Quality' of Army Recruits Down

Army Boots

istockphoto.com

News Headlines: Jan. 23, 2007

Talk About It:
San Antonio Express-News: Texas Rated No. 1 in Army Recruiting, But 'Quality' Down -- "A report released Tuesday by the National Priorities Project found that Texas produced more Army recruits last year than any other state in the nation. ... But the number of 'high-quality' recruits has continued a downward slide nationwide since 2004. Recruits in that group hold a traditional high school diploma and score in the upper half of the Armed Forces Qualification Test."

Is the war to blame? How can the Army turn this trend around?

Election 2008:
Chicago Sun-Times: Hillary Plays Rezko Card

AFP: Obama Hurls New Anti-Clinton Broadsides

AP: Romney Focuses on Business Resume

AP: Thompson Quits Presidential Race

Nation:
Chicago Tribune: Former Black Panther Ends Fight; To Be Extradited

AP: Minority Students Trail Peers in HS Graduation Rates

World:
Reuters: Congo Rebels Sign Deal to End Eastern Conflict

AFP: Zimbabwe Opposition Condemns 'Pro-Mugabe' Police

AP: Gazans Knock Down Border, Flee to Egypt

Op-Ed:
The State: Obama Most Likely Democrat to Unify America

Wall Street Journal: Obama's Clinton Education

Hutchinson: Writing Obituary for Bradley Effect Is Premature

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South Carolina: Politicking in the Palmetto State

South Carolina skyscape - iStockphoto.com
iStockphoto.com

This week, News & Notes is reporting from South Carolina in time for that state's crucial primary election. The following are online resources, which offer additional information about the state and the candidates' campaign efforts.

More About South Carolina:
A Brief History of South Carolina

Directory of African-American Historic Places

More About the Gullah People

Federal Statistics on South Carolina

Political Analysis:
South Carolina's Role as GOP Kingmaker

Latest State Polls & Demographics

2008 Primary Tracker

2006 Primary Results & Voter Registration Statistics

What's at Stake

The State: South Carolina Political Coverage

The Presidential Candidates:
Democrats:
Hillary Clinton
John Edwards
Mike Gravel
Dennis Kucinich
Barack Obama

Republicans:
Rudy Giuliani
Mike Huckabee
Duncan Hunter
John McCain
Ron Paul
Mitt Romney

More News & Notes Election Coverage

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January 22, 2008

When "Black" Suggests "Poverty"

Impoverished Woman

An African-American woman sits on the front porch in an underprivileged part of small town Missouri.

iStockphoto.com

Taking a closer look at last night's CNN/CBC Democratic debate, it wasn't the back-and-forth between Clinton and Obama that made a lasting impression on me, it was this Q&A:

CNN reporter Suzanne Malveaux asked of Sen. John Edwards:

"I've spoken with a lot of African American voters in South Carolina this week, and a lot of them say that electing a black president, that this would change the way whites see African Americans and the way African Americans see themselves. Do you think that this is a valid consideration for voters in determining who's president?"

Edwards responded and added this:

"Ending poverty is the cause, the single most important cause in my life. ... I think it is a huge moral issue facing the United States of America, and it is an enormous issue facing the African American community. If you're black, you're much more likely to be poor, you're much less likely to have health care coverage. That community is hurt worse by poverty than any community in America. And it's our responsibility, not just for the African American community, but for America, as a nation, to take on this moral challenge, to try as best we can to walk in the shadow of Dr. King and try to make certain that we take this cause on, and I intend to do it."

To which, Sen. Clinton said:

"I think that what we want to do is have a little reality check here, because how is it best to end poverty? We know we've got to maintain programs that are there to help people in need, but look at what's happened over the space of the last seven years. The average African American family has lost $2,600 in income."

And Obama followed:

"As I said, I started my career after college working in low-income neighborhoods, working in public housing projects, talking to children who would tell me that, when I asked them, "What do you want to be when you grow up?" They say, "I want to be a doctor," or, "I want to be a lawyer," had the same aspirations as every other child, but they were three, four grade levels behind. And nobody had told them that the likelihood of them accomplishing their goals were each year diminished because we weren't putting the money in to make sure that they could actually achieve it."

Click here to read the full quotes in context, but what I want to pull from here is the jump from a question about the political interests of African Americans ... to addressing the issue of poverty.

While much of what the candidates said is true, it's worth noting that most blacks are middle class. Their answers could have easily had more to do with spurring entrepreneurship and community wealth-building.

It raises the question: what's the best way to address social ills without perpetuating stereotypes and ascribing more problems to black identity?

Related: Obama's Bid Turns Focus On Class Split Among Blacks

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Clinton, Obama Spar Over Records in Debate

CNN Debate

Democratic presidential hopefuls Sens. Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama engage in a heated debate at the Palace Theatre in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.

Eric Thayer, Getty Images

News Headlines: Jan. 22, 2007

Talk About It:
CNN: Analysis: Sparks Fly in Most Contentious Debate to Date -- "The gloves came off quickly Monday night as Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama traded blows just days before the South Carolina primary, and two weeks before voters in 24 Super Tuesday states weigh in on this wide-open presidential contest."

What did you think of last night's debate? Here's in-depth analysis from NPR senior Washington editor Ron Elving.

At this point, how do you think South Carolina's primary will play out? Who are best positioned to be the Democratic and Republican nominees?

Related: Clinton's Spousal Shadow | Clinton Keeps Up Attacks
Plus: In the Audience, Dave Chappelle

Election 2008:
L.A. Times: Poll: U.S. More Ready for Black President

New York Times: A Scramble Across Florida for GOP

Nation:
AP: White Supremacists Protest in Jena, La.

Philadelphia Inquirer: The Creative Slice of Economic Pie

Washington Post: Minority Students Become the Majority in Maryland

U.S. News: Stocks Down After Surprise Fed Rate Cut

World:
New York Times: Congo Agrees to Peace Deal With Rebels

Reuters: Mbeki Still in Control After Losing ANC Role

AFP: U.S. Slams Sudan's Appointee Linked to Darfur Atrocities

People:
Oscars.com: Ruby Dee Nabs First Oscar Nod; Denzel Overlooked

AP: Sammy Davis Jr. Widow Sues Over Legacy

Op-Ed:
Karen Russell: Zip It, Bill!

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January 21, 2008

Blue Skies?: Miami Real Estate

Miami Construction

iStockphoto.com

I'm passing through Miami for a meeting before we as a show head to South Carolina for our live coverage.

It is one of the kind of days that I love ... indoors. The skies are a magnificent blue, but not that clear sunny blue. Instead, they are a steely mass of shifting layers, dark thunderclouds moving in what seem like glass, superimposed planes across a field of whiter clouds in the distance. The fronds of the coconut palms are pushed back like the umbrella of a commuter walking against the wind. The water, too, is dark and roiled.

And the high-rise condos around here are blue, too. So many of them are half-finished, with blue plastic covering newly installed windows. Blue is a kind of thumbs-up color, an all-is-well color ... usually. But I wonder if these condos -- contracted during the boom of speculation -- will cost the buyers who plunked down deposits dearly.

I've got my eyes on the skies ... and the real estate. The mortgage crisis is a huge story, one with as many ripple effects, I believe, as the presidential election. I'm excited to cover the story, actually. It's great to deconstruct how this country and the economy works.

It's one of those issues you can understand on many levels: the structural nature of the economy; how different local markets are affected; and, of course, the emotional and financial cost that people holding the bag on a high-priced mortgage have to pay.

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One Primary Down, One More Debate to Go ...

On today's show, Tony Cox guided us through the weekend voting contests in Nevada and South Carolina and looked ahead to tonight's Democratic debate, sponsored by CNN and the Congressional Black Caucus.

What's your reaction to Clinton and Romney's wins in Nevada and McCain's win in South Carolina? What issues do you want to emerge during tonight's CBC co-sponsored debate?

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How Are You Honoring King Day?

As we observe the national holiday to honor the birth of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., we want to know what you consider to be King's legacy.

Some have argued that the more King is honored -- and essentially deified -- the more his life and works are homogenized, altered and simplified. Agree?

