Dr. E. Faye Williams, Esq., President, National Congress of Black Women. (Updated 5/23/2015) Currently, there is an ongoing case that is underway in the World Bank’s Administrative Tribunal involving an African litigant who wanted to introduce a DNA test result to establish that blacks are human and should be treated as such by the World […]
Category: OPINION
Lessons from Baltimore
Congressman Elijah Cummings This year Senator Elizabeth Warren and I have teamed up to launch a series of investigations — the Middle Class Prosperity Project — in order to focus greater congressional attention upon the bread and butter issues that matter the most to our nation’s working families. In February, we examined the harsh reality […]
GOP Lunatic Center
Lee A. Daniels The Republican Party doesn’t have a lunatic fringe. It has a lunatic center: a core bloc of White voters and officeholders whose extreme conservatism leads them to indulge again and again in outlandish conspiracy theories and, more seriously, proposed and enacted legislation of disgraceful callousness. The past few weeks have offered two […]
A New Normal for Baltimore…and Beyond
Sen. Catherine Pugh As the light continues to shine on Baltimore it is an opportunity for us to show the world how we transform broken down neighbors and the lives of many of the individuals living in them. There is no getting around the number of boarded up houses that still exist in our city […]
What’s the What: Why I’m Not Going to Pay for Apple’s New Music Service
Years ago I had stacks upon stacks of CDs. Most of them I bought, a few were given to me by friends and some of them were sent to me by record labels when I wrote about the music industry. When I wanted to listen to something, I would stare at the bookshelf on which […]
Baltimore: The Bold, The Bad, and The Lovely
George H. Lambert, Jr. Of all the coverage of the disturbance in Baltimore that came in the wake of Freddie Gray’s death, the item that caught my attention the most was CNN’s coverage of the powerful African American women in charge of that city. Howard University alumna Stephanie Elam has authoritatively treated such recent issues […]
Criminalizing Poverty Is Big Business
Marian Wright Edelman The recent Department of Justice report on police and court practices in Ferguson, Mo. put a much needed spotlight on how a predatory system of enforcement of minor misdemeanors and compounding fines can trap low-income people in a never-ending cycle of debt, poverty, and jail. This included outrageous fines for minor infractions […]
Baltimore: Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid, John 14:27
Dr. Natasha C. Pratt-Harris As a people many of us have become indoctrinated as spirit-led individuals, readers of the Bible and the Quran, persons who praise the Most High, followers of an earthly leader who echoes the word. We gather in our places of worship, our churches, our mosques, etc. professing to fear The Almighty, […]
How D.C. Underfunds Public Charter School Students
Eric McKinley King As a parent, I believe in the original rallying cry for public charter schools in the District of Columbia – “parental choice.” Charters are publicly funded, but run independently of the traditional public school system; they were intended to extend choice to every parent regardless of income because, like the school system, charters […]
Something Hard to Understand
William E. Spriggs Each week, another candidate throws a hat into the ring for the 2016 presidential campaign-a constant reminder that President Barack Obama is at the end of his term. Currently, the President is engaged in a high-stakes battle, twisting the arms of the Democratic Party base and pressuring his close congressional allies, like […]
ENVIRONMENTAL RACISM
Dr. E. Faye Williams, Esq. TriceEdney – I remember a time when few, if any, Black people expressed interest in environmental issues. Our primary focus was on the day-to-day events that we could see and feel, and knew to be more tangible than air or water “pollution.” When the conversation centered on coal production or […]
‘Thug’ is in the Eye of the Beholder
Walter L. Fields A small section of Baltimore, no more than four to six blocks on the city’s west side, experienced looting and property destruction after the funeral of Freddie Gray, the young man whose spine was mysteriously crushed after being taken into police custody. Gray would later die from his injuries and ‘Charm City’ […]

