Black Public Scholars

September 20, 2010

Today Show Guest Calls Black Music “Spook Music”

by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Syracuse UniversityScholarship in Action 

I was in New York doing what I try to do best: show up for my little girls and support them in their endeavors. My daughter had a volleyball game at her university and I was pumped for the event. Although I do all I can to stay away from work when I am with my kids, I couldn’t help but sneak away to appear on one of my favorite radio shows, "The Main Line" on 98.7 Kiss FM.
During the show, we discussed all the usual topics for a hot blooded Sunday afternoon: Politics, news, African American issues, Obama and more. Toward the end of the show, someone made mention of Robert Plant’s appearance on The Today Show. My first thought was, "Who in the heck is Robert Plant and why does he matter?" It only took me a couple of seconds to figure out the answer to both of those questions.

 

Click to read.

September 14, 2010

Philly Police Seen Beating a Man on Tape

by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Syracuse UniversityScholarship in Action 

A video showing Philadelphia police officers beating a man for nearly two minutes has taken the Internet by storm. The incident is so shocking that the video has received thousands of views, and has also sparked an internal investigation by Philadelphia police.

The incident occurred in West Philadelphia and is two and a half minutes long. The officers are accused of attacking 29-year old Askia Sabur outside a takeout restaurant in the area on Friday. What is also interesting is that most of the officers appearing in the video are African American, reminding us that the power of the state is not just a white and black thing.

Allegedly, officers asked Sabur and his cousin to clear the corner, but they refused, stating that they were waiting for their food. Lt. Frank Vanore, a police spokesman, claims that Sabur knocked one of the officers down. But he alleges that this occurred before the Youtube video was recorded.

 

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September 9, 2010

The NCAA Has the Right to Judge Reggie Bush’s Ethics?

by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Syracuse University 

Anyone even remotely familiar with the sports world is well aware of reports that former USC star Reggie Bush is at risk of having his Heisman Trophy taken away from him. The return of the Heisman would likely be related to NCAA violations that allegedly took place within the USC program during the time when Bush played for them. Bush didn’t speak in detail on the issue when he was asked about it.
"At this point, it’s kind of out of my hands," Bush said Wednesday after practice with the New Orleans Saints.
Bush would not confirm or deny whether he spoke with the Heisman Trophy Trust about losing the award. Executive Director Robert Whalen said that no decision has yet been made.

 

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September 3, 2010

Black Athletes, Guns and Whatever Else: When’s It Going To Stop?

Filed under: black news, black politics, black professors — Staff @ 7:44 pm

by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Syracuse UniversityScholarship in Action 

Shaun Rogers, a Defensive Tackle for the Cleveland Browns, was fined $400,000 by the league for violating its personal conduct policy. Rogers was caught carrying a loaded gun inside an airport. The fine represents approximately 1/17th of his $6.9 million salary.
Some would say that Rogers got off easy, since it would have been no surprise to see him either suspended or sent to jail. The player was caught carrying a loaded semi-automatic handgun in his carry-on bag at Hopkins International Airport. There’s no indication regarding whether or not he realized that TSA agents actually have the ability to see inside of someone’s luggage with their x-ray machine. It’s hard to imagine what he might have been thinking.

Click to read.

September 2, 2010

Black Scholars Speak Up for Detroit Economic Suffering

Filed under: black news, black politics, black professors — Staff @ 11:22 pm

by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Scholarship in Action 

This week, Bennett College President and prominent black scholar Dr. Julianne Malveaux wrote a strongly-worded article about the economic suffering taking place in the city of Detroit. In the article, Malveaux describes Detroit as Ground Zero for the black economic experience over the past two years.
"Only one in four young black men graduates from high school in Detroit. The rest are lost and left out, swallowed by a city where urban blight, industrial desertion, and educational failure define daily life. Detroit is ground zero, exemplifying the absolute worst of urban life."
Dr. Malveaux goes on to highlight the problems that are caused in our communities by decaying schools and poor investment in urban infrastructure. She mentions that President Obama was quick to support the automakers in Detroit, yet there are quite a few urban citizens of the city who have yet to feel relief.

Click to read.

August 31, 2010

Why Was This Honor Student Beaten by Police?

by Dr. Boyce WatkinsScholarship in Action 

Jordan Miles is a black teenager in the city of Pittsburgh. Miles also attends one of the city’s most prestigious performing arts schools. On a cold winter night earlier this year, Miles claims he was assaulted by three plain clothes police officers. According to the lawsuit Miles’ attorneys have filed against the city, the officers assumed that Miles was a drug dealer and conspired to file false charges against him to create a story to cover up their actions.
Miles says that he was walking to his grandmother’s house when officers Michael Saldutte, David Sisak and Richard Ewing approached him. Miles claims that the officers proceeded to chase him, kick him and beat his face into the ground. The damage to Miles’ face was extensive, and the officers allegedly pulled one of his dreadlocks from his head.

 

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August 21, 2010

Black Athletes May Have Options Reduced by the NCAA

by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Syracuse University Scholarship in Action 

Mark Emmert, the new president of the NCAA, plans to endorse a system for collegiate athletics that disallows players to play one year and head to the NBA. Instead, Emmert wants a system in which the age limit is removed (which is what kept players like Carmelo Anthony from going pro right out of high school) with players being forced to decide whether they wish to declare for the NBA draft or go to college. If they choose to go to college, they are not allowed to play in the NBA for either three years or when they turn 21, whichever comes first. In the face of the new rule, players are pushed to make the decision sooner, and are locked into that decision for at least three years.
Bethlehem Schoals and Tom Ziller of Fanhouse.com write on the racial dimension of this issue in the following way:

 

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August 20, 2010

SC State’s James Clyburn Center Under Investigation

by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Black Scholarship in Action, Syracuse University 

The James E. Clyburn University Transportation Center at South Carolina State University has been spending money for the past 12 years, but no one seems to know exactly where that money went. State Senator Robert Ford has recently called for an investigation into the center to find out details on how funds have been managed. Even Rep. Clyburn has become a critic of the center’s management as of late.
The Post and Courier, a newspaper out of Charleston, SC has conducted its own investigation using an open records request. The newspaper has described the university’s records as "a convoluted system of record-keeping, with no central control and records on the same subject located in different offices or buildings."
There was a consultant’s report recently completed by the firm Elliott Davis which concluded that the university’s system of grant management not only makes it difficult to track the money, it also makes it tough to find out whether the objectives of the grant were accomplished.