When King was assassinated in April of 1968, he was supporting garbage collectors who were on strike. What issues do you think King would champion if he were alive today? And how are you observing King Day?

Related: King's Life in Photos

Related: Timeline of King's Life

Flashback: Reagan Makes King Holiday Official

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January 20, 2008

MLK: Play Your Position

MLK

Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Last night, I spoke at the University of Florida in Gainesville. The Black Graduate Students' Organization (BGSO) had their 22nd Annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Awards. I was introduced by Dr. Katheryn Russell-Brown, who's been on our air. She's an author and a UF law professor, who heads their Center for the Study of Race and Race Relations.

The BGSO crew are DYNAMIC scholars ... and funny! And smart, artistic, etc. etc. etc. (Why, when I had a 7 AM flight, did I stay at their dance party until almost 3 AM?)

Anyway, back to the speech. A little story I used to kick things off ...

Several years ago, I was in one of my raise-a-fist angry black woman moments. I don't even remember what set me off. So I sent an e-mail to some activist friends, all about saving black youth. Essentially, I tried to out-activist the activists. Imagine me trying to channel Huey Newton ... or more importantly, faking it out of a sense of insecurity about my own gifts. At the moment, I thought it was better to put on someone else's skin in order to fulfill my (well-meaning) goals.

Anyway, one of my friends, a community-based activist, kindly sent me an e-mail in response. The part I remember is that she said "play your position." The way she put it, with humor and some ego stroking, it wasn't an admonition. She was saying, kindly, that she was an activist and I was a journalist and both of us had our roles to play in creating a more just, liberated, and equal society.

Though she's passed away, her words stick with me still.

Most of us want to play someone else some of the time. We think that if only we were ... WHATEVER ... we would be more effective at making change. Sometimes when we think this, we are truly working out our place in the world, and we do need to shift direction. But sometimes -- most of the time -- it's because we see so much need in this world and we want to fill it all.

At the event, we had a conversation about what it means to find your mission, to play your position ... even when others disagree with you. That includes when the people disagreeing with you are the ones who have supported you, people who you love.

That got me to Reverend King. On MLK's actual birthday, the 15th, News & Notes producer Roy Hurst got us some tape of Dr. King speaking out against the Vietnam war in 1967. In that speech, with a heaviness and weariness, Dr. King acknowledges that many of the people who had marched and struggled with him were also people who did not want him to speak out against the war. Rev. King said (and we played this part of his speech):

Over the past two years, as I have moved to break the betrayal of my own silences and to speak from the burnings of my own heart, as I have called for radical departures from the destruction of Vietnam, many persons have questioned me about the wisdom of my path. At the heart of their concerns, this query has often loomed large and loud: "Why are you speaking about the war, Dr. King? Why are you joining the voices of dissent?" "Peace and civil rights don't mix," they say. "Aren't you hurting the cause of your people? "they ask. And when I hear them, though I often understand the source of their concern, I am nevertheless greatly saddened, for such questions mean that the inquirers have not really known me, my commitment, or my calling. Indeed, their questions suggest that they do not know the world in which they live.

The people who questioned the wisdom of Dr. King's path included members of the SCLC, people he had been working for justice with for a decade. So, why did Dr. King break with them on this issue? Well, each of us has our own moral compass, our own path to walk ... our own position to play. And as I've learned over time, one of the greatest things we can do for social justice is to play our position well.

Dr. King was willing to play his position, not only when it brought him into opposition with people in power who he was willing to defy, but also when he made people who stood beside him angry. He was willing to follow his moral compass. Not all of us have that strength all of the time. He was certainly human ... he probably didn't live up to his own expectations all the time. But he played his position, one that ultimately cost him his life.

We don't have to lose our lives in order to change others'. All we have to do is find that sweet spot where we find our moral compass, give our gifts to the world, and accept but do not expect rewards when they come. Okay, that's not really an "all we have to do." That's quite a high bar. But I do believe, deeply -- from having a job where I get to speak to politicians, artists, community activists, pundits, and you name it -- that it's the diversity of our gifts that produce transformation.

So: happy Martin Luther King Day. And play your position ... and play it well.

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January 18, 2008

Poll: Black Democrats Back Obama Over Clinton

Obama and Clinton

Sen. Barack Obama and Sen. Hillary Clinton appear during a Democratic Presidential debate in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Getty Images

The majority of black Democrats are showing support for Obama instead of Clinton, a CNN national poll shows.

According to the survey, 59 percent of black Democrats backed Obama while 31 percent support Clinton.

"There's been a huge shift among African-American Democrats from Clinton to Obama. African-American Democrats used to be reluctant to support Obama because they didn't think a black man could be elected. Then Obama won Iowa and nearly won New Hampshire. Now they believe," said Bill Schneider, CNN senior political analyst.

Do you think that Schneider is right? If not, what do you think caused the shift of black Democrats away from Clinton?

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Golfweek Editor Gets Boot for Noose

Tiger Woods

Getty Images

News Headlines: Jan. 18, 2007

Talk About It:
CNN: Golfweek Editor Booted Over Cover Featuring Noose -- "The editor of Golfweek magazine was replaced Friday after the publication's January 19 issue featured a cover with a noose -- referencing a controversial comment made earlier this month by a Golf Channel anchor regarding golfer Tiger Woods."

Do you think that the editor deserved to be fired, or was this action too harsh? What kind of precedent, if any, will this firing create?

Election 2008:
Washington Post: BET Founder Sorry for Remarks About Obama
Los Angeles Times: In Compton, Clinton Invokes King's Legacy
New York Times: Southern Blacks Are Split on Clinton vs. Obama

Nation:
AP: Muslim Athlete Disqualified Over Uniform
Washington Post: FEMA Flip-Flops Again on Trailers

World:
USA Today: Official: Somali Americans Detained in Ethiopia
BBC: Zimbabwe Bank to Issue $10m Bill
AP: C.I.A. Says Tribal Leader Behind Bhutto's Death

Op-Ed:
Charles Krauthammer: Black Dreams, White Liberals

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January 17, 2008

Signs of the Times?

 
“The stock market's already-brutal start to the new year grew even worse today, driving some major indexes into bear-market territory, as fear of a recession triggered another barrage of selling.”
 
 

Some have called it a dark cloud on the horizon, while others see it as the invisible elephant in the room. Economists and politicians are reluctant to give it a name. But one thing is for certain, we all know it's here.

It's recession and Michael Grynbaum of the New York Times puts it best:

"The Dow Jones industrial average plunged 306.95 points Thursday as investors confronted new chapters of a well-worn story: the economy is in trouble."

With the tumultuous housing market and the plummeting stock market, the symptoms of this impending ailment are already being felt by people around the country.

So, how have you been affected? Have you felt it in dramatic ways? Did you sell your house, lose your job, or have to move to another town?

Or have you coped with it in smaller ways-- spending less by not going out, driving less to avoid high gas prices, or even second guessing that lavish Valentines Day vacation?

Tell us your story...

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Too Black? (Too Strong?)

Okay folks:

We get your e-mails and letters. Today, for our weekly "Letters" segment, we got a ping that said we were "racist" for doing so much black news.

I don't buy that. Most of our listeners aren't black, and we get kudos from listeners of all races. Most importantly, our show is tasked, in our mission statement, with "illuminating the African-American experience." The question is, how do we do that?

Sometimes we profile black folks, including some who do some pretty unusual things. (See Christopher Johnson's piece on a top mixed martial arts fighter.)

Sometimes we discuss race.

Sometimes we have black guests discussing the news of the day, particularly on our politics segments, our bloggers' roundtables, and our reporters' roundtable.

And sometimes, as with today's segment on something (judging from this blog) that you care deeply about -- the FDA saying cloning animals for meat is safe -- we just have two white folks on talking through an issue that our broad mixed audience cares about.

So are we too black? Or just too strong... in that we are willing to tackle issues other people don't?

Look, I question our approach. Our staff does. And that's a good thing. It means we are willing to change and innovate. It's not as if we come in to work every day and always agree, among the staff, on how to approach these things. We're trying to figure it out.

