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ThisWeekGhana.com becomes the D-O-T
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Commentary
We invite commentaries from writers all over. The subject is about
Ghana and the world. We reserve the right to accept or reject
submissions, but we are not necessarily responsible for the opinions
expressed in articles we publish......MORE
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March on Washington 2013 brings
liberal distortion
Star Parker
The liberals who control the event have little interest in
serious thought about why there have been failures.
Looking over the program for the festivities commemorating the
50th anniversary of the civil rights March on Washington, and
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s famous "I Have a Dream" speech,
it's hard to not feel sober about the whole thing.
I say sober because there is good news and bad news.
What's the good news?
There has been monumental progress in the quality of life, on
average, that black Americans lead today.
The bad news?
Fifty years is a long time, and the progress is not nearly what
it should be or could have been.
Unfortunately, the program for the "50th Anniversary March on
Washington," posted on the website of that name, shows that
liberals who control the event have little interest in serious
thought about why there have been failures. Needless to say, the
event is devoid of a single black conservative spokesperson.
Few would have dreamed in 1963 that within 50 years a black man
would be president of the United States -- let alone twice
elected.
We've got black millionaires, even a couple black billionaires.
The inherent stigma of race has changed dramatically.
According to a recent Gallup poll, 87 percent of Americans
approve of marriage between blacks and whites, compared to only
4 percent who approved in 1959. Among white Americans, 84
percent approve of black-white marriage today, compared to just
17 percent in 1969.
Institutional racism is no longer legal in America, and
acceptance of black Americans as every bit as human and normal
as white Americans is in much better shape today than 50 years
ago. But the overall picture of black America is not good.
According to the Census Bureau, the median net worth of black
households in 2010 was $4,955 compared to a median white
household net worth of $110,000.
Median black household income in 2011 was $32,229 compared to
median white household income of $52,214.
Comparing median household income by ethnicity -- white,
Hispanic, Asian, black -- it's lowest for blacks.
Black liberals want us to believe that huge economic disparities
persist today between black Americans and the rest of the nation
because of racism and continuing civil rights injustices.
Fifty years ago, blacks faced major institutional barriers to
living in America as free, normal citizens. As result of the
civil rights movement and passage of the Civil Rights Act in
1964, barriers that allowed differential treatment under the law
and permitted institutional racism were dismantled.
Of course, there are still individuals with us who carry racial
prejudice in their hearts.
But to suggest, as liberals do, that institutionalized racial
injustice explains today's disparities in educational and
economic achievement between black and white America is to
assure that disparities will continue and that the real problems
will never be addressed.
The "50th Anniversary March on Washington" does our nation a
disservice by going beyond just commemorating a great
achievement and suggesting that disappointing progress is
because that achievement was incomplete. Organizers suggest that
blacks lag behind today because many "continue to suffer civil
and economic injustices."
Not true. Black Americans are today free.
It may be fun to come to Washington to remember and celebrate.
But the answers for blacks today are not in Washington. They are
in black homes, black schools, black hearts and black minds.
We need today a Personal Responsibility Movement. If it had
gotten started in 1964 with the Civil Rights Act's passage,
blacks would be in far better shape today. Instead, too many
turned to government for programs.
It's why increasing numbers of black Americans are now looking
to a conservative agenda that honesty examines and looks to fix
what is broken in black communities and correctly identifies
these as mostly moral rather than political challenges.
Star Parker
Urban
Cure
August 26, 2013
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More commentaries |
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Chinese Illegal Gold
Miners in Ghana
Commentary, Aug 26,
Ghanadot - According to the Ghana Minerals and
Mining Act 2006, foreigners were prohibited from
small-scale gold mining on plots under 25 acres. Guangxi
miners usually pool capital together from family savings
and bank loans or even usury in China to form a small
company with an initial capital input of about
US$500,000. This contrasts with capital-intensive
Western mining companies in Ghana .......More |
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God will also judge the
justices -Kabral Blay Amihere
Joy, Aug 27, Ghanadot -
Chair of the National Media Commission (NMC) Kabral Blay
Amihere says judges of Supreme Court hearing an Election
Petition should be mindful that their verdict on
Thursday would also be judged by God....
More
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Nigerian schools ordered to
shut after extremists kill 30
Guardian, July 08, Ghanadot - Ibrahim Gaidam,
governor of Yobe, issued the order after visiting
students with burns and gunshot wounds from the attack
outside Potiskum, the state's second largest town, on
Saturday. Islamist extremists set a dormitory ablaze,
burning some students alive. Last month militants
attacked two schools, killing 16 students and two
teachers.....More
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Deposit travelling documents with SC –
Party leaders told
Ghanavibe, Aug 26, Ghanadot - Neenyi Kofi
Taboe, Agona East District Director of the National Commission
for Civic Education (NCCE), has suggested that leaders of the
National Democratic Congress (NDC) and New Patriotic Party (NPP)
deposit their travelling documents with the Supreme Court prior
to the verdict.....This he said, was to assure Ghanaians that
they (party leaders) would not foment troubles if the verdict of
the Supreme Court on the 2012 Election Petition did not favour
them and run away to foreign countries.
.. ....More
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