Click to read.

Black Jewish Man Dies Protecting Girlfriend from a Robbery

Yoseph Robinson, Former Hip-Hop Exec Turned Orthodox Jew, Murdered in Robbery

by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Syracuse University – Institute for Black Public Policy, Scholarship in Action 

 

Yoseph Robinson was a good man and role model. He’d converted to Judaism after his fight with drugs and often reminded others of the importance of being morally strong. He upheld these values until his last moments when he died protecting his girlfriend from a robbery.

Lahava, a woman helping Yoseph write a book, was laughing and joking with a man when he suddenly demanded her money. Robinson told the man to leave her alone, and that’s when a struggle broke out. Yoseph was shot several times in the arm and chest and died on the scene. The robber got away on foot in the Brooklyn area.

Before his untimely and unfortunate death, Yoseph Robinson served as a role model for neighborhood children. Everyone loved him, and he was writing a book on his transformation out of drugs and into a more productive life. As he died, he told his girlfriend to tell his daughter how much he loved her.

 

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August 16, 2010

HUD Intervenes in Black Comedian George Wilborn’s Discrimination Case

by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Black Scholars United

 

Serious charges of racial discrimination have been laid out against a Chicago couple for refusing to sell their home to a black comedian and his family. Apparently, the family’s real estate agent informed government officials that the couple chose not to sell their home to the comedian because he is black.
George Wilborn is not only the victim of the couple’s discrimination, he is also a co-host of The Michael Baisden Show. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development announced on August 10 that they will charge Daniel and Adrienne Sabbia, as well as their real estate agent Jeffrey Lowe with violation of fair housing laws.
According to HUD, the family and their agent stalled negotiations with Wilborn and even took the home off the market in order to avoid selling it to him. Wilborn and his wife Peytyn offered $1.7 million for the house, which was the highest offer the couple had received in two years. Lowe, the real estate agent, admitted that the couple did not want to sell the home to the Wilborn family because they are black.

Click to Read

August 1, 2010

Black Women Angry Over Essence Magazine Hiring a White Fashion Editor?

by Dr. Boyce Watkins, TheLoop21.com

It seems that the world has grown irritated with Essence Magazine for hiring a new white fashion editor. Michaela Angela Davis, a former employee, has blasted the organization for effectively betraying its constituents with the non-traditional hire. She cites mass discrimination that has historically occurred within the fashion industry and seems disappointed that “our space” no longer belongs to us.

I certainly empathize with Davis’ point. Davis is a strong and direct black woman (I had her on my show), one who has very little tolerance for those who deviate from what she perceives as righteous ideology regarding women and minorities. Her passion for the issues that affect us seems to come from a genuine place, like a black woman who has seen enough and refuses to allow herself or anyone like her to be victimized by a clearly racist and sexist society. 

 

Click to read.

June 19, 2010

Billy Hawkins: NCAA is Actually a Plantation for Black Male Athletes

by Dr. Boyce Watkins

Professor Billy Hawkins of The University of Georgia has released a controversial new book that describes the experiences of NCAA athletes by comparing them to slaves on a plantation. According to the research of professor Hawkins, black athletes are exploited by the NCAA physically, financially and intellectually.

Hawkins cites the massive revenue earned by the NCAA via March Madness, which includes a 14-year, $10.8 billion contract with CBS sports. In spite of seemingly unlimited revenues to encourage athletes to stay focused academically, Hawkins notes that nearly one-fifth of the 64 teams participating in the NCAA tournament had graduation rates of less than 40 percent. Across the 36 sports monitored by the NCAA, men’s basketball has the lowest graduation rates, where less than two-thirds of the players earn degrees.

The dismal graduation numbers for the NCAA support Dr. Hawkins’ research, in which he argues and shows that black athletes at predominantly white institutions are being exploited while being neglected academically. In his book, "The New Plantation," the well-respected Professor of Sport Management and Policy uses a plantation model to present the black male athletic experience as part of a broader historical context.

 

Click to read

June 12, 2010

What Hip Hop Needs to Do Now

The age of the Hoochie Mama is over

by Dr. Boyce Watkins | TheLoop21 in Culture & Society

It’s time for hip hop, and its audience, to grow up.

read more

June 10, 2010

News: Oscar Grant Trial Has No African American Jurors

by Dr. Boyce Watkins

On New Year’s day of 2009, Oscar Grant was shot in Oakland, California. The shooter was a Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) officer by the name of Johannes Mehserle. Grant was 22-years old at the time of his death, and the shooting was captured by cell phone cameras and disseminated throughout the Internet. Adding insult to injury, the Grant family just found that there will be no African American jurors in the trial of grant’s shooter.

Jack Bryson, whose sons were with Grant the night he was killed, was angry about the jury selection.

"This is like a slap in the face," Bryson told The Associated Press. "This case came all the way to Los Angeles after the judge in Alameda County said they couldn’t get a fair and impartial jury there.
"This is the best you can do, and you did this in two days. We could’ve stayed back in Oakland for this."