That's also a strength. Our staff is racially and culturally mixed. We all have different interests. Off air, we have our various hobbies and superpowers. The staff includes a martial artist, two DJs, a jazz musician, a cyclist, a novelist, etc. etc. etc. One thing I hope is that over time we can bring more of our loves and quirks to the show ... and that we can get more of yours on through our blogs and by incorporating you on air.

(I also lurv the science fiction and horror movies. I am looking for a way to do something on horror movies for our air, so if you have any good ideas, ping me here through the blog.)

The upshot: even if it stings sometimes ... and even if we think you're wrong ... we want your feedback. We need it, and we hear you.

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New Developments in Watts

Los Angeles

Getty Images


News Headlines: Jan. 17, 2007

Talk About It:
LA Times: Subdivision in Watts Attracts Attention -- "It's an improbable place to find a home-building boom in the midst of Los Angeles' sluggish housing market. Yet only three blocks from the Imperial Courts public housing project, along a stretch of land once used as a neighborhood dump, 44 homes are rising in Watts within sight of its famous towers."

What could these new developments mean for Watts and South Los Angeles? Do you think they are precursors to gentrification or promise of economic improvement in the area?

Election 2008:
Wall Street Journal: McCain Courts Military In South Carolina

Nation:
NY Times: Racial Tensions Stir in Ohio Town
USA Today: Court Fines Man for Using "N-Word"

Boston Globe: Maker of Heart Drug for Blacks Cuts Jobs

World:
New York Times: Protesters Clash With Police in Kenya for Second Day

BBC: South African President Visits Zimbabwe for Mediation Talks

Op-Ed:
Wall Street Journal: Nobel Prize Winner: Don't Ignore Violence in Kenya

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January 16, 2008

Race: I'm Just Not Hearing You

Tomorrow, we're going to have on Jewelle Taylor Gibbs, author of Race and Justice: Rodney King and OJ Simpson in a House Divided. We'll be talking through ... talking about race and politics specifically.

When Bill Clinton used the term "fairy-tale" in discussing the candidacy of Barack Obama, was it:
A) racial, and offensive
B) offensive only if you support Obama
C) neither racial nor offensive

How you answer the question depends on who you are and what you're listening for. Race is just one factor in how we listen ... not the tone of our skin but the cultural context we bring to conversations.

Speaking of listening, we did a tour de force of the latest in politics today.

First we got a breakdown of what happened in Michigan from NPR's Ron Elving.

Then we got a chance to speak with Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick about his city's challenges and whether the federal government needs to pay more attention to urban affairs. (He thinks so!)

We also had analysts Ron Christie and Melissa Harris-Lacewell talk, among other things, about whether some of the campaigns are going broke... or at least if they're in trouble. (Two Republican candidates are making some unusual asks... former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani told his senior staff to go a month without pay; and Sen. John McCain is looking for a three million dollar loan for his campaign.)

We also spoke about black gay and lesbian issues from the left and the right: blogger and regular commentator Jasmyne Cannick and Abner Mason, former president of the Log Cabin Republicans.

And we're headed to South Carolina next week for the primary there. Scroll down our blog and holla if you live in SC and we can talk to you!

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The Birthplace of Hip-Hop Fights for Its Rights

 
“It's crazy. It's alarming. What does it mean exactly, we don't know. But it can't be good.”
 
 

As we mentioned earlier today, the purported birthplace of hip-hop may be on the real estate chopping block.

Thirty-five years ago, Clive Campbell (aka D. J. Kool Herc) started spinning records and isolating breakbeats (a technique gleaned from the pioneers of dub and dancehall from his childhood home of Kingston, Jamaica) and throwing parties in the rec room of a working class apartment building near the Bronx. Campbell's musical innovations at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue would become the skeleton of what would evolve into the entire body of hip-hip as we know it.

The stark building, not visually different from its brick brethren speckling the boroughs, now has the eyes of a group of investors headed by Mark Karasick (who was the seller of the Bank of America Center in San Francisco) upon it.

But some residents and community members are not buying what he's selling. One tells the New York Times:

"We think it's odd that a guy of this stature is buying a 100-unit building," says Dina Levy, director of organizing and policy with the Urban Homesteading Assistance Board. "It's literally like saying Donald Trump wants to buy a 100-unit rent-stabilized building that sits in the middle of nowhere. It's crazy. It's alarming. What does it mean exactly, we don't know. But it can't be good."

Is 1520 Sedgwick Avenue the birthplace of a movement or is it merely a building? How should we honor landmarks and preserve history in a constantly fluctuating urban environment?

More: Save the Birthplace of Hip-Hop | Interview with Clive Campbell

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Eddie, Tracey Split; Ike Died of Overdose: Report

The entertainment Web site TMZ is reporting the following:

1) After two weeks of wedded bliss, Eddie Murphy and Tracey Edmonds have split up, but "they have decided to remain friends."

2) A coroner's investigation has revealed Ike Turner died of an accidental cocaine overdose.

Let the speculation begin: what's the real deal on Eddie's break-up?

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You Got Beef With Cloned Meat?

Cow

iStockphoto.com

News Headlines: Jan. 16, 2007

Talk About It:
ABC News: Safe to Eat That Cloned Cow -- "The U.S. Food and Drug Administration reported that the meat and milk from cloned cows are safe for human consumption. The FDA said its decision came after extensive study of some 600 clones. The agency examined their health and the characteristics of the animals' meat and milk."

More: Blogger Response

Critics are skeptical, saying there are too many unknowns about cloned meat and milk. What do you think? And if it were to hit the market, would it unfairly affect the nation's poor (assuming the "real" stuff would be more expensive)?

Election 2008:
New York Times: 3 Winners, but No Anchor for Republicans

Washington Post: Clinton, Obama Move From Talk of Race

The Boston Globe: King's Son Says Clinton Erred

Miami Herald: Clinton, Obama Spar Over Florida

Nation:
New York Times: Tenants Might Buy Birthplace of Hip-Hop

The AJC: How Low? Atlantans Get a Saggy Pants Forum

USA Today: Minority-Hiring Policy Stiffens for Major Football Programs

Politico: War Rages, But Congress Moves On

S.F. Chronicle: Residents Send Medical Gear to Native Ethiopia

BBC: Black Women Get Cancer 'Earlier'

World:
New York Times: Protesters and Police Clash in Kenya

The Jerusalem Post: African American-Israel Ties Saluted

AP: 66 Nigerians Held on Trafficking Charges

Op-Ed:
Michael Chabon: Hey, Farrakhan and Cohen: You Can't Scare Me

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We're Heading to South Carolina!

Next week, News & Notes will be broadcasting from South Carolina, in time to cover that state's primary election. We're looking for real people (that means you) who can give us a feel for what it's like to live there and offer reaction to the campaigning you're seeing in your neighborhood. And if you're a blogger or news watcher who is heading to S.C. for the same reason we are, we want to hear from you too. Drop us a line below, and be sure to leave an accurate e-mail address so we can contact you. Your e-mail address will not be made public.

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January 15, 2008

Bam! Throw Down That Race Card!

Race Card

A rendering of "the race card," depicting Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson, created by Fabian the Occasional Superstar.

racecard.tv

Yesterday, we posted a timeline of the barbs that the Clinton and Obama campaigns have traded that have been (or been interpreted as) race-based.

The question we've been kicking around with our guests over the past couple days is: have the two campaigns crossed a racial line, or is this just politics as usual?

Okay, permit me to do one of the things I love ... go on a tangent with the help of our friend the Internet.

If you go to Wikipedia and search "dirty tricks" you get an explanation of how the term became popular during Watergate for the low-down, dirty tactics of some political operatives.

There's also a set of links at the bottom of the page to everything from the Willie Horton ads to the "Anti-Obama Whisper Campaign."

Anyhow, that page hashes through debates about Obama from his-middle-name-is-Hussein to he-tried-cocaine. The question of whether it matters that Obama once used drugs -- fueled by a snarky remark by BET founder Bob Johnson -- was key to our discussion today with CNN contributor Roland Martin and Robert George of the New York Post.

