HELP FOR HURRICANE MATTHEW VICTIMS IN NORTH CAROLINA
http://www.icontact-archive.com/TfWiFvrku19Q9Bj4e81evxJsRaXGc1uk?w=4
Tuesday, October 18, 2016
Thursday, October 6, 2016
BIZZARE POLITICAL DISCOURSE DOMINATES 2016 ELECTION
Uncommon Nominees Lead Parties
By Mildred Robertson
By Mildred Robertson
The 2016 Presidential election
will be noted as perhaps the most bizarre in the annals of American history.
This distinction will not be achieved because, for the first time, a woman will
head the ticket of a major party as the presidential nominee, although that is
a noteworthy detail. What has made this election unique is the nature of the
race itself.
The country faces numerous
challenges that are vital to our continued stature as the premier super-power
on the world stage. We are facing economic challenges as we wrestle to balance
domestic and international trade to fully participate in the global economy
while creating a robust business climate within our borders. We must continue
to work to create international partnerships that will support fair trade
practices and create good-paying American jobs.
The browning of America has
pushed racial tension to new heights, and racial profiling and militaristic
police tactics have pitted the Black and brown communities against municipal
governments across the nation. While still the most affluent nation in the
world, according to Pearson's Global Education
Index, America ranks 14th in the world for “cognitive skills
and educational attainment.” A Bloomberg poll ranks health care
efficiency in the US at 44 out of 51 countries surveyed. The International Centre for Prison Studies
states that America has more prisoners than any other country in the world. All
of these issues and more loom large on our horizon. These are the issues that
the next President of the United States will face as he or she strives to move
us forward toward peace, growth and prosperity.
So, it is bizarre that the
nominees for the 2016 presidential election and the media are talking about a
beauty queen’s weight, women’s menstrual cycles, the relevance of the size of a
man’s hands to other body parts, how one might be weak following a bout with
pneumonia, or how it is not nice to poke fun at those with disabilities.
Granted, these topics were all introduced by Republican nominee
Donald Trump as part of the presidential discourse. But both the media and the
opposing party have allowed Trump to set the tone for this presidential race.
First, the media seemed to think
that ratings were more important than the final patriotism as they gave Trump
millions of dollars in free advertising as he said one outrageous thing after
the other, guaranteeing him prime-time news coverage on a regular basis. He was
allowed to introduce myriad falsehoods into public discourse that an uneducated
and unsophisticated portion of the electorate embraced as gospel fact. Those in
the Republican Party who didn’t believe his many falsehoods eventually embraced
the fact that a lot of the Republican base were willing to give Trump a pass as
long as he was able to defeat Hillary Clinton, and just got on board.
Meanwhile, Clinton wrestles with
a millennial vote unfamiliar with her true record. Many of them have come to
accept an obfuscated representation of who she is and what she has stood for
over the years. Clinton has failed to break through years of negative media
directed at her and the Clinton machine, and she holds an unenthusiastic lead
among Blacks and Latinos.
So, with only a lukewarm Obama
coalition behind her, she has taken to poking the bear rather than staying on
message. This tactic has impeded her efforts to clearly enunciate
the challenges that face our country and express how her policies will address
them.
She has learned that she can’t
focus on what appears to me to be a pretty solid platform, and make headway
with the electorate. But when she pushes Trump’s buttons she can make him veer
off the script that has been carefully crafted to make him seem more acceptable
to the reluctant party liners who have pledged “never Trump.” All it takes is a
poke at his wealth, or his misogyny to send Trump off into a Twitter storm that
will ultimately result in bad press and a drop in the polls.
I get it. Poll numbers and bad
media mean something in an election. But it is an election, folks, for the
highest office in the United States; the most powerful country in the world.
This election is far too important than to hinge on emotions. It is too
important to be decided by media coverage, or the antics of a carnival barker.
We have real problems that need
real solutions. The fact that someone as incompetent, dishonest, racist,
misogynistic and unstable as Donald Trump is one step away from the presidency
is more than bizarre. It is dangerous.
There is just a little more than
a month before most Americans go to the polls to elect the 45th
President of the United States. Let’s pray that the majority of Americans can
dig through all the drama, falsehoods, and knee-jerk emotions that have
dominated this election. Let's hope that the majority of us can make a sound
judgment based on facts about what is best for our nation. Otherwise, on
November 9th we may wake up to a country in chaos—a country we don’t
even know. A bizarre America where facts don’t matter, leadership is
self-serving, aimless and corrupt, and the average American is left, like many
enterprises with whom Trump did business, holding the bag.