Click to read

Black Scholars Kept From Getting Jobs at White Universities

by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Syracuse University

Dr. M. Cookie Newsom

is the Director for Diversity Education and Assessment at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She is also a trouble maker and an angry black woman, which is likely going to cause her serious problems with her colleagues (we talked yesterday about how being angry can get a black person into serious trouble). Dr. Newsom, however, has good reason to be angry. In a recent interview with Diverse issues in Higher Education, Dr. Newsom stated in plain language that most major universities are not serious about diversifying their faculty and that this hurts all students, especially students of color.
"The dismal truth is academe doesn’t really want a racially-diverse faculty," Newsom said during a faculty diversity presentation at the American Association of University Professors’ (AAUP) annual national conference in Washington, D.C. "It’s totally a myth."

Dr. Newson based her conclusions on statistics and data she collected which shows that most major universities are good at documenting plans to increase faculty diversity, but most of it’s nothing but lip service.

Click to read more.

What Do We Make of Nelson Mandela and the World Cup? Quite a Bit

Dr. Boyce Watkins

Dr. Boyce Watkins

Author and Finance Professor at Syracuse University

World Cup may be Mandela’s last great goal for South Africa

8:03 AM on 06/10/2010

OPINION – To say that this event has significance to Mandela would be a tremendous understatement…

> MORE

 

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President Obama and the "Angry Black Man" Critique

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June 8, 2010

The Latest in Black Politics – 6/8/10

Politics

African American Social Commentators Speak – 6/7/10


  • Dr. Boyce Watkins

    Dr. Boyce Watkins

    Author and Finance Professor at Syracuse University

    Rand Paul puts foot in mouth again with MLK comparison

    2:56 PM on 06/07/2010

    OPINION – I am not sure why Rand Paul keeps working to convince black people that he loves us…

    > MORE

  • Earl Ofari Hutchinson

    Earl Ofari Hutchinson

    Journalist, author and broadcaster.

    Why BP keeps stonewalling Obama

    12:32 PM on 06/07/2010

    OPINION – BP’s corporate arrogance is made out of cash. It can and has bought its way out of trouble repeatedly and when need be even bought governments…

    > MORE

  • Dr. Boyce Watkins

    Dr. Boyce Watkins

    Author and Finance Professor at Syracuse University

    Arizona isn’t the only state with a racist agenda

    9:18 AM on 06/07/2010

    OPINION – The collective outrage expressed over the civil liberties issues in the Arizona immigration law has been hardly present during other more serious racial atrocities…

    > MORE

  • Monique W. Morris

    Monique W. Morris

    Author and VP for Economic Programs, NAACP

    Blacks blocked from serving on Southern juries, study says

    9:13 AM on 06/07/2010

    OPINION – Knowing that this type of discrimination continues is the first step toward holding district attorney’s offices accountable for fair treatment…

    > MORE

  • Marcus Vanderberg

    Marcus Vanderberg

    Sports and social commentator

    Record-breaking Ray Allen saves NBA Finals

    8:38 AM on 06/07/2010

    OPINION – If Allen thinks of more things to do to be better, it could spell the end for the Los Angeles Lakers…

    > MORE

  • Clutch Magazine

    Clutch Magazine

    Weekly magazine for young contemporary women of color

    What ladies can learn about men from the NBA playoffs

    10:05 AM on 06/05/2010

    OPINION – But besides the raw comedy, the league is also a great source of education for any woman who has wondered why guys act the way they do…

    > MORE

  • Monique Harden

    Monique Harden

    Co-director of Advocates for Environmental Human Rights

    Can the Gulf Coast still be saved?

    1:08 PM on 06/04/2010

    OPINION – President Obama should respond to the oil gushing from the depths of the Gulf of Mexico as he would to a foreign invading army…

    > MORE

  • Ronda Racha Penrice

    Ronda Racha Penrice

    Author of African American History For Dummies

    Is ‘blackface’ always beyond the pale?

    12:05 PM on 06/04/2010

    OPINION – Blackface is not going anywhere anytime soon…

    > MORE

  • Earl Ofari Hutchinson

    Earl Ofari Hutchinson

    Journalist, author and broadcaster.

    Why Democrats are the greatest danger to Obama’s agenda

    11:44 AM on 06/04/2010

    OPINION – President Obama’s deadliest enemy is not Sarah Palin, GOP congressional obstructionists, the Republican National Committee or even Fox News…

    > MORE

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  • May 25, 2010

    Black News: Killer of Three Black College Students Convicted

    by Dr. Boyce Watkins, The Institute for Black Public Policy

    Nearly three years ago, two black college students and a friend were murdered in a schoolyard in Newark, NJ. Monday, a jury returned guilty verdicts for three of the murders and one attempted murder after deliberating for less than a day.
    Rodolfo Godinez, a 26-year old gang member and native of Nicaragua, was convicted of all charges against him, including multiple counts of robbery, weapons possession and conspiracy. He can get up to 30 years to life for each murder count, and the sentences can be given out consecutively.
    "This man will never see the light of day," said Robert D. Laurino, the acting Essex County prosecutor.
    Sentencing for Godinez is set for July 8. His lawyer, Roy Greenman, said,"Obviously, there will be an appeal on a number of grounds," but he declined to state the grounds on which he’d be filing.
    The prosecution did not assert that Godinez was the one who hacked at the victims with a machete or shot each of them execution-style, in the back of the head. He was argued, however, to be the one who summoned the other gang members to the schoolyard on the night when the murders took place. The murders were particularly chilling because all four of the victims were "good kids" with no criminal history and educational plans for the future.

    Click to read

     

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    May 17, 2010

    Julianne Malveaux: Obama Disappoints Black Women with the Kagan Nomination

    I was among the many who were disappointed that President Barack Obama did not nominate an African American woman to be an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. After all, there are six white men, two women, one Latina and one white, and a nominal African American man on the Court.  Why not an African American woman?
    The Black Women’s Roundtable, led by Melanie Campbell, was so disappointed that they shared their concerns with the President in a letter that spoke both to the contributions African American women have made and the qualifications of a few good women that President Obama should have considered before nominating Ms. Kagan to the nation’s highest court.

