The making of the Black man into Public Enemy Number 1 began long before a rainy, dark night in a gated Florida community where a White person with a gun would be seen as a gun enthusiast — a Second Amendment scholar — but a Black man with a gun could only be a thug. […]
Category: OPINION
Before Harborplace Goes Forward, Learned Lessons Should be Applied
As we embark upon another debate about whether Baltimore should sell bonds and offer tax incentives to aid in the development of a billion-dollar harbor development project, some old points of view are being resurrected. Many will argue the efficacy of the city investing millions of dollars in a development project, but what is missing […]
Finally, the Barack Obama I Voted For
For more than four years, I have said that I liked candidate Barack Obama better than I like President Obama. Candidate Obama addressed the question of race head-on when pressured to distance himself from Rev. Jeremiah Wright, the Chicago pastor who led him to Christianity. But President Obama has been a different story. According to […]
A TIME TO RETHINK EVERYTHING
PHILADELPHIA–The stench of injustice has spilled over with the nauseating smell of institutional murder once again. Left unchanged, this injustice will linger until the next injustice, and the next case…until we finally get it: public policy, in the form of reparations, is the solution to all of our social ills and the injustices that frame […]
To Be Equal
“As of 2004, more black men were denied the right to vote because of a criminal record than in 1870, when the Fifteenth Amendment was ratified, giving blacks the right to vote.” Joshua Dubois, former director of President Obama’s Office of Faith-Based Initiatives As the Trayvon Martin trial and record high summer temperatures both begin […]
Maryland: A State of Many Contradictions
Maryland is geographically located just below the historic Mason and Dixon Line, making it a southern state. The “Old Line State” as Maryland is sometimes called, actually had elements fighting on the side of the Confederacy during the Civil War to uphold slavery. Today State leaders deliberately shun the southern affiliation, choosing instead to market […]
Zimmerman Acquittal Could Double Loss for Trayvon Martin’s Family
The family of Trayvon Martin not only lost their 17-year-old son at the hands of George Zimmerman, a Florida neighborhood watch volunteer. They could lose their money to him, too. Imagine this bitter irony: Under Florida’s stand your ground law, according to legal experts contacted by the AFRO, if the Martin’s family files a civil […]
Our struggle to end hunger in America continues
When we consider all that is at stake in the ongoing struggle between progressive and reactionary forces on the issue of food stamps, the faces of hungry American children should be the picture in the forefront of our minds and hearts. We all should be following the lead of national leaders like my Massachusetts colleague […]
You Cannot Love Me And Not Love Black Men And Boys: We Are Inextricably Linked
I’ve been talking with my friends about what they are telling their children about what happened to Trayvon Martin. What Black men and women are saying to their sons. What Black men and women are saying to their daughters. What everyone else, from all other backgrounds, are saying to their children, their loved ones, their […]
Criminal Injustice System Failed Trayvon
Watching television Saturday night, I sat in stunned silence as the jury returned its not guilty verdict for George Zimmerman in connection with the shooting death of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin in Sanford, Fla. Then, I was jolted by a comment made by Prosecutor Bernie de la Rionda: “… We live in a great country that […]
Marian Wright Edelman Statement: Justice Denied
WASHINGTON, July 14, 2013 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — In case you missed it, below is the reaction of Marian Wright Edelman, president of the Children’s Defense Fund, to the verdict in the George Zimmerman case for the killing of Trayvon Martin. Justice Denied Until the killing of Black men, Black mothers’ sons, is as important as the […]
Ruth Bader Ginsburg–the New Thurgood Marshall
If you’re looking for the justice on the Supreme Court who mirrors Thurgood Marshall’s tenure on the bench, it is not Sonia Sotomayor, the “Wise Latina.” And it certainly isn’t Clarence Thomas. It is Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the second woman to serve on the nation’s highest court. This became clear in the Fisher v. University […]

