NAACP joins NECAP protest


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Providence NAACPUsing the NECAP test as a high stakes graduation requirement has been challenged by students, teachers, parents, education activists and civil libertarians. Now you can add the NAACP to the list as well.

Providence NAACP President Jim Vincent told the Board of Education last night that he, too, is opposed to using this test as a graduation requirement.

In a statement today, he said:

The NAACP Providence Branch supports the NECAP test as a tool to evaluate student performance and progress but it should NOT be used as a graduation requirement. Last year, 40% of Rhode Island and over 60