Bloggers and pundits have plenty of views on how "dirty tricks" are playing out in Campaign '08. An article on the progressive Web site AlterNet offers the opinion that the Clinton campaign is ruthless. It says:

The headlines say the latest schism among the top Democratic presidential candidates is over gender and race. But on the ground in the presidential season's opening states, there is a darker narrative: that Hillary Clinton will not just fight hard, but fight dirty, to win. And her tactic of choice is attempting to suppress the votes of her rival's supporters. The latest example is from Nevada, where the Nevada State Education Association is widely seen as filing a suit on Clinton's behalf to stop Las Vegas' most powerful union, Culinary Workers Local 226, from caucusing inside downtown casinos after the union endorsed Barack Obama. The tactic foments a split along racial and class lines in arguably the strongest union city in America.

But some writers think the Obama campaign is just as culpable for the "race card" issue. An article by Cenk Uygur reads:

The Obama campaign sent their national co-chair Jesse Jackson, Jr. to tear down Hillary Clinton on MSNBC the other night. He took it too far over the top. His comments on Hurricane Katrina seemed to indicate he was saying Hillary Clinton doesn't care about black people. It's one thing when Kanye West says that about George Bush, it's another when it's Obama's spokesperson saying it about Hillary Clinton. That is out of bounds.

But is anything really out of bounds in politics? You know what they say about love, war ... and getting those votes.

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Blacks Still Wary of Clinical Trials

Doctor

iStockphoto.com

Persistent attitudes of distrust keep blacks from participating in potentially life-saving trials, according to a report published by HealthDay.

"Black Americans continue to distrust medical research and clinical trials, apparently a lasting legacy of the infamous Tuskegee experiment which was shut down more than three decades ago, a new study shows."

It continues: "This discrepancy is particularly unfortunate, because not only do black Americans suffer disproportionately from many health conditions, they often experience illnesses differently and respond differently to medications, making race-specific trials even more crucial, the researchers noted."

Read more of the study's findings. Do you think the disparity is due to an unwillingness to participate or institutional exclusion?

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Oprah Gets Her Own TV Network

Oprah Winfrey

Television host Oprah Winfrey delivers remarks on behalf of Sen. Barack Obama.

Paul J. Richards, AFP/Getty Images

The Queen of Television's empire is expanding.

This from the AP: "Oprah Winfrey is getting her own TV network. Discovery Communications and Winfrey announced a deal Tuesday where the Discovery Health network will be turned over to Winfrey next year, becoming OWN -- the Oprah Winfrey Network.

Some of Winfrey's stable of regular contributors could be expected to be part of the programming, he said. Winfrey's current talk show, as well as rights to use of reruns, is spoken for until the end of the season."

Read the rest, and tell us what you think. Oprah is under contract to continue her talk show through 2011 -- which would be her 25th year on the air. This network -- through reruns and Harpo-produced content -- could indefinitely extend Oprah's presence on TV.

Read the press release.

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Obama, Clinton Try to Move Beyond Race Issue

Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton

Sen. Barack Obama (left) and Sen. Hillary Clinton (right) greet one another during the ABC/Facebook New Hampshire debates.

Emmanuel Dunand, AFP/Getty Images

News Headlines: Jan. 15, 2007

Talk About It:
Fox News: Obama Declares Truce -- "Minutes after he told voters at a Reno, Nevada, rally that his opponents were trying to 'run [him] down,' Senator Barack Obama held a media availability today to declare truce with his main competitors -- Senators Clinton and Edwards. But mainly Senator Clinton.

'I think over the last couple days you've seen a tone on the Democratic side in the campaign that I think is unfortunate,' he stated. 'I may disagree with Senator Clinton or Senator Edwards on how to get there, but we share the same goals. We're all Democrats. ... I don't want the campaign at this stage to degenerate into so much tit for tat back and forth that we lose sight of why we are all doing this.'"

Related: Chicago Sun-Times: Clinton, Obama Try to Cool Things Off

More: Supporters Keep Sparring

Do you think either side will respect this "truce" and move beyond the issue? Who do you think will win South Carolina, and how will it affect the outcome of other primaries?

Election 2008:
Washington Post: McCain, Romney Take Different Routes to Win

AP:Dems Battle in Court, Debate and Vote

New York Times: In South Carolina, a Bid for Black Women's Votes

Nation:
Law.com: Lawyer Alleges Partner Told Her Not to Hire Blacks

New York Times: Baltimore Finds Subprime Crisis Snags Women

Kansas City Star: Leavenworth No Picnic for Vick

World:
New York Times: Malawi Cuts Diplomatic Ties With Taiwan

AP: Kenya Lawmakers Elect Opposition Speaker

Washington Post: A Cautious Comeback at Baghdad University

Health & Science:
Indy Star: Minorities Need Apply, Medical Researchers Say

Science Daily: Weight-Loss Tips Differ In Black Magazines

Op-Ed:
Richard Cohen: Obama's Farrakhan Test

Boston Globe: Who Was More Important: President or Preacher?

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January 14, 2008

Race in the the Race: A Timeline

With all the he said-she said-he said going on between the Clintons and Barack Obama's campaign, here's a timeline of events -- compiled from published reports -- that highlights how this issue started last week and escalated:

Mon., Jan. 7: Sen. Hillary Clinton tells Fox News, "Dr. King's dream began to be realized when President Johnson passed the Civil Rights Act. It took a president to get it done."

Tues., Jan. 8: Former president Bill Clinton says, at a campaign event in New Hampshire, "This whole thing is the biggest fairy tale I've ever seen."

Tues., Jan. 8: Donna Brazile appears on CNN, calling Bill Clinton's comments "depressing."

Fri., Jan. 11: The New York Times publishes an article, quoting Rep. James E. Clyburn (D-SC), the highest-ranking African-American in Congress: "We have to be very, very careful about how we speak about that era in American politics. ... That bothered me a great deal."

Fri., Jan. 11: Bill Clinton appears on Al Sharpton's radio show to defend and clarify his statements.

Sun., Jan. 13 (Morning): Hillary Clinton appears on NBC's Meet the Press, saying, "Clearly, we know from media reports that the Obama campaign is deliberately distorting this."

Sun., Jan. 13 (Evening): BET founder Bob Johnson appears with Sen. Clinton at a campaign event in South Carolina and alludes to Obama's youthful drug use. He later says he was referring to Obama's community organizing. [Billy Shaheen, Clinton's New Hampshire campaign co-chair, stepped down last month after warning that Republicans would capitalize on Obama's prior drug use.]

Sun., Jan. 13 (Evening): Michelle Obama, appearing at the Trumpet Awards in Atlanta, criticizes those who "dismiss this moment as an illusion, a fairy tale."

Mon., Jan. 14: Bill Clinton appears on Roland Martin's radio show, offering reaction to Bob Johnson's comments.

Mon., Jan. 14: Obama responds: "I'm not going to spend all my time running down the other candidates, which seems to be what Senator Clinton has been obsessed with for the last month."

If you have something to add to this timeline, submit it via the comment section below. And tell us what you think of race being an issue in the election. Is it getting too much attention, or is it an inevitable development?

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An End Near for Electoral College?

This from the AP: "New Jersey became the second state to enter a compact that would eliminate the Electoral College's power to choose a president if enough states endorse the idea. ... The goal is to ensure that the national popular vote winner becomes president."

What do you think? Does this move return power to the people, so to speak? Or is it an end-run around the Constitution?

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Steroids in Sports; Anti-Aging Drugs in Hollywood?

Mary J. Blige

Singer Mary J. Blige speaks with the media while attending the General Motors Style event.

Bill Pugliano, Getty Images

Marion Jones ... Barry Bonds ... now Mary J. Blige, 50 Cent, Wyclef Jean, Timbaland, and Tyler Perry?!

Those entertainers' names have popped up among thousands of others in an investigation into obtaining steroids and human growth hormones.

The New York Times picked up on the story, as mentioned in our morning headlines.

For her part, Blige -- through her spokesperson -- has denied any involvement: "Mary J. Blige has never taken any performance-enhancing illegal steroids." She also included anti-aging steroids.

Though the benefits of such anti-aging drugs are unproven, they aren't illegal. Should celebs face any blow-back for taking them?

