Citi Trends

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seeing her on msnbc damn near being brought to tears talking about daca is so disturbing man... it's like we are in some weird sick game

I be trying tell people and explain to the older Black generation, that those of us under 30 ain't seeing nothing but a dark hole of despair. Luckily my mom works with young black people everyday so she sees the despair..

I used to have dreams of doing things and now I am like fukk that, I'ma have to do what I gotta do so the next generation can go have dreams and go about their aspirations in a pro-social way and won't be lied to.

The millennial generation is going to have to be the new civil rights generation because Gen Xers fukked it up because of the big influx of capital out of the Civil Rights Movements glamoured everyone.

I look at as a cry for dependence.

A lot of older black folks are of the mindset that because they survived/maneuvered or were awarded certain privileges then they have no reason to actually help lead the younger generation and that we should figure it out on our own.
Yet, they still want us dependent on them for guidance and lecturing. But because of that mindset we have become detached and uncompromising for a lot of them, which is why you get the “they have no respect for their elders” comments.

Now here comes these other groups of people who are trying to latch onto our struggle and use our momentum. They see them as some downtrodden helpless strays who they can be the saviors of and receive the recognition they desire.

They think “now these people are REALLY in trouble”. And just see us as being lazy.
 

xoxodede

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I hope people continue to call and write letters/fax letters. I saw this CBC article yesterday and was disgusted -- cause they stay on the sidelines for ADOS.

https://www.dallasweekly.com/opinion/article_b71e1026-441a-11e9-9585-5b89b1d4a882.html

COMMENTARY: The Congressional Black Caucus: Not Always in Headlines, but Never on the Sidelines
  • By Julianne Malveaux, NNPA Newswire Contributor

What does the Congressional Black Caucus do? It takes Majority Whip James Clyburn to make it understandable. "It's not only what we make happen, but what we stop from happening," Clyburn told a standing room only crowd at the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation's Black History Month Celebration on February 26. His words are instructive for folks who get their news from sound bites and tweets. The legislative process is rarely fully televised, and those who put brakes on nonsense proposals never make the headlines. The February 26 event made it clear, in celebration, that the Congressional Black Caucus is often effective on the front lines and the sidelines.

The 116th Congress includes fifty-five members of the Congressional Black Caucus, an incredibly diverse group of African Americans who approach Black liberation (although some might not use the term) differently. Among the fifty-five, there are five who now chair House committees, including Congressional representatives Maxine Waters (D-CA), who chairs the Financial Services Committee, Eddie Bernice Johnson (D-TX) who chairs the Science, Space, and Technology Committee, Robert "Bobby" Scott (D-VA) who chairs the Education and Labor Committee, Bennie Thompson (D-MS) who chairs the Homeland Security Committee, and Elijah Cummings (D-MD) who chairs the Government Oversight Committee. Cummings was the only one of the five who was not present, understandably so when one reflected on his leadership in the hearing that examined Michael Cohen, the jail-bound attorney who formerly represented the Nation's Prevaricator-in-Chief.


Photo by Mark Mahoney

Each of them talked about the challenges they face in their roles, especially the fact that progressive legislation that leaves the House of Representatives is often unlikely to pass the Republican-dominated United States Senate and the obstreperous Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (my words, not theirs). But each also talked about issues they will address in their leadership. Congresswoman Waters can subpoena tax returns and bank records. She spoke of the many ways banking boards lack diversity and plans to establish a diversity and inclusion subcommittee as part of the Financial Services Committee. Bennie Thompson and Eddie Bernice Johnson talked about directing money to HBCUs and about the ways that some universities are able to get the majority of federal dollars. Congressman Bobby Scott intrigued me when he talked about the way the media is interested in drama, not substance. On a day when he dealt with both the minimum wage and higher education legislation, most of the questions he got from the media were about Blackface and other scandals in Virginia.

The search for the salacious has been the theme of the 45 administration. One does not have to search far to find payments to prostitutes, pandering to potentates, and other chicanery. The real trickery, however, is happening when our regulatory structure is being decimated, when payday lending rules are hanged by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to make predatory lending easier and more exploitative; when education regulations are being changed to make access for Black and other students of color even harder than it is now; when labor regulations are being changed to exploit unions. The federal minimum wage, at $7.25, has not increased in a decade. As such, the Raise The Wage Act should be making headlines. Instead, all cameras, all eyes are on the scandals that dominate this administration.