Wednesday, September 28, 2016
2016 Presidential Election Debacle
WHAT DONALD TRUMP'S CANDIDACY SAYS ABOUT AMERICA
By: Mildred Robertson
By: Mildred Robertson
I watched Monday night’s debate in both amazement and horror
as I observed the debacle which is the 2016 Presidential Election. Let me
clarify that I am a Hillary supporter. It is not a default vote for me. I
believe that she is capable and qualified to lead this nation as the first
elected female president, and I will proudly cast my vote for her. It is
definitely NOT a vote for the lessor of two evils.
I see only one evil, and the fact that this individual who
apparently has no redeeming characteristics is two heartbeats away from the
White House frightens me more than Putin…more than Korea…more than Isis. It is
incredible to me that at least a third of Americans, and maybe more, find
Donald Trump to be an acceptable choice to lead the most powerful nation in the
world.
To date, Donald Trump has articulated no discernible policy
in any area of politics. In foreign policy he has discussed building a wall to
stop immigration and pulling our country into isolation by defaulting on our
NATO obligations. Disturbing…yes—policy…no. He has laid out no plan as to how
he would accomplish either goal. (We know
Mexico is NOT going to build the wall!)
On domestic policy, he insists that he would force
businesses to bring jobs back to America. This is ironic in that he himself has
exported many jobs outside this country. And again, he has expressed no solid
policy on how he would accomplish this goal. Nor has he laid out a reasonable fiscal
plan to “Make America Great Again.” According to experts, his proposed economic
policies would propel us back toward the recession from which Obama just dug us
out. And he is proud to evade paying the very same taxes that are used to
support infrastructure, fire and police departments and schools; the very
foundation of safe, thriving communities.
His response to social issues are just as bizarre, as he
courts the African American vote in one breath and promises to nationalize “Stop
and Frisk” in the next; a practice which has been found to be both
discriminatory and unconstitutional. He still refuses to say that he was wrong
in demanding President Obama’s birth certificate and claims to be proud of
having “forced” him to present it. Tone deaf in everything associated with
discrimination, he does not see the parallel between his demand, and the historical
Southern practice of making Black people present papers to prove their status. He justifies his early business practices of
red-lining by saying that everybody was doing it.
Trump and his organization have embraced racists, disparaged African Americans and Latinos, attacked
women, offended fallen soldiers and their families, and denigrated war heroes.
It appears that he also may have evaded taxes, carried out illegal practices in
his foundation and bilked contractors out of money that they earned and
deserved. He has a history of being a philanderer, and has no understanding of
religious practices; even though he tells the religious right that he is a
deeply religious individual. He is a proven liar and may possibly have amorous
feelings toward his own daughter.
When you couple his total lack of preparation and qualifications for the Office
of the Presidency with his moral deficiencies, it is amazing that millions of
Americans are capable of choosing this man to lead them. It is amazing that
they would embrace this caricature of a human being and say “He speaks for me.”
It says more about millions of Americans than it does Donald
Trump that someone of his ilk would be allowed to become the standard bearer of
a national party. It means that every third person I see in the mall, or on the subway or in a restaurant or on my job has likely embraced the racist, bigoted, immoral and dimwitted philosophy this campaign represents. While millions support Donald Trump, let’s hope that
millions more stand up and say, “This is NOT who we are! This man does NOT
speak for me!”
We all have the opportunity and the obligation to say just that
on November 8th.
Thursday, July 21, 2016
MONEY AND BLACK POWER
Using Wealth to Effect Change
By Mildred Robertson
As we wrestle to find strategies that will turn our community and our country
around we must ask, what can make a difference for young minorities growing up
in this hostile society. How can we make it better? The answer is already here, in our own
community! The way to independence, justice and social equality is monetary. That is the key.
By Mildred Robertson
As I struggle with the reality of America’s socio-economic
condition in 2016, I am appalled that our national and political discourse is
eerily reminiscent of the 50s and 60s when majority culture Americans clearly
embraced a racist system that brutalized and dehumanized blacks and other
minorities.