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Well, At Least the Pool Isn't Crowded

Never mind the civil unrest in Kenya that has claimed at least 600 lives, displaced a quarter of a million people, and leaves the country's future in the balance.

"We were really hoping our safari would not be cancelled," says Canadian tourist Debbie Shillitto, stretching back on her sun lounger at the Samburu game reserve. "We get all the attention," she says. "It makes me feel special."

You have to read it to believe it.

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Race in the Race to the White House

Barack Obama

Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama pauses as he speaks at a rally in New Hampshire.

Chip Somodevilla, Getty Images

News Headlines: Jan. 14, 2007

Talk About It:
AP: Clinton, Obama Clash Over Race Issue -- "Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama have become embroiled in racially tinged disputes as large numbers of black voters prepare to get their first say in the Democratic presidential campaign. The candidates and their surrogates are heating up their rhetoric, and it could prove to be combustible beyond South Carolina's Jan. 26 primary."

What an eventful weekend -- from the Clintons defending their comments about MLK's legacy and the Obama candidacy, to BET founder Bob Johnson making a thinly veiled dig at Obama's youthful drug use, to Michelle Obama's response to Bill Clinton's "fairy tale" comment. Who's to blame for injecting race into the campaign, how will it play out, and how should the candidates handle it?

Election 2008:
Washington Post: McCain Moves Into Lead; Obama Gains on Clinton

New York Post: Barack's '99 Problems' Pointed at Clinton?

AP: Huckabee Eschews Politics for Preaching

World:
New York Times: Europe Takes Africa's Fish; Migrants Follow

AFP: Facing Possible Criminal Charges, Interpol President Resigns

People:
Reuters: Stars Say Goodbye to Jazz Legend Oscar Peterson

Times Union: Steroids Beyond Sports: Mary J. Blige, Tyler Perry?

Billboard: Janet Jackson Hopes New Album Ends Sales Slide

Op-Ed:
William Jelani Cobb: Obama Rises, Civil Rights Leaders Scowl

Larry Rivers: Black Universities Are Still Needed

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January 11, 2008

Bill Clinton Calls Al Sharpton to Clarify "Fairy Tale"

Ron Paul

Former president Bill Clinton talks to supporters during a visit to the Seabrook Recreation Center in New Hampshire.

Roberto Schmidt, AFP/Getty Images

Bill Clinton toured the talk show circuit today to clarify his use of the term "fairy tale" in reference to Sen. Obama's campaign:

"It is wrong that Senator Obama got to go through 15 debates trumpeting his superior judgment and how he had been against the war in every year, enumerating the years, and never got asked one time -- not once, 'Well, how could you say that when you said in 2004 you didn't know how you would have voted on the resolution?' You said in 2004 there was no difference between you and George Bush on the war. And you took that speech you're now running on off your Web site in 2004. And there's no difference in your voting record and Hillary's ever since. Give me a break. This whole thing is the biggest fairy tale I've ever seen."

As we pointed out in today's headlines, South Carolina Rep. James Clyburn spoke out against Clinton's statement in a New York Times article, saying the former president insinuated that Obama's rise to prominence was a fairy tale.

Continue reading "Bill Clinton Calls Al Sharpton to Clarify "Fairy Tale"" »

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No Ifs, Ands, or Butts ...

TV camera

iStockphoto.com

I was reminded once again while hosting our show today how similar experiences between men and women can be viewed very differently -- especially black men and black women. It happened during my conversation with former ABC TV news anchor Carole Simpson. She was part of our "Great Expectations" series about people who have triumphed after overcoming great obstacles in their lives.

This one was about butts -- white male butts, to be exact.

Simpson broke color and gender barriers during her pioneering career as a broadcast journalist, which began in Chicago in the 1960s. She told News & Notes she'd faced discrimination and numerous obstacles along the way.

But one incident stood out.

Early in her career, she said, while Simpson was on the air doing her radio newscast, her white male colleagues once gathered in front of her, turned their backs and dropped their pants. Enmasse. The 'moonshot' may have unnerved her, but she said she was determined not to show it. Simpson shouldered on, finishing her newscast as if nothing had happened. She said looking back on it, acts of sabotage against her -- there were others, like burning her scripts -- only made her stronger and more determined to succeed -- which she did, admirably.

I told Carole that the very same thing had happened to me once when I was a television anchor for FOX in the 1980s. It was her response that surprised me. "But I was a woman!" she insisted. And while my personal reference was meant only as a testament to her unfortunate experience, I blurted in reply "A butt's a butt. Even a white butt."

Just like a man.

It was later, off air, that the show producers and I talked about that exchange, and that's when it hit me. The saboteuring acts we both experienced were the same, but there was a good reason our responses were entirely different. In my newsroom, the fact that I'd not broken stride on air in spite of the hairy asses staring at me, had made me "one of the boys." A big laugh was had by all.

But there could be nothing funny about that experience for Simpson because of her gender, even more so than her race. Simpson's point, and it's one I frankly hadn't considered, is that no matter how good a journalist she became, she could never be "one of the boys" -- white OR black. Being male was one of the few perceived advantages I had in an industry that is far and away controlled by men, regardless of race.

So I get it. And while the issue of gender versus race, and which is more insidious as a career stumbling block can't be solved here, I think we need to become more aware of how we each perceive things, even when it's different. That's what my conversation with Carole Simpson revealed to me. I've had a long career, but there's still a lot more to be learned about each other.

And about butts.

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Will Clyburn Make an Endorsement?

South Carolina flag

iStockphoto.com

News Headlines: Jan. 11, 2008

Talk About It:
New York Times: Civil Rights Tone Prompts Talk of an Endorsement -- "Representative James E. Clyburn of South Carolina, the highest-ranking African-American in Congress, said he was rethinking his neutral stance in his state's presidential primary out of disappointment at comments by Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton that he saw as diminishing the historic role of civil rights activists."

What impact do you think a Clyburn endorsement might have? What did you think about the Clintons' comments on the nation's civil rights history? And what do you make of all this talk about Obama being competitive in South Carolina simply because a larger part of the electorate is black?

Update: Bill Clinton called into Al Sharpton's radio show today to clarify his "fairy tale" statement. Read more here.

Election 2008:
Washington Post: Young Feminists Split: Does Gender Matter?

Baltimore Sun: McCain, Paul Get Off Easy at GOP SC Debate

AP: Obama, Clinton Go for Black Vote in SC

AFP: Nevada Set for Moment in 2008 Election Spotlight

Politico: Top Rudy Staffers Working Without Pay

New York Times: Calls Grow for Bloomberg to Make Up His Mind

Nation:
Boston Globe: Jurors Testify About Claims of Racism

Chicago Tribune: Conference Aims to Give Young Black Men Hope

Boston Globe: Minority Police Group Cites Race in Disciplinary Actions

Reuters: Bush: U.S. Could "Easily" Be in Iraq for 10 Years

People:
New York Times: Marion Jones Sentenced to Six Months in Prison

AFP: Venus Williams Hunts for Elusive Australian Title

L.A. Times: Just Call Isaiah Washington 'Chief Gondobay Manga'?

Op-Ed:
New York Times: When an Apology Is Not Enough

Joel Stein: A Black President? Seen a Few

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January 10, 2008

Report: Donda West's Death Not Caused By Surgery

Kanye and Donda West

Rapper Kanye West and his mother, Donda West, attend the launch of the Kanye West Foundation.

Roberto Schmidt, AFP/Getty Images

Donda West, mother of hip-hop star Kanye, did not die of "surgical or anesthetic misadventure" according to a coroner's report.

The report could not find the exact cause of the death of West, 58, on November 10 -- one day after she had a tummy tuck, breast reduction, and liposuction -- but it noted that pre-existing coronary artery disease could have been a contributing factor.

The report ends the series of strange events surrounding West's death. Earlier, the coroner's office originally suggested that West died from surgical complications. Her surgeon, Dr. Jan Adams, denied any wrongdoing. The California state medical board threatened to revoke Adams' medical license due to two previous alcohol-related arrests.

Adams also made a dramatic exit from an interview with CNN's Larry King in November.