Photo by Mark Mahoney

In celebrating the Congressional Black Caucus, I'm not touting their perfection, because the collective caucus is flawed as any other organization. My biggest bone to pick with Caucus members is all of them won't sign or align themselves with HR 40, the reparations legislation that Congressman John Conyers (D-MI) introduced thirty years ago. Many say the reparations conversation is impractical. From my perspective, if you are interested in economic justice, you must be interested in restorative and reparatory justice for the descendants of the enslaved people who built this country. That means developing public policy to close the wealth gap. That means developing public policy to increase access to education. That means educating a nation with leaders and teachers who seem to think it is okay to run around in Blackface, hand children cotton bolls or more alarmingly, have children (in South Carolina) actually pick cotton and sing slave songs. That means examining the ways that racist (yes, racist) legislation has exacerbated, not closed the wealth gap.


Photo by Mark Mahoney
Our Congressional Black Caucus and, indeed, the Democratic Party that all of them belong to, is flawed, but there are accomplishments, as well. The challenge for us is to lift up the accomplishments amidst a culture that values scandal instead of achievement.

Julianne Malveaux is an author and economist. Her latest book “Are We Better Off? Race, Obama and Public Policy” is available via www.amazon.com for booking, wholesale inquiries or for more info visit www.juliannemalveaux.com
 

xoxodede

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It's really important that we start reaching out to ADOS scholars /historians and asking them to lend a voice to the movement. They are VITAL to the cause. They should be the ones writing articles and talking to the media as well.

I have personally reached out to these two historians asking them to lend a hand - and help pitch articles to the media in support of ADOS.

They Were Her Property | Yale University Press

Out of the House of Bondage: The Transformation of the Plantation Household | Duke University History Department

This week I have a call with my fave: http://www.drdainarameyberry.com/
 

CASHAPP

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I be trying tell people and explain to the older Black generation, that those of us under 30 ain't seeing nothing but a dark hole of despair. Luckily my mom works with young black people everyday so she sees the despair..

I used to have dreams of doing things and now I am like fukk that, I'ma have to do what I gotta do so the next generation can go have dreams and go about their aspirations in a pro-social way and won't be lied to.

The millennial generation is going to have to be the new civil rights generation because Gen Xers fukked it up because of the big influx of capital out of the Civil Rights Movements glamoured everyone.

I look at as a cry for dependence.

A lot of older black folks are of the mindset that because they survived/maneuvered or were awarded certain privileges then they have no reason to actually help lead the younger generation and that we should figure it out on our own.
Yet, they still want us dependent on them for guidance and lecturing. But because of that mindset we have become detached and uncompromising for a lot of them, which is why you get the “they have no respect for their elders” comments.

Now here comes these other groups of people who are trying to latch onto our struggle and use our momentum. They see them as some downtrodden helpless strays who they can be the saviors of and receive the recognition they desire.

They think “now these people are REALLY in trouble”. And just see us as being lazy.

I'm gonna be honest. Honestly I do not respect the older generation that much at all and its for reasons that both of you kind of summed up. That includes Generation X AND the Baby Boomers.

In the past year alone I learned about term life insurance...i never knew about this or was taught it by anyone at all and always assumed all life insurance was expensive. I didn't know you can have short term life insurance plans for like $1 million and pay less than $600 a year. I had relatives too obsessed with watching cable that cost way more than that and ignoring the youth then as you say then calling us lazy.

In addition to learning about that life insurance, I also learned about roth IRAs, 529 savings plan for young kids and how alot of white folks been using that for ages to fund their kids going to school. With the roth iras its not just simply having one...alot of people do not also know that you can have someone whether that is your son, daughter, neice or nephew as a BENEFICIARY on your roth ira, in addition to creating one for themselves. Then there are the health savings accounts(HSAs). All of that encompasses lifetime inheritance, college savings, retirement savings, health savings...all things that help with generational wealth. None of which I learned from when I went through school and the couple years at community college. Only thing I gotta do more research on is land ownership/real estate.

All of this I learned through my own research through the internet whether that was on Youtube, financial websites, or the Breakfast Club. I plan to get involved in all that I mentioned before I turn 30 in a couple years and fix the mistakes and lack of foresight my elders had and put my sister, my niece and all my younger cousins on game.
 

AlainLocke

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I'm gonna be honest. Honestly I do not respect the older generation that much at all and its for reasons that both of you kind of summed up. That includes Generation X AND the Baby Boomers.