Many in our nation are
clearly agonizing over this symbol of 21st century oppression; the authorized
targeting of black Americans and other minorities by our system of justice. It
appears simple enough to agree that a man, woman or child should not be
executed for trivial infractions such as
driving with a busted tail light, playing in a park, or simply walking to the
corner store for a drink and some skittles.
Black people are amazed, and perhaps shocked, that so many
people cannot see how the unfettered slaying of blacks for non-violent (or
non-existent) violations is wrong, and deserving of punishment for the
perpetrators. We have been amazed that people equate the call for justice against
police who brutalize our citizens to an assault on the police who truly protect
and serve.
We have been amazed that the majority culture is somehow
surprised that someone got pissed off enough to pick up arms against the police. (Please do not start a twitter feed about
this statement. I am in support of effective, compassionate fair policing, and
value those who do a good job.) Surely thinking individuals had to know that some in our
society would become so desperate for justice in the absence of any, that they
would attempt to make up and execute their own justice.
But violence is not the way. I believe we have the power to make meaningful change in our society. All of us... every one of us!
But violence is not the way. I believe we have the power to make meaningful change in our society. All of us... every one of us!
We can continue to appeal to the conscience of America , but
we must understand that many in our country have no conscience. We can look to
our religious leaders, but find many of them are simply demagogues. We can look to our political leaders, but
discover that many are corrupt. We can and should pray, but God expects us to
do our part. The big question becomes,
“what is my part?”
We must begin to strategically use the massive amount of
dollars that pass through the black community to provide the leverage necessary
to effect social change. According to the 2016 Nielsen Report, black households
earning $75,000 or more per year are growing faster in size and influence than
whites in all income groups above $60,000. If we were an independent nation,
our spending power would place our Gross Domestic Product at the 15th
largest economy in the world. The report goes on to say that marketers need to
take note and market to this growing demographic. And that is where the power lies.
We must take those dollars and make them work for us. We can
effect social change by supporting those entities that are fair and equitable.
More importantly, we must deny our dollars to those entities that support the
continued subjugation of blacks and other people of color.
Do not be deceived, Black communities used to thrive,
boasting their own banks, grocery stores, theaters and service providers. But
in the early 20th Century the majority culture went to great lengths
to destroy this budding economy, as evidence by the destruction of Black Wall
Street in Tulsa Oklahoma and other such communities around the nation. They understood the power that economic
independence offers. In fact, that is why many of our political leaders are
preachers, or own their own businesses. This financial freedom allows an
individual to be authentic, without fear of economic ruin.
The next great movement will not be a political third party,
or a grassroots organizer, or even a movement such as Black Lives Matter. The
next harbinger of social change is the realization by blacks and people of
color that they already have the power to effect change and secure justice.
Once we look in our pockets and decide to strategically utilize our wealth, we will
be able to make meaningful, lasting social and economic change.
In the famous words of James Carville…”It’s the economy,
stupid!.”
Monday, July 11, 2016
Hate Speech Ruling America's Political Discourse
By Mildred Robertson
We are bombarded daily by a media that has lost its way;
filling our airwaves, newspapers and magazines with the opinion of this pundit
or that one. They pull out the rap sheet on any victim of a police shooting,
and post a mug shot rather than a graduation picture. News is rarely reported
these days, and if it is, it is because social media has forced it. This is the very
same media for whom the Founding Fathers crafted a special protection in our
constitution.
Words have created an image of the black man that makes the
world fear him, regardless of his station in life, the way he carries himself,
how much money he has or how much education he gains. It does not matter to
America. It does not matter to the police who have been called to protect and
serve, not just white America, but me too. That is why there is a “Black Lives
Matter” movement, because someone has to change the conversation.
Listen to the words. . . . There is no threat in them.
Saying “Black Lives Matter” does not mean that blue lives don’t
matter, because they do. It doesn’t mean that white lives don’t matter—they do.
It does not mean that brown lives don’t matter. Brown lives also matter. It would be wonderful for us to say “ALL LIVES MATTER” and for that to
include my black self, my son, my brother…but heretofore that has not been the
case.
The fact is, words matter, and America needs a new lexicon.
Words matter.
If that were not so, the Founding Fathers would not have put
specific protection in the Constitution for free speech. The Bible would not have stressed that talk
can do tremendous good or evil (Psalm
12:4) and that “A perverse man stirs
up dissension, and gossip separates close friends” (Proverbs 16:28).