How has West's death highlighted the dangers of plastic surgery? Should Dr. Jan Adams still bear some responsibility for her death?

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Controversy Surrounds Ron Paul's '90s Newsletters

Ron Paul

Republican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul speaks to reporters in the "spin room" after a Republican debate.

Roberto Schmidt, AFP/Getty Images

Newsletters attributed to Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul, dating back to the 1990s, include rants against blacks, gays, AIDS victims and the Isralei lobby, CNN is reporting.

A series of anonymous newsletters printed under Ron Paul's name make remarks about blacks in the Los Angeles riots of 1992, according to documents obtained by CNN, following a report proving the newsletters' existence by The New Republic.

One newsletter specifically mentions that "order was only restored in L.A. when it came time for the blacks to pick up their welfare checks."

Another statement reads, "The criminals who terrorize our cities -- in riots and on every non-riot day -- are not exclusively young black males, but they largely are. As children, they are trained to hate whites, to believe that white oppression is responsible for all black ills, to 'fight the power,' to steal and loot as much money from the white enemy as possible."

In an interview with Wolf Blitzer today, Ron Paul categorically denied seeing the newsletter.

"I never did see these," Paul said. "It's not part of my character. Nobody has ever heard me say this. This is a bit of a witch hunt."

Paul also remarked that he was actually gaining popularity among black voters, and media attention about these documents only served as a distraction from the "real problem" about the treatment of minorities in the judicial system.

Should Ron Paul be held accountable for the actions of his supporters? Is he actually becoming more popular among black voters? Is the unveiling of these documents just a smear campaign against the GOP candidate?

Read excerpts from the newsletters here.

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Black Cartoonists of the World Unite!

 
“It's like a weather forecast of mostly sunny with patches of racism. ”
 
 

Comics aren't a laughing matter for eight African-American cartoonists, who plan to take action on Feb. 10 in an attempt to raise awareness of their place in the profession.

The cartoonists plan to create nearly identical comics across their publications to satirize what they believe is the newspaper industry's inability to recognize the hallmarks of African-American made strips.

"Many editors and readers consider different 'black comics' to be interchangeable," said cartoonist Darrin Bell creator of Candorville.

Out of the more than 200 widely syndicated comics, around 15 are created by cartoonists of color.

Check out: Candorville

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Wilson to Attend Morehouse College

 
“To see him replace the old prison ID badge with a badge from a prestigious [historically black college] was why Genarlow's mother and I fought so hard.”
 
 

News Headlines: Jan. 10, 2007

Talk About It:
The AJC: Genarlow Wilson to Attend Morehouse College -- "Genarlow Wilson, the Georgia teen who spent two years in prison for having consensual sex with a teenager, will attend Atlanta's Morehouse College this spring, courtesy of the Tom Joyner Foundation, an educational non-profit founded by the nationally syndicated radio personality."

Election 2008:
New York Times: Kerry to Endorse Obama | In Harlem, Tough Choice

ABC News: In or Out? Conflicting Reports on Richardson

Politico: Clyburn Keeps His Cards Close to His Chest

Reuters: McCain Unplugged on the Campaign Trail

Nation:
Newsday: Golf Channel Anchor Suspended for 'Lynch' Comment

Chicago Sun-Times: How a 'Nerd' Became the Gang's Grad Student

Biz Report: BET Launches African-American Ad Network

World:
New York Times: Fighting in Congo Rekindles Ethnic Hatreds

AP: Tensions Escalate on Darfur Border

Op-Ed:
New Statesman: What Obama Means to Black Britons

Philadelphia Inquirer: N.J. Slavery Apology An Empty Gesture

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Kenyans Frantically Fleeing Sectarian Violence

Kenyan crisis

Residents of Kibera crowd the entrance to a container filled with food aid relief at a food distribution point.

Roberto Schmidt, AFP/Getty Images

Chicago Tribune: By Any Means, Kenyans Fleeing

As the election crisis continues in Kenya, large numbers of ethnic Kikuyus are evacuating the country -- some by drastic means -- to avoid violence, the Chicago Tribune's Paul Salopek reports.

"They have squeezed into taxis so dangerously overloaded, the bulging tires look ready to pop. Hundreds have clambered onto filthy dump trucks and rumbling tractor-trailers -- with the men even offering to sit on the hood and roof. And a lucky handful, who somehow had managed to salvage a stash of money from their torched houses, are using the cash to bribe their way onto Eldoret's few commercial flights...

Loaded by crane onto flatbed trucks, the corrugated steel boxes, typically used to transport merchandise across the oceans, are instead being stuffed with human cargo. Scores of Kikuyu men, women and children are climbing willingly into the dark and airless chambers. For a fee of roughly $8 each, drivers then transport them out of the danger zone."

The massive population shift will undoubtedly change the social and cultural landscape of the region, but how will this mass exodus affect neighboring nations, especially politically fragile areas of Ethiopia and Somalia? How will Europe and the United States react to an influx of Kenyan refugees?

More: Kenya:Lessons from Ethiopia's Unresolved Crises | Annan Takes on Kenya Peace Role

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January 9, 2008

Golf Channel Anchor Apologizes for 'Lynch' Comment

Tiger Woods

Tiger Woods makes a tee shot on the fifth hole during the final round of the Target World Challenge.

Robert Laberge, Getty Images

Talk About It:
Chicago Tribune: Golf Channel Anchor Apologizes to Tiger Woods -- "Golf Channel anchor Kelly Tilghman has apologized after saying during Friday's telecast of the PGA Tour's opening event that today's young players should 'lynch Tiger Woods in a back alley.'"

More: Tiger Shrugs Off Comments

In our editorial meeting today, this topic came up, and I -- ever the apologist -- made the point that maybe her intent wasn't racist or malicious because these days, no one could be crazy enough to say something like that publicly ... and mean it. Another person said her intent didn't matter; her words were enough. Someone else believed she said exactly what she meant. What do you think? Should she be fired? And what do you make of Tiger's response?

[Tony Cox will get to the bottom of this story on tomorrow's show. So tune in.]

Election 2008:
Politico: Brazile on Bill Clinton: 'Depressing'

New York Times: Clinton Says Debate Was Her Turning Point

Washington Post: Obama Tries to Prove Electability to Blacks in S.C.

AP: Obama Hints of Sharper Edge Vs. Clinton

The AJC: Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin '150 Percent' for Obama

World:
New York Times: Kenya Crisis Worsens as Opposition Cools to Talks

AP: Sudanese Soldiers Fire on U.N. Peacekeepers in Darfur

Op-Ed:
John Zogby: Polling the New Hampshire Primaries: What Happened?

Slate: Why Women Voted for Hillary

Editor & Publisher: '20 Years After' for Black Cartoonists

San Francisco Chronicle: The Year of the Annoyed White Liberal

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Was This Hillary's Pivotal Moment?

Lots of morning-after analysis today about whether Hillary Clinton's tearing up on the campaign trail helped her win a greater percentage of women voters. What do you think?

More: A Show of Emotion That Reverberated

Related: Woman Who Made Clinton Cry Reportedly Voted for Obama

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January 8, 2008

New Hampshire: "No Black Haircare Products"

Dark & Lovely

Where in New Hampshire can you find box perm?

Carson Products

Iowa likes to say it's the first big contest on the road to the presidency. But New Hampshire is festooned with banners and newspaper headlines that remind you it is the "First-In-the-Nation Primary." And boy, does it get packed.

Thousands and thousands of newswomen and men; students; volunteers; and campaign workers flood into the state, spend millions of dollars, and then pack up and ship out as soon as the primary is over.

Having been on that campaign trail myself, I can say that you need a good pair of snow boots and a high tolerance for late-night cocktail parties. That's where you get all the good intel.

It really is a sight to behold. And it raises the question of whether ANY state -- particularly one whose demographics are, frankly, so white and so much less diverse than the nation as a whole -- should have so much influence on American politics.

But hey, pass the shrimp ... at least while the reporters are in town.

Speaking of which: a favorite memory.

It was my first campaign trail, 1996. I was doing commentary for CNN.

I was having cocktails in one of those big, faceless hotels with Bill Maher and Al Franken and a bunch of other folks. It was fun.