    I won’t even speak on what I perceive as some of the shortcomings of the Kagan nomination.  The Solicitor General has earned the support of some colleagues that I fully respect, such as Harvard Professor Charles Ogletree.  At the same time, we have to pause at the fact that her definition of diversity is ideological diversity, not racial and ethnic diversity, and that she seemed to make Harvard a more welcome place for conservatives, if not for African American faculty.

     

    Click to read

    May 15, 2010

    Miriam Harris: Elena Kagan’s Weak Cultural Competence

    No one is more delighted than I am that esteemed presidential historian, Annette Gordon- Reed will join the faculty at Harvard Law School. Despite the fact that she was recruited by then Dean Elena Kagan, I respectfully disagree with Charles Ogletree that Elena Kagan is a good choice for the Supreme Court.

    Ogletree argues that from 2003 until the end of Kagan’s deanship in 2009, the number of African American students matriculating rose to an all time high. I am sure this is accurate, but how relevant is it?

    Do these numbers speak to the quality and caliber of student life? Are Harvard graduates fully engaged and can they provide an effective and vigorous understanding with matters pertaining to race? Or, are they merely defenders and justifiers of the status quo?

    I suggest that Professor Ogletree look at the April 30, 2010 blog post written by Diane Lucas. Ms. Lucas was a guest blogger for FEMINISTE and authored a piece entitled, "The Racist Breeding Grounds of Harvard Law School". Lucas wrote this article to discuss the racist behavior of Stephanie Grace, a graduating student, and to discuss her own experience as a Black student at HLS. Lucas critiqued Kagan’s leadership before she knew that Kagan was the U.S. Supreme Court nominee.

     

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    Black Women’s Leadership Groups Disappointed in Elena Kagan Appointment

    E KaganFrom Politic 365: The announcement of Elena Kagan could not really be called a surprise, since the White House went out of its way to all but announce her as their pick over the last week. The Obama Administration dropped hints by the dozens to their favored reporters, who dutifully shared their information with the rest of us. I had come to accept it as a done deal, even though I had been a little perturbed at the way the D.C. pundits only mentioned three or four names from the president’s short list, as if the rest of the names on it, like Georgia’s ownLeah Ward Sears, were invisible.

    It wasn’t until I called a friend of mine, an African American lawyer here in Atlanta who had been a diehard Hillary supporter and then a reluctant Barack Obama supporter after he became the Democratic nominee, that I realized that others felt the same way. "First he puts a Hispanic woman on the court. Fine. He’s paying back the Hispanics for their support," she said. "Then he puts a white woman on the court. Okay – he’s paying them back for coming over to his side after Hillary lost. I see that.

    But why do I have to be last? Why do black women always have to be last? I don’t think he cares."
    Where are the Sistahs? See Politic365 to find out

    May 13, 2010

    Black Harvard Professors Should Stop Excusing the Inexcusable

    by Dr. Boyce Watkins

    Politicians make promises, and they keep almost none of them. The most common game is “Scratch my back today and I’ll scratch yours next week.” When the next week arrives, the politician is off making promises to somebody else. African Americans are typically fed the political scraps and then asked to get on board with a broader liberal strategy that blatantly puts our needs and issues at the bottom of the list. That is the message being sent with the Supreme Court nomination of Elena Kagan, a woman who didn’t hire one single Black, Latino or Native American person during her tenure as Dean at The Harvard Law School or as Solicitor General of the United States.

    The White House has been on the defensive when it comes to Kagan’s sad hiring record. I am not the only person to receive talking points from the White House media team in my email, as they seem to be putting on the full court press. Salon.com wrote a long piece describing the information they received from The White House and why the information is fundamentally flawed. The White House is in the unenviable position of having to turn a rotten egg into a tasty omelet, arguing that Kagan’s record of hiring zero black or brown people while teaching at Harvard is somehow not as bad as it looks. Let’s be clear: It is certainly as bad as it looks, since David Duke couldn’t have done any worse. Even if you buy into the argument that Kagan (the woman with more Washington connections than the electric company) was somehow the weak and powerless dean who couldn’t influence hiring decisions, I would presume that the Solicitor General has a significant say in who she hires on her watch.

    My favorite part of the spectacle has been the army of African American Harvard Law professors called out to defend Kagan in public, all of whom oddly seem to have the same arguments. They point to Kagan’s affiliation with Thurgood Marshall, which is strange, given that Kagan has compiled a hiring record that would make Marshall turn over in his grave. Being affiliated with Marshall doesn’t imply that Kagan learned anything from him or embraced any of his values. They also point to the fact that Kagan took an endowed chair named after a black man. I am sure that their Harvard-educated brains are sweating over the fact that they have to dig so deeply to find any scrap of infinitely recycled evidence that this woman is anything more than another paternalistic liberal who expects black people to love her because she doesn’t abuse them as much as the Republicans. Trying to get intelligent black folks on the Elena Kagan bandwagon is like trying to explain to a man why he should let Tiger Woods give his wife a bath. Taking money under the name of a black man doesn’t exactly make you a champion for civil rights. The other Harvard professors then point to the slew of temporary hires and black student admissions that occurred under Kagan’s watch. I’ll explain that one in a second.

    Faye Anderson, a citizen journalist and graduate of The Stanford University Law School who has also heard from The White House, had this to say: “The push is on to round up African American support for Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan.”