Unfortunately, Americans have missed the nuances of how the
civil liberty of free speech is supposed to work for the greater good. Free
speech was granted to us not to allow perverted politicians to stir up
political turmoil and hatred among classes of people, but to ensure that even
the least powerful among us would have a voice.
That perversion, fueled by hate speech in the highest
political arena, has driven an unprecedented wedge between people of different
ethnicities, cultures genders, religions and sexual orientations. We are all
pushed to choose a side.
While the investigation is still underway, it appears that
some people in Dallas chose a side. I believe that the investigation will show
that the perpetrators of these acts were frustrated by the inaction of this
nation on the hundreds of unjustified killings of black men, women and children
for minor infractions that would probably not have resulted in arrest for a
white American. Please understand that I in no way condone the police killings
in Dallas; but I understand how a young, frustrated African American might
arrive at that decision.
It is a story we have heard over and over again, and the
result is always the same. We say a prayer.
We have a march. And next month, another black man, woman or child is
needlessly gunned down for no apparent reason, other than being black. And that voice that the Founding Fathers
protected for us is nowhere to be heard.
The fact is, words matter, and America needs a new lexicon.
Wednesday, June 8, 2016
IT’S NOT JUST DONALD TRUMP—THE MEDIA IS OUT OF CONTROL
By Mildred Robertson
June 8, 2016
June 8, 2016
I sat last night, and watched in disbelief as MSNBC and
other news outlets disenfranchised millions of voters by announcing Hillary
Clinton as the presumptive nominee for the Democratic Presidential Party. This election season has given pause to
thinking Americans. The system is broken. We must do something to bring this democracy
back into balance.
Don’t get me wrong. I am a Hillary supporter. I was pretty
sure she was going to win. Those who had been doing the math expected this as
the final outcome. But to call it before millions have even had the opportunity
to cast their vote is a total overreach on the part of the media.
This last turn of events is only one in a long list of
perversions to the election process that, I believe, is fueled by the media and
threatens our very freedom. First there was the 11-ring circus that was the
Republican Primary where the multiplicity of voices gave rise to the carnival
barker that is Donald Trump.
Had the Republicans been able to field an array of qualified
candidates who intelligently debated the serious issues that face our country,
we might have gotten a serious presidential contender that offered a realistic
alternative to the Democratic nominee. Instead, we got a presidential primary
reality series orchestrated by a television personality whose arrogance is
superseded only by his proclivity to lie and misrepresent both himself and his
opponents. This was facilitated by the media who used the entertainment value
of a Donald Trump candidacy to boost ratings, with little thought given to the
impact of this free coverage on the democratic process. No other candidate could
have afforded to buy the time that was freely given to Trump to espouse his stupidity,
hatred, bigotry and racism, which unfortunately, was embraced by millions of
Republicans.
For ratings, the media allowed Trump to suck up all the air
in the room, leaving no space for thoughtful, meaningful debate. Each news day
has been dominated by his most recent outrageous antics, with few media
questioning either the veracity or the news worthiness of his statements. Now,
in the 11th hour, some media have stepped up to challenge Trump, but
it is too little, too late.
And then there is the Democratic Primary. Neither Bernie nor
Hillary has gotten much attention, until now. Oh, there was momentary coverage
when someone attacked Hillary for this, that or the other. Bernie got some
airtime when he claimed unfairness in the Democratic Party Primary process, but
for the most part, neither has received much media play as it relates to their
basic platform.
For the media, it is all about personality and perception…seldom
about substance. If it is not about Benghazi, emails or Bill—if it doesn’t
involve raging against the system or millennials who are disenchanted with the
status quo, then it’s just not going to get airtime. Media coverage has focused on what separates
us, what vexes us rather than issues that will impact our future and determine
our path in a world facing many serious challenges.
Our nation must address issues associated with global
warming, nuclear threats, social unrest, aging seniors, childcare, equality for
women, minorities and others outside social norms. We have no time for “must see TV.”
The freedoms given the media were provided to ensure the
free exchange of ideas, a fundamental tenet of a free society. As one trained
as a journalist, I understand the sacred nature of this provision in our
Constitution. But what the modern day media has done with the freedoms afforded
it by our Constitution is nothing short of sacrilegious.