But I got a chance to watch Maher's show. It was on Comedy Central back then. Chris Rock used to do occasional "color" commentary for Maher. He did a stand-up in New Hampshire, shivering outdoors, back when he had that texturizer just short of a high-top fade and said "I am in New Hampshire. And I can say with certainty, there are no black haircare products in New Hampshire."

That says it all.

Except for our interview today with two of the 1,300 (!!!!) black people in New Hampshire. Wanda Mitchell, a diversity officer at the University of New Hampshire, said there are black hair care products ... but it can be hard to find a church with a good gospel choir. It was a fun convo. Check it out.

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Candidates Talk Civil Rights History

Hillary Clinton

Democratic presidential hopeful and New York Sen. Hillary Clinton campaigns in Manchester, New Hampshire.

Stan Honda, AFP/Getty Images

Talk About It:
New York Times: Clinton's Civil Rights Lesson -- "Today, a supporter said this while introducing Mrs. Clinton: 'Some people compare one of the other candidates to John F. Kennedy. But he was assassinated. And Lyndon Baines Johnson was the one who actually' passed the civil rights legislation. The comment, an apparent reference to Senator Barack Obama, is particularly striking given documented fears among blacks that Mr. Obama will be assassinated if elected. Mrs. Clinton's expression did not change noticeably when [the woman] made the comment."

More: "Dr. King's dream began to be realized when President Johnson passed the Civil Rights Act," Mrs. Clinton said. "It took a president to get it done."

For candidates to invoke Dr. King in this way seems like dangerous territory. What do you make of this latest barrage of criticism?

Election 2008:
NNPA: Congressional Black Caucus Split Between Clinton, Obama

Wall Street Journal: Clinton Braces for Second Loss; Union, Senators May Back Obama

Washington Times: Huckabee Vows to Defy Birthright Citizenship

Nation:
CNN: New Jersey Officially Apologizes for Slavery

New York Times: A Safety-Net Hospital Falls Into Financial Crisis

World:
AP: Kenya Opposition Leader Rejects Talks

AP: South African Candidate Confirmed

AP: War Crimes Trial Resumes for Former Leader of Liberia

People:
AFP: Colin Powell Pleased by Barack Obama's Success

CNN: In Kenya, Obama's Relatives 'Pray' for Victory

Op-Ed:
Gloria Steinem: Women Are Never Front-Runners

Jesse Jackson: Obama's Success Is Making Us All Winners

Washington Post: A Candidacy's Prose and Cons

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January 7, 2008

Sarko Jr. on the Ones and Twos

French President Nicolas Sarkozy

French President Nicolas Sarkozy

Eric Feferberg, AFP/Getty Images

French President Nicolas Sarkozy has been drawing attention of late for a series of photo ops with his leggy new girlfriend -- but now it's his 22-year-old son, Pierre, who is making news.

The college drop-out turned rap producer is the brains behind a new song by a French rapper named [wait for it] Poison.

This wouldn't be nearly as interesting if it weren't for this tidbit: Sarko (the president) -- earlier in his career as interior minister -- ordered the prosecution of six rappers for insulting the police.

And Sarko Jr.'s lyrics aren't exactly family friendly.

Read more.

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Name Your One-Hit Wonder

Jade

Cover of Jade's "Don't Walk Away"

Warner Brothers

Blogger Clay Cane takes us back to the days of Cross Colours and box braids with this post about his favorite R&B girl group one-hit wonders.

Now that's a lot of qualifiers, but check the list and name your pick.

What's yours? Mine (as pictured) is a little gem from the group Jade called "Don't Walk Away."

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Naomi Campbell One-on-One With Venezuela's Chavez

Naomi Campbell

Model Naomi Campbell visits newly finished houses donated by the Venezuelan government to host Cuban refinery workers.

Sven Creutzmann, AFP/Getty Images

Talk About It:
The Canadian Press: Naomi Campbell Interviews Venezuela's President Chavez -- "Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez likes Prince Charles and thinks President Bush is crazy, in an interview with Naomi Campbell in the British edition of GQ magazine. The 37-year-old supermodel spoke to Chavez in her role as contributing editor to British GQ, the magazine said."

Thankfully, Naomi's trip offers a brief, welcomed respite from political news (get your fill below). Among the highlights:

It also appears that Mr. Chavez was able to get a few questions of his own in during the interview and was keen to find out about Britain's monarchy, asking Campbell: "Do you know Prince Charles?" When the supermodel replied that she had met him and had also known Diana, Princess of Wales, Mr. Chavez declared: "I like the Prince. Now he has Camilla, his new girl. She's not attractive is she?"

Read more excerpts here.

Election 2008:
USA Today: Hopefuls Make Final N.H. Push | Obama, McCain Ahead

New York Times: Iowa Caucus Results Put Pressure on Black Leaders

Washington Times: Obama Gets Beefed-Up Protection | No Cash From Denzel, Spike, Motown

New York Times: Retracing Steps, McCain Is Feeling Rejuvenated

Nation:
AP: No Easy Fix to Housing Crisis, Says Treasury Secretary

Philadelphia Inquirer: 'We Can Do This!' New Mayor Declares

World:
Reuters: Floods Strike Southern Africa

AP: Taylor War Crimes Trial Opens

L.A. Times: Violence Stalks the Alleys of Nairobi

Health & Science:
Science Daily: Significant Disparities In Cancer Therapy Still Exist

Arts & Culture:
AP: 'The Wire' Producer Lashes Out at Hollywood

The Hartford Courant: That Old-Time Football, Black College-Style

Op-Ed:
Boston Globe: Obama and the Ghosts of Racism

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January 4, 2008

Whoa-Bama!: A Win, and a Question of Loyalty

Obama Family

Illinois Sen. Barack Obama with wife Michelle and two daughters, Malia and Sasha, at an Iowa caucus night rally.

Saul Loeb, AFP/Getty Images

I have a friend. Let's call her Rashifa.

So, Rashifa and I were talking about politics. She was shocked at how many of her friends weren't that enthusiastic about an Obama presidency. She was like, "It is time for black folks to claim our own! How in their ever-loving minds could a black person not vote for Barack Obama?"

Well, according to our interviews at News & Notes plus other reporters' work, there are plenty of reasons black folks give for not supporting Obama's run for the White House.

Among them:
-- He just can't win. (or: A black man just can't win.)
-- The Clinton legacy is strong on race.
-- Let's stick with a winner, and that winner is ... (usually the name they give is Clinton)
-- I don't know if he has enough experience. (Variant: It's just not his time yet.)
-- I don't know enough about him.
-- I like John Edwards' talk about economic equality.

And on and on and on. Everybody's got an opinion.

After Sen.Obama's win in Iowa, will some people change their opinion? During today's political post-mortems, we talked about the tendency voters have to want to fall on the winning side. Will Obama's win in Iowa quiet those folks who said, "He just can't win?"

Today we had two segments that dug into that question and more.

First we spoke with political strategists Jamal Simmons and Angela McGowan.

McGowan, an analyst for Fox News, is author of Bamboozled: How Americans Are Being Exploited by the Lies of the Liberal Agenda. Simmons was press secretary for the presidential campaigns of both Sen. Bob Graham and Gen. Wesley Clark.

In addition to parsing out the impact of Obama's win, they talked about whether Gov. Mike Huckabee would appeal to New Hampshire's fiscal conservatives the way he appealed to Iowa's social conservatives. (Gut instinct on their part: no.)

Then, we caught up with three reporters for our weekly roundtable: Clarence Page, a columnist for the Chicago Tribune; John Yearwood, world editor for the Miami Herald; and Bob Moser, a contributing writer for The Nation.

Moser has been following how the race is playing in South Carolina, and he found that a fair number of black voters were not yet sold on Obama.

Back to my friend Rashifa.

Referencing Barack Obama's memoir Dreams From My Father, she said, "He's a black nationalist."

And I said, "He doesn't sound like a black nationalist."

Rashifa said, "He's just smart enough not to talk about it."

Everybody's got an opinion.

What's yours?