    The talking points by the White House and black Harvard Law professors are all fine and good, but the key issue to remember is that the only hires that matter when making decisions in a law school are tenured and tenure-track appointments. Comparing tenured appointments and tenure track positions to temporary appointments is like comparing marriage to dating or having sex: a man having sex with a woman doesn’t mean that he values her as a potential spouse. Many universities run through a slew of minority professors for visiting positions in order to temporarily boost their diversity numbers or to fulfill teaching requirements, but when the faculty member asks for a long-term commitment, they spit out the black scholar and hire a white one. Another game is to offer minority candidates administrative or practitioner/clinical positions, like running a center or serving as a liaison to urban communities. Not that these positions are not important, but they ultimately become the academic ghetto which keeps black scholars from having the opportunity to do what they were trained to do. That’s the Jim Crow system which exists in academia, and I am saddened that there are black professors being pressured to support it. The collective self-esteem of the African American community must rise to the point that we demand what we truly deserve, not simply accept what people like Elena Kagan are willing to give us. Kagan reminds me of the fact that many African Americans were led to believe that Bill Clinton was truly the first black president. I never accepted such an assertion because I believed we could get something better.

    Mark Thompson, host of “Make it Plain,” a Sirius/XM Satellite show, says that “I think there’s pressure both explicit and implicit for African Americans to accept that Obama’s blackness and Marshall’s blackness are transferable to Kagan. The bottom line is that we need a genuine African American on the court because there isn’t one.”

    The great education we’re receiving about the nomination of Elena Kagan is two-fold: First, we are learning that black Harvard professors defending a person who has shown black people such little respect is not about standing up for the rights of common black folks. It’s about standing up for the elitist power of the Harvard Law School, which stands to dominate the Supreme Court. Notice that the three black professors most vocally supporting Kagan (Kennedy, Ogletree and Sullivan, all of whom I respect) are from Harvard and nowhere else. Secondly, it says that African Americans are expected to follow-suit on liberal agenda items, even when we’ve received the most blatant insults imaginable. The marriage between white liberals and African Americans is flooded with mistreatment, yet we are expected to suck it up and toe the company line. Rather than pushing to get people to believe something that simply isn’t true, I am hopeful that The White House can actually create change we can believe in. Elena Kagan will be nearly as bad for the civil rights as the infamous Clarence Thomas. The only difference is that Thomas may have hired at least one black person.

    Stop Comparing Elena Kagan to Thurgood Marshall: She’s Not Him

     

    From Colorlines.org

    Obama’s second Supreme Court nominee clerked for one of history’s greatest racial justice champions. You wouldn’t know it by looking at her career since.

    Despite all the hubbub Solicitor General Elena Kagan’s Supreme Court nomination will generate, the truth of the matter is Kagan won’t make much difference to a judicial balance of power that leans rightward. She’ll maintain the status quo: four reliably liberal justices, four reliably conservative justices and one center-right swing voter in Justice Anthony Kennedy. Importantly, that means she will also do little to alter the court’s rightward trajectory on racial justice.

    Both Kagan and the White House have made much of her time as a clerk for her self-described mentor, Thurgood Marshall. The hapless Republican National Committee has responded with a bizarre effort to tar her association with one of history’s most celebrated justices. But both sides overstate the connection. Kagan hasn’t exactly spent her career as a champion of the racial justice principles Marshall articulated. We need to be asking why that’s the case.

    As a Democratic president’s nominee, to be confirmed by a Democratic Senate, we can expect a would-be Justice Kagan to align herself consistently with the liberal voting bloc. After all, today’s Supreme Court appointments rarely let down the presidents who nominate them. Sure, David Souter—whom a wise Latina replaced last summer—was the bane of George H.W. Bush’s existence because of his pro-choice opinions. And retiring Justice John Paul Stevens certainly grew, during his three and a half decades on the court, to become a disappointment for President Gerald Ford’s legacy. I just don’t see that happening to our current constitutional-law-professor president.  

    click to read

    Black News: African American Scholars Speaking Up on Elena Kagan

    by Dr. Boyce Watkins

    I started the day thinking about Elena Kagan, Barack Obama’s most recent nominee to the Supreme Court. I was wondering how in the world the president could appoint someone who has no experience on the bench, given the number of highly qualified judges he had to choose from. Then I was informed that this might be a good thing, since the Republicans don’t have a judicial record to scrutinize. No problemo.

    I then noticed that Kagan has past affiliations with The University of Chicago, The Harvard Law School and Goldman Sachs, and that she was appointed to her position at Harvard by Lawrence Summers, the head of the President’s Council of Economic Advisors. I was starting to get uncomfortable at that point, because Kagan’s appointment would mean that the entire Supreme Court would be filled with Harvard and Yale grads, which effectively says that every other law school in the country need not apply (so much for having a meritocracy). I also saw a very disturbing pattern of cronyism, elitism and Wall Street loyalty that lets us know that perhaps the President of Hope and Change is not quite what we ordered, making back room deals with his buddies, all for the sake of keeping American power locked into tiny social circles.

    Click to read

    May 12, 2010

    Black Law Professors disturbed by Elena Kagan’s Nomination by Obama

    AP photo/Jose Luis Magana

    Reports suggest that Solicitor General Elena Kagan may be President Obama’s choice for the Supreme Court vacancy.

    Like everyone in the legal academy over the last decade, we have watched with admiration the amazing changes that Elena Kagan brought to Harvard Law School. A fractured faculty, divided among ideological lines, seemed finally content, if not united. A boisterous student body was finally pacified. The logjam that had stopped faculty hiring had burst. Indeed, she hired so many new faculty the Harvard Law School’s newspaper’s 2008 April Fool’s issue declared, "Dean Kagan Hires Every Law Professor in the Country."

    The first woman Dean of Harvard Law School had presided over an unprecedented expansion of the faculty — growing it by almost a half. She had hired 32 tenured and tenure-track academic faculty members (non-clinical, non-practice). But when we sat down to review the actual record, we were frankly shocked. Not only were there shockingly few people of color, there were very few women. Where were the people of color? Where were the women? Of these 32 tenured and tenure-track academic hires, only one was a minority. Of these 32, only seven were women. All this in the 21st Century.