In the past year alone I learned about term life insurance...i never knew about this or was taught it by anyone at all and always assumed all life insurance was expensive. I didn't know you can have short term life insurance plans for like $1 million and pay less than $600 a year. I had relatives too obsessed with watching cable that cost way more than that and ignoring the youth then as you say then calling us lazy.

In addition to learning about that life insurance, I also learned about roth IRAs, 529 savings plan for young kids and how alot of white folks been using that for ages to fund their kids going to school. With the roth iras its not just simply having one...alot of people do not also know that you can have someone whether that is your son, daughter, neice or nephew as a BENEFICIARY on your roth ira, in addition to creating one for themselves. Then there are the health savings accounts(HSAs). All of that encompasses lifetime inheritance, college savings, retirement savings, health savings...all things that help with generational wealth. None of which I learned from when I went through school and the couple years at community college. Only thing I gotta do more research on is land ownership/real estate.

All of this I learned through my own research through the internet whether that was on Youtube, financial websites, or the Breakfast Club. I plan to get involved in all that I mentioned before I turn 30 in a couple years and fix the mistakes and lack of foresight my elders had and put my sister, my niece and all my younger cousins on game.

I don't think its their fault though, like I am not mad at them. All the leaders in their generation were killed and White people let us have something, even though it was temporary and the Gen Xers have nothing. We are a young people and are isolated from capital and White people, we don't know what we don't know. And it has been proven that we do good with what we have, we know how to save money, we just don't have a lot of it.The true crime that they committed was being greedy and being blinded by access to capital and not continuing what the Civil Rights Generation started.

They put finance before politics and acted like finance was gonna save us. White people have money because they do good politics. Not because tthey work hard, or they are smart or they know about finances.

A lot of the Black politics of the old, seems to be built around that idea that we are just ignorant and don't know any better, not built around the idea that White people oppress us and that we are an underclass.
 

xoxodede

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I just saw this thread:

And honestly, I think Trump is getting reelected.

America set to close international immigration offices

This man is not playing. He has shaken so much shyt up. He is stopping illegal and legal immigration -- and making it harder to become a citizen or even come over here.

Between this and the wall - he has done what a lot of whites (and Blacks) wanted him to do.

What do yall think?
 

AlainLocke

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I just saw this thread:

And honestly, I think Trump is getting reelected.

America set to close international immigration offices

This man is not playing. He has shaken so much shyt up. He is stopping illegal and legal immigration -- and making it harder to become a citizen or even come over here.

Between this and the wall - he has done what a lot of whites (and Blacks) wanted him to do.

What do yall think?

I think Trump is the fascist dictator that most of White people deep down inside want. He is stupid as shyt but he's rich. Old as fukk but acts like a kid. Every word he says is a lie but he is brutally honest about where his loyalties lie.

Trump is Obama's karma for being one of the worst presidents in American history and I am not saying that because he didn't do right by us, he didn't do right by anybody. If Obama was a White man, he would be dragged for being a shytty president, yeah I said it. If Obama pushed for what he said he was gonna do, all that wonderful Hope and Change shyt, instead of being Bill Clinton 2.0, the Democrats could've had this country on lock. Not only did he not do what he said he was gonna do, he tried to run for a third term by proxy by throwing his weight behind Hilary Clinton.

Obama continued the wars. Obama bailed out the banks and the auto industry. Obama allowed wealth and income inequality to sky rocket and acted like his unemployment numbers were stellar, but everybody that pays attention to politics understands that the official U-3 unemployment statistic that get released does not account for those that are under employed, seasonal employees, part-time and those that given up looking for work. U-6 is a better representation of unemployment and it is always double of U-3.

Trump is doing what every failing liberal democracy does, close ranks. No more immigration. No more caring about the working class and poor people. No more caring about the lives of racial minorities, especially your designated underclass. Worship and glorification of "traditional" masculinity -gotta be tough and strong and ruthless.

It isn't a good thing for us because it means we are gonna be starved to death as the designated underclass. The increase in political violence between literal Nazis and anti-fascists is not a good thing. It means that we are close to all out political chaos.

But this isn't happening just in the USA, but all over the Western World. Liberal Democracy is a failure because capitalism runs it and capitalism is unstable and unfair by design. Liberal Democracy is the computer and capitalism is the operating system, you can't have a stable society with an unstable economic system.

I wouldn't be surprised if there was a domestic terroristic attack in 2020 or if there was an assassination.
 
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