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Obama, Huckabee Score Wins in Iowa

Huckabee and Obama

Former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee (left) and Illinois Sen. Barack Obama (right) address supporters during their caucus night rallies.

Saul Loeb, AFP/Getty Images

Talk About It:
New York Times: Huckabee and Obama Win Iowa in a Big Turnout -- "A smaller field of presidential candidates arrived in New Hampshire today facing a dramatically upended campaign after two one-time insurgents -- Senator Barack Obama, an Illinois Democrat, and Mike Huckabee, the Arkansas Republican -- won the Iowa caucuses Thursday night."

Were you surprised by the outcome of the Iowa caucuses? What do Huckabee and Obama's victories mean to you?

Morning-After Analysis:
Washington Post: The Conventional Wisdom Defied

New York Times: 2 Newcomers Jolt Parties' Status Quo

ABC News: Bill Clinton: Hillary Can Be 'Comeback Kid'

Politico: Clinton Team Retools, Predicts N.H. Win

Chicago Sun-Times: New Precedent for Black Voters

AP: Obama Shows Black Candidate Can Win

New York Times: For Some Kenyan Villagers, Action Is in Iowa

Peggy Noonan: Obama 'Took Mama to School'

Bob Novak: Huckabee's Win Leaves McCain's Camp Smiling

Nation:
AP: Jobless Rate Hits 5 Percent, 2-Year High

Boston Globe: Bias Alleged as Black Firefighter Faces Union Sanctions

USA Today: DNA Evidence Frees Texas Man After 26 Years

World:
BBC: Can Tutu Heal Kenya's Wounds?

Newsweek: Kenya: Behind the Violence

CNN: U.S. Concerned for Saudi Blogger

Arts & Culture:
CNN: 'Wire's' Latest Target: The Media

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January 3, 2008

Kenya in Crisis After Contested Elections

Kenya

A Kenyan man leads his children away from his neighborhood as he flees violence during disturbances in the streets of the Mathare slum in Nairobi, Kenya.

Tony Karumba, AFP/Getty Images

Talk About It:
New York Times: Kenyan Riot Police Turn Back Rallying Protesters -- "It has been a week since Kenyans went to the polls in the most contested elections in the country's history. Kenya's president, Mwai Kibaki, was narrowly declared the winner but opposition supporters and Western observers said the president's party rigged some of the results. The anger over that has exploded across the country and incited violent protests, hooliganism and clashes between members of the president's tribe, the Kikuyu, and other tribes who support the opposition, which is most of the 40 some tribes in the country."

Related: Chronology of Events

Several blogs are offering firsthand accounts of the unrest:
Kenya Pundit | Kenya Imagine | Thinker's Room | Insight Kenya

Nation:
L.A. Times: Bratton Touts Drop in Crime

New York Times: 2 Black Women Sue Madison Square Garden

Chicago Tribune: Optimistic Obama Looks Ahead

Philadelphia Inquirer: For Some, An Ideal Time to Buy Home

Final Call: Black-Owned TV Stations Nearly Extinct

The AJC: After 28 Years, Girls Inc. Director Moves On

Politico: Thompson May Drop Out, Back McCain

World:
AP: Sudanese Police Talk to Witnesses in Death of U.S. Diplomat

AP: Somalia: Foreign Aid Workers Released

Op-Ed:
The Nation: Playing the Race Card Against Obama

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January 2, 2008

In Character: Who Would You Talk To?

Today News & Notes had its launch of a new NPR-wide series called "In Character."

Author and Spelman professor William Jelani Cobb took a look at Mudbone, conjured by Richard Pryor.

The whole point of this series is to look at fictional characters that epitomize elements of American life.

I'm getting ready to do Jim from Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn.

Then I'm going to have a LOT of fun doing Storm from the X Men.

If I could talk to any fictional character, though, it would be Anyanwu, the wise, tough, and empathetic shape-shifter from Octavia Butler's Wild Seed. To me, she embodies the strengths and weaknesses of womanhood, refracted through the masterful speculative fiction of one of my favorite authors.

Meanwhile, check out this essay inspired by Toni Morrison's Pecola Breedlove and the ongoing conversation about the series over at the 'In Character' blog. And like Evy in Minnetonka, you can tell us about the characters who've moved you. We may even put your suggestion on the radio.

If you could have a conversation with any fictional character in the world, who would it be?

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'News & Notes' Tackles Election 2008

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Stay on top of the 2008 election with analysis from our panel of respected political experts and interviews with key newsmakers. Plus, our roundtable debates offer opinions and perspectives from our seasoned team of news-watchers.

News & Notes On the Trail

Online Resources:
Match Candidates' Views to Your Own

Comprehensive Political Calendar

From NPR:
Election 2008 News Archive

Ron Elving's "Watching Washington" | Ken Rudin's "Political Junkie"

Candidate Profiles: Republicans | Democrats

More Political News:
ABC News: The Note

CNN Political Ticker

Politico

AOL Black Voices: Election Coverage

Use the comment section below to weigh in on the race for the White House and the issues that matter to you.

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New Jersey Considers Slavery Apology

The 13th Amendment

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According to the AP, New Jersey lawmakers are considering an apology for slavery.

Following in the footsteps of Alabama, Maryland, North Carolina and Virginia, Jersey could become the next state (and first in the North) to issue a formal apology.

"This is not too much to ask of the state of New Jersey," said Assemblyman William Payne, who sponsors the bill. "All that is being requested of New Jersey is to say three simple words: We are sorry."

Should the state approve the measure? What purpose do these symbolic apologies serve?

New Jersey Republican Assemblyman Richard Merkt said this: "Who living today is guilty of slave holding and thus capable of apologizing for the offense? And who living today is a former slave and thus capable of accepting the apology?"

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Obama Courting Iowa's Black Democrats

Sen. Barack Obama

Sen. Barack Obama speaks during a rally in Des Moines, Iowa.

Saul Loeb, AFP/Getty Images

Talk About It:
New York Times: Saying Race Is No Barrier, Obama Still Courts Blacks --"Even as Sen. Barack Obama maintains that his candidacy transcends racial divisions in American politics, his campaign has vigorously courted Iowa's relatively small number of black voters. Outreach to pastors, civic leaders and student athletes are pieces of a rarely discussed element of the campaign here to seize upon excitement at the prospect of electing the first black president, which would resonate with black voters beyond Iowa."

More: Black Iowans Ready for Caucuses

Nation:
New York Times: Candidates Unleash Final Efforts in Iowa

L.A. Times: GOP Base Scatters to Rival Camps

Reuters: More Needed to Help Stabilize Housing, Says White House

AP: Homicides Soared in New Orleans in 2007

Seattle Times: Kucinich to Backers: Obama is Plan B

World:
AP: Death Toll in Kenya Violence at 300

Jerusalem Post: Activist Plans Inner-City Project in Israel

AP: Sudan Police Investigate American Death

Health & Science:
New York Times: H.I.V. Cases Rise in Young, Black Gay Men

Science Daily: Whites More Likely To Get ER Narcotics

People:
AP: Eddie Murphy Marries Tracey Edmonds

Chicago Tribune: Morris Put Black Studies in Chicago Schools

Op-Ed:
Rep. Major R. Owens: Charlie Wilson vs Osama bin Laden

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January 1, 2008

Happy 2008!!!

2008

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We have today off, but I came in to reorganize my office. You know -- "New Year, New Start."

OMG! I have so much stuff! It is fairly terrifying to try to drag it around, but it will be faboo once I get it set up.

Meanwhile, Jasmyne Cannick called me out to see if I would go on her "New Year's Sista Hike."

I did, and thought I was running late. But her group was just taking off as I got down to the bottom. Finding parking around Runyon is a mad drama.

I am so glad I started the New Year with a hike ... it was really refreshing.

I called my mom at midnight her time, spoke to my sister today, and had a great time at a party last night (played Guitar Hero for the first time, among other things).

It bodes well for the rest of the year.

Tomorrow, we start running full-tilt into caucus/primary land.

Tonight, I'm going to read a good book of fiction and await the political rush.

What did you do to ring in the New Year??? Inquiring minds want to know.

Peace and joy to you and yours,
Farai

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