     

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    May 11, 2010

    Black News: Obama’s Supreme Court Pick Hired Zero Black Professors at Harvard

    Kagan Hired No Black Professors While Dean Of Harvard Law

    Read more about Kagan Hired No Black Professors While Dean Of Harvard Law

    TAGS: education, Elena Kagan, Harvard, Supreme Court

    May 3, 2010

    Athletes Get Nothing from NCAA’s New $11 Billion Dollar Contract

    The NCAA men’s basketball tournament is expanding, starting next season, but not on the large scale once expected.

    The sport’s signature event will grow to 68 teams from 65 in conjunction with a new 14-year, nearly $11 billion television agreement with CBS and Turner Sports announced Thursday. That gives the NCAA a 41% hike in annual media and marketing rights connected to the tournament — and "financial stability through the first quarter of this century," interim President Jim Isch said — without the controversy of a more dramatic move to a 96-team bracket.

    Negotiations with CBS/Turner, ESPN and Fox Sports initially had targeted a 96-team field, drawing concern and criticism from traditionalists and others over the impact on the tournament’s aesthetics, effect on college basketball’s regular season and conference tournaments and potential for further intrusion on players’ time and studies.

     

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    April 30, 2010

    Dr. Boyce Watkins: NAACP Lending Principles for Banks

     

    From Dr. Boyce Watkins, Syracuse University

    In light of the article I wrote challenging the partnership between the NAACP and Wells Fargo, the company accused of predatory lending in the Black community (click here to read the article), I thought I’d publicly share the NAACP lending principles that were sent to me by one of the NAACP spokes people.   In spite of the fact that I am not accusing the NAACP of illegal or unethical behavior, I still hold to the fact that the following must be true in order for me to become comfortable with this partnership:

    1) There should be public accountability and transparency regarding the nature of the deal between the NAACP and Wells Fargo.  That includes the amount of the sponsorship and all WRITTEN contractual commitments between the NAACP and Wells Fargo.  Only specific terms in writing are relevant and can be properly enforced.

    2) Simply agreeing to stop predatory lending is not enough, since there must be compensation given to the African-American community for tens of billions of dollars in lost wealth due to the racially discriminatory practices of Wells Fargo.  If a senior citizen on the South Side of Chicago who lost her home is not given relief from her situation, then this partnership does very little for our community.  A person cannot simply apologize for a crime and refuse to commit the crime again; there must be an effort to make right on the crimes that have been committed in the past.

    The NAACP Banking Principles on Fairness in Lending are Below:

     

    Mortgage foreclosures, excessive subprime mortgage interest rates, and hindered access to prime mortgage loans have had an inordinate impact on people of color and other historically disadvantaged borrowers. These practices have resulted in adverse effects even beyond the actual borrowers themselves. Home values have been depressed as a result of these practices, and in general people of color and their families have become increasingly vulnerable to loss of shelter, home security, equity, and wealth—even if they do not have subprime loans. To encourage transparency and fairness in the processes associated with obtaining quality loans and improved relationships between financial institutions and people of color and other historically disadvantaged borrowers, the NAACP has developed the following principles.

    1. Loan terms will not be determined by a borrower’s race, ethnicity, gender, national origin, sexual orientation, language preference, disability, religion/creed, or age, except as otherwise permitted or required by law. Additionally, loan terms will not be determined by factors designed to serve as proxies (e.g., zip codes) for the above categories. Loan terms will not be determined by subjective underwriting without controls to prevent inappropriate bias or discrimination. Similarly situated borrowers (i.e., borrowers with similar underwriting characteristics, including credit scores, debt ratios, loan-to-value ratios, etc.) will receive comparable loan terms on identical or comparable loan products.

    2. Every borrower will have the option of selecting a loan product that is appropriate for his or her circumstances. Borrowers will first be presented with loan product choices that are consistent with their financial circumstances. Lenders will determine whether borrowers are eligible for prime loan products and, if so, the borrowers will be presented with prime product options. Additionally, information will be provided to the borrowers about available conventional and Federal Housing Administration (FHA) loan products in order for the borrowers to fully understand their options. Borrowers with good payment histories and demonstrated improvement in credit performance and other risk factors will be considered by their existing lenders for loan refinancing that result in improved loan terms.

    3. Institutions will seek to eliminate policies or practices that encourage biased and exploitive behaviors toward borrowers. Lending institutions will disclose in good faith the loan fees associated with each loan and will conduct periodic audits of files, policies, and practices to ensure an environment—in lending, credit, and payment options—that is free of bias toward borrowers. Additionally, lenders who sell loans on the secondary market to third parties will also observe these fairness principles and will refrain from charging usurious interest rates.

    4. Borrowers will be approved only for loans they have a current ability to repay. Borrowers will receive loans that they demonstrate the ability to repay, even in the event of a rate increase. Adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs) and other loans will not be underwritten at the “teaser rate,” but rather at the fully indexed interest rate. Standard adjustable rate loan products will be clearly identified as such to borrowers, so they are fully aware of the terms of the ARM loan products and the possibility of interest rate and payment increases.

    5. Each policy may be maintained and monitored for its racial impact. Fairness is measured not only in terms of intent, but also impact. Policies will reflect a demonstrated effort to ameliorate negative outcomes based on race or ethnicity. Each institution will have internal controls to determine overall, and within the subprime community of loans issued by the institution, that its neutral practices do not have an unlawful adverse impact based on grounds of race, sex, color, or ethnicity.

    6. All borrowers will have access to free information, online and in print, that will help them understand and improve the quality of their loans. The terms of each loan will be provided to the borrower and explained in plain and simple language. The terms of the loan will be in a large font and easily legible to those who are not severely vision-impaired. If the borrower is fluent in Spanish but not English, the loan disclosures and documents will be translated. In the case of other languages, borrowers without access to loan translation expertise will be referred to phone-based or other translation services that are familiar with loan terms and conditions. All borrowers should be able to clearly understand the terms of their loan products.

