5 for ‘15: Minnesota hiphop’s top 5 new prospects MORE ON PAGE 10
Insight News January 5 - January 11, 2015
Vol. 42 No. 1 • The Journal For Community News, Business & The Arts • insightnews.com
The “race” card, Thomas Jefferson and white supremacy imply that every ethnic group is now practitioners of racism. In other words, we are all culpable; not only “white” people, but also all people, with or without supporting institutions with an institutional ideology that promote “race” supremacy. The floating fallacies about “race,” make everybody, like the hugest segment of the “white” population not racist. These fallacies leave no place in this discussion for the likes of the first Black president of the United States of America, Barack Obama as well as Gen. Colin Powell and other Black personalities like them. President Obama and Powell are only occasions in the Black American’s long arduous and heroic struggle against the evils of white supremacy, since the founding of this Republic. Concurrent with the attempt to generate confusion
Notes on the struggle By Professor Mahmoud El -Kati There now seems to be a vast amount of confusion over the meaning of racism. Since the daring challenge to the perpetrators of raw, mad dog racism by the Civil Rights Movement in the 1950s and 1960s, the history and meaning of racism has become intentionally muddled. By racism I meant white supremacy. We are now witnessing a concerted effort by the imagemakers and propagandist of America to twist the facts, past and present, and redefine racism as a non-specific, generalized phenomenon. Furthermore, they
PhotoXpress
RACE TURN TO 2
What does Model Minority Mutiny demand? this must-read essay, Black Lives Matter is “a tactic to (re)build the Black liberation movement.” That tactic is realigning the national conversation about race to focus on America’s centurieslong, perpetual practice of antiBlackness, from chattel slavery to Black Codes to redlining; from slave patrols to Broken Windows policing to Stand Your Ground laws; from convict leasing to today’s mass incarceration, gentrification, gender violence, voter disenfranchisement, and school-to-prison pipeline. It demands that we address the underlying historical and structural forces that lead to the loss of so many Black lives, in a nation that has allegedly left racism behind: Amadou
A new generation of young Black leaders have ignited a movement. They have awakened the nation and the world to the longstanding, daily brutality of state violence against Black lives. There have been daily protests against police brutality in U.S. cities for over four months now, disrupting business as usual, shutting down intersections, bridges, tunnels, transit stations, and highways with clear demands for justice and accountability. And they won’t stop soon. Alicia Garza, Opal Tometi, and Patrisse Cullors are experienced organizers who created Black Lives Matter as an ideological and political container not only for the demands to end the routine extrajudicial killings of Black people, but to end the devaluation of Black life in all its forms. As stated simply in
Courtesy of Race Files
MUTINY TURN TO 9
AS NNPA PREPARES FOR 75TH ANNIVERSARY
Chavis: Black press now mainstream Black press as a side press from the mainstream press. I want the Black press to become the new mainstream because the demographics are changing.” Chavis was among the speakers at a gala celebration for the 50th Anniversary of the Washington Informer Newspaper, published by NNPA member Denise Rolark Barnes. Black-owned newspapers are often called specialty, alternative or minority press by government agencies and corporate America. But, according to an analysis of U. S. Census Bureau
By Hazel Trice Edney (TriceEdneyWire.com) Civil rights leader Benjamin Chavis, now president of the National Newspaper Publishers Association, says he envisions Black newspapers as becoming the “new mainstream” rather than an alternative press as it is often called. “The Black Press, I believe has an opportunity where it can make even more traction than it has in the past,” Chavis said in a recent interview with the Trice Edney News Wire. “In other words, I don’t see the
Roy Lewis/Trice Edney News Wire
NNPA President Benjamin Chavis
Ebola
Health
Deaths climb above 7,300
Is it a cold or a flu?
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Tim Scott
Mia Love
Elected Black Republicans not expected to be a plus for the community By Freddie Allen NNPA Senior Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON (NNPA) – Black Republicans made history during the midterm elections in November by winning in Texas, South Carolina and Texas, but political analysts wonder if the victories will have any long-term impact on the future of the GOP in the Black community. Traditionally, Black candidates running for elected offices not only need a large Black turnout, but also a majority of the Black vote to win statewide and national races.
REPUBLICANS 4 TURN TO
MAINSTREAM 6 TURN TO
Finding Your Roots
Will Hurd
Education
Opening the genealogy flood-“Gates”
Help college-age children resolve to manage their finances
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