I certainly fear government intrusion into the inner
workings of the media. But somehow, someone must determine what is true
journalism and what is entertainment. It is, I believe, unethical for the media
to cause millions of Americans to feel that their votes are irrelevant. When
ratings become more important than democracy…when being the first to break a
story is more important than the impact that breaking news will have on
millions of Americans, it appears to me that the media have fallen short of the
lofty expectations of our Founding Fathers.
In journalism school they taught us that there were some
situations where it was not alright to speak. We don’t generally print the
names of rape victims, or children involved in crimes. We don’t broadcast the
name of a murder or accident victim before the family is notified. We don’t
yell “fire” in a crowded theater.
Isn’t that what happened last night? Could this announcement
not have waited until the polls closed today?
Of course it could, but not if you wanted to be first.
It is my prayer that those states casting their ballots
today will not be deterred by media whose desire for ratings is the sum total
of what they have become. I hope that voters cast their ballots despite the
unethical, ratings hungry behavior of some media. Every vote counts, regardless
of what the media says. It must for our democracy to stand.
Monday, April 25, 2016
Election 2016 – Hard Choices
Let’s be adult – it’s not about marbles
By Mildred Robertson
By Mildred Robertson
I am a Hillary supporter. I
believe, that with all her knots and bruises, she is the best person in the
field to follow the path President Obama has so appropriately charted for
America. Hillary believes what I believe. It is not something that I have to turn
to the media pundits to figure out.
She believes in universal health
care. I know that, because I heard her
voice call for it, first, long and loud, back when her husband first took
office. Her record will show that she
has an understanding of the impact of things like child care, pay equality and
paid leave on not just the women of our nation, but our entire economy.
She believes a woman should have
sovereignty over her own body, and that every human being in this country
should be treated with respect. She
knows the Black community often doesn’t get a fair shake when it comes to the
legal system, employment, education, and a myriad of other factors that help to
continue and widen the economic gap between people of color and the rest of
America and she wants to do something about it. She knows that Social Security
and Medicare and Medicaid are not charity, but an essential part of what makes
us a civilized nation and provides an essential safety net for countless
Americans who otherwise would languish in utter poverty.
She knows what it takes to lead.
She has done it in the chambers of Congress and in the board rooms of countless
heads of state world-wide. Whether it is foreign policy, health-care, the support of historically black colleges
and universities, voting rights, or sensible gun laws, Hillary and I agree on
many things.
She is Hillary, not Bill. She did
not sleep with Monica Lewinsky.
She is Hillary, not Bill, she did
not institute the current prison system.
Does she always tell the
truth? I don’t know. Do you? Does she get paid well for what she does?
Certainly! Isn’t that your goal in life as well?
I do know that if the media dug
around in my past as they have hers, they would probably come up with a thing
or two that would make me look somewhat unattractive. I do not always make the
right choice. Sometimes, over a 30-year span, I get new information or a new
perspective, and sometimes I simply change my mind. How about you?
I want to vote for Hillary in
November. That doesn’t mean that I think she is perfect, but I believe she is
the best prepared and positioned candidate to be the 2016 standard bearer for
Americans who want to move this country forward.
However, if Hillary does not win
the Democratic nomination…if Bernie Sanders comes out victorious in July and
successfully captures the nomination, I will NOT take my marbles and go home. I
will gladly walk into the voting booth on November 8 and cast my vote for Bernie
Sanders.
I understand that Sanders speaks to many Progressives in a way he does not speak to me. I understand the
fervor. After all, I was a die-hard Obama fan when folks were saying “Obama
who?” I know what it means to see something in a candidate that no one else
sees, and to passionately believe that the person can make a difference. So I
get it.
What I don’t get, is the decision
by many Sanders supporters to vote for Sanders or no one. When you look at it
up close, you could change all the “she believes” in my previous statements,
and write “he believes” and there would be very little daylight between the
two.
The opposition is another story
entirely. Any Republican candidate put forth thus far spells disaster for this
country and every part of the Progressive agenda. For any Progressive supporter
to opt out of this election because his or her preferred candidate fails to
gain the Party nomination is immature, short-sighted and dangerous.
Remain in play.
Defeat the REAL enemy.
That enemy’s name is neither Bernie
nor Hillary.
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