    7. Lenders will work with borrowers to prevent foreclosures. Loan servicers will consider foreclosure to be the “last resort” and will explore all appropriate alternatives before completing a foreclosure sale. Because these matters impact borrowers, their neighbors, and the institution, we believe it wise for the institution to engage in extended good-faith efforts to do all that it can to prevent foreclosures. Lenders and their affiliates will not operate using a business model intentionally designed to profit from a foreclosure.

    8. Lending institutions will support and implement the inclusion of diverse suppliers in their contracting and partnership decisions. Financial institutions will establish aspirational and measurable goals and develop supplier programs that ensure the inclusion of businesses owned by women- and people of color wherever contracting and partnership opportunities present themselves. Goals will be, at the very least, to reflect the various racial, ethnic, and gender compositions of the general population.

    9. Workforce diversity is important to fair decision making and expanded opportunity for economic development. From the boardroom to the cubicle, the workforce continuum will reflect the diversity of the nation. As financial institutions establish inclusive business policies, so too will there be a measurable effort to employ a workforce that is reflective of the growing diversity of the nation—at all decision-making levels within the institution.

    Bob Johnson’s Wife is Ashamed of BET

    by Dr. Boyce Watkins

    Thirty years ago, with $15,000 dollars in seed money and another $500,000 in bank loans, Sheila Crump Johnson and her ex-husband, Bob Johnson founded Black Entertainment Television. Since that time, the couple has earned over $1 billion dollars from their tiny investment, and BET is a household name. They sold the company to Viacom in 2000 for $1.3 billion, making them richer than Oprah Winfrey.

    Now, the 60-year old woman who founded the company with her husband says that she is ashamed of the channel:
    "Don’t even get me started," says Mrs. Johnson. "I don’t watch it. I suggest to my kids that they don’t watch it… I’m ashamed of it, if you want to know the truth."

    Johnson goes on to admit that BET may be contributing to the spread of AIDS in the black community by promoting raunchy, unprotected sex in rap music videos.
    "When we started BET, it was going to be the Ebony magazine on television," Johnson told The Daily Beast. "We had public affairs programming. We had news… I had a show called Teen Summit, we had a large variety of programming, but the problem is that then the video revolution started up… And then something started happening, and I didn’t like it at all. And I remember during those days we would sit up and watch these videos and decide which ones were going on and which ones were not. We got a lot of backlash from recording artists…and we had to start showing them. I didn’t like the way women were being portrayed in these videos."

     

    Click to read

    April 29, 2010

    AOL Video: Michael Bivins Talks to Dr. Boyce Watkins

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    Dr. Boyce Video: Latino Studies Professor on What You Need to Know About Immigration

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    Dr. Boyce Video — Michael Bivins of Bel Biv DeVoe & Alfred Edmond of Black Enterprise on African American Music & Business

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    Dr. Boyce Video — Talking Black Finance With Expert Ryan Mack

    April 26, 2010

    The Latest from Dr. Boyce on MSNBC’s TheGrio.com – 4/27/10

    April 24, 2010

    Dr. Boyce Watkins: Where Henry Louis Gates Has it Wrong about Slavery

    Henry Louis Gates gets slavery's history all wrong

    by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Your Black World

    Harvard Professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. recently wrote an interesting piece for the New York Times called, "Ending the Slavery Blame Game." In the piece, Gates effectively argues that the fight for reparations is convoluted and somewhat mitigated by the fact that African elites participated in the slave trade. While describing complex business deals made between some African leadership and the Europeans who brought Africans to the New World, it almost appears as though Gates is saying that this disturbing relationship somehow undermines the right of African-Americans to hold our government accountable for its involvement in crimes committed against our people.

    At very least, I am under the assumption that by "ending the slavery blame game," Gates is arguing that we should stop blaming the United States government and white America for the rape, murder, castration, lynching and beating of our ancestors.

    Sorry Dr. Gates, but I must respectfully (or perhaps not so respectfully) disagree. If a young girl is sold into prostitution by her own parents, the pimp must still pay for the suffering he caused the young woman. He can’t simply say, "Her parents made a deal with me, so you should stop the blame game."

    In other words, the United States, as a broad and powerful industrial entity, benefited from slavery to the tune of several trillion dollars. Much of this wealth was passed down from one white man to another, and was always out of the grasp of the black men, women and children who gave their lives on American soil in order to earn it. As a result, the median net worth of the African-American family is roughly one-tenth that of white American families and we have consistently higher unemployment due to our inability to create jobs, since white Americans own most businesses. These facts hold true without regard to how the African-American holocaust started in the first place. They also hold true because wealth and power are commodities that are passed down inter-generationally, and we missed out on all of this because we were slaves. What occurred after we left Africa can and must be considered independently from what happened while our forefathers were in the mother land.

     

     

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    April 19, 2010

    Dr. Boyce Watkins: Resident Scholar – AOL Black Voices

     

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    Harvard’s Charles Ogletree Describes Sharpton’s Link to Obama

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    The Black Agenda: Wealth-Building Must Top the List – Dr. Boyce Money

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    Officer Charged With Beating a Motorist

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    Financial Lovemaking: Tiger, Tiki and the High Cost of Cheating

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    Jay-Z Sues Red Sox Slugger David Ortiz Over 40/40 Club Name

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    Bill O’Reilly Gets Booed at Sharpton’s National Convention

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    President Obama Spends $18 Billion on Jobless Benefits

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    Police May Have Coerced Boys to Confess to Gang Rape of 7-Year-Old

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    Former NAACP President Benjamin Hooks Dead at 85

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    Man With HIV Knowingly Infected Women, Set to Be Released From Prison

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    Kennedy Family Member Staying in Prison on Murder Conviction

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    Mississippi Gov. Says Slavery Conversation is Not Important

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    NBA Star Derrick Coleman is Now Broke: $87 Million Up in Smoke

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    Michael Steele Tries to Explain Himself to Other Republicans

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    Suspects Found in Slaying of Newlywed Couple

    April 11, 2010

    Your Black Social Commentary – 4/10/10

    April 7, 2010

    Dr. Boyce Watkins: Why Black Men Aren’t Graduating from College

     

    blackmalegraduation

    by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Syracuse University

    Last week, the American Council on Education issued a report on the state of black males in the higher education system.  The report reveals some interesting and disturbing trends.  It turns out that black men are graduating from college at a rate which lags significantly behind other ethnic groups. When determining graduation probabilities over a six-year period, black males were found to have a graduation rate of 35 percent.   This compares with rates of 59 percent, 46 percent and 45 percent for white males, hispanic males and black women, respectively.  In other words, black men are a little more than half as likely to finish college when compared to their white male counterparts.

    I have been a black man for my entire life now, and I’ve taught at the college level for the past 17 years.  So, perhaps I can shed some light on the nature of these problems and how we might work to solve them.  Some of the factors are institutional and some are cultural, so prepare to be offended by at least one of the things I have to say:

    RELATED: Why Aren’t Minorities Graduating From College?

    1) Most American universities refuse to hire or retain African American professors, including many HBCUs: If your professors look like you, you are more likely to relate to that individual and enjoy the class.  When I went to The University of Kentucky, Indiana University and The Ohio State University (where I earned my PhD), I didn’t see one single professor who looked like me (and I took A LOT of classes).  This made for an incredibly awkward and damn near traumatic educational experience.  When I first noticed institutions like Morehouse College presenting images of black males in the front of the classroom, I was envious after realizing what I’d been missing.  Rather than finding excuses for firing or not hiring black professors, most universities would be well-advised to stop lying to themselves and become serious about diversity.  Yes, black professors are out there to hire if you are looking for them, but many academic departments find a reason to believe that they are not qualified.  Just look at the experiences of myself, Cornell West and Michael Eric Dyson as cases in point.  Each of us has received significant resistance in our careers because our work is connected to the black community. Our stories are just the tip of the iceberg, since there are thousands of black professors who’ve gone through the exact same experience when dealing with the entrenched racism of academia.  Many HBCUs are not immune to this trend, as most of them don’t have very many African American professors (Don’t believe me?  Go to the Computer Science Department or Business School at any random HBCU and count the number of African American professors).

     

    Click to read

    April 4, 2010

    Blacks Far More likely to be Incarcerated than Whites

    This data was gathered from the prison initiative and shows that there is more racism in the US prison system than there was in South Africa During Apartheid:

     

    Incarceration is not an equal opportunity punishment

    by Peter Wagner
    Updated June 28, 2005

    On June 30, 2004, there were 2,131,180 people in U.S. prisons and jails. That’s a rise of 2.3% during the 12 previous months. Federal prisons are growing almost 5 times faster than state prison populations.

    As of June 30, 2004, the U.S. incarceration rate was 726 per 100,000 residents. But when you break down the statistics you see that incarceration is not an equal opportunity punishment.

    U.S. incarceration rates by race, June 30, 2004

    incarceration rates by race graph

    Gender is an important "filter" on the who goes to prison or jail:

    incarceration rates by gender graph

    Look at just the males by race, and the incarceration rates become even more frightening

    incarceraton rates for males by race

    If you look at males aged 25-29 and by race, you can see what is going on even clearer

    incarceration rates for young males

    Or you can make some international comparisons

    International rates of incarceration graph

    South Africa under Apartheid was internationally condemned as a racist society. What does it mean that the leader of the "free world" locks up its Black men at a rate 5.8 times higher than the most openly racist country in the world?

    Statistics as of June 30, 2004 from Prison and Jail Inmates at Midyear 2004, Tables 14; except for the race rate statistics which are calculated from Table 13 and Census Bureau population estimates. South Africa figures from Marc Mauer, Americans Behind Bars: The International Use of Incarceration. All references to Blacks and Whites are for what the Bureau of Justice Statistics and U.S. Census refer to as "non-Hispanic Blacks" and "non-Hispanic Whites".)

    March 24, 2010

    Dr. Boyce on AOL Black Voices – 3/23/10

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    Tea Partiers Deny The Use of Racial Slurs

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    Rush Limbaugh Back Pedals on Pledge to Leave the Country

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    Michael Steele Looks Even Worse as a Black Man Defending Tea Partiers

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    Police Officers Charged with Beating Celebrated with Free Beer

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    Jesse Jackson Jr. Presides Over The Health Care Debate

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    Young Mom’s Body Found in Bed Frame of a Hotel Room

    March 23, 2010

    News: Michael Steele Bows to the Tea Baggers

    by Dr. Boyce Watkins, Syracuse University

    The Tea Party Protesters might need a little bit of brand management to overcome the growing perception that they represent a racist, homophobic, extremist fringe of disgruntled voters. The most recent incident of very bad PR came this week, as a small group of Tea Party protesters gathered on Capitol Hill and yelled "n*gger" and "f*ggot" at members of Congress as they walked past the crowd. The group has taken heat for the actions of those who don’t know how to be cordial in their discourse, and it’s not good for the Republican Party.

    Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele was put in yet another awkward position, trying to defend that which is not defensible. A man who appears to be disrespected at every turn by his own party, Steel dismissed those using the n-word within the Tea Party group as "idiots out there saying stupid things." Of course, Steele was not in a position to dismiss the Tea Partiers themselves, likely because they would have put him in a pile with the other black people they hate the most.

    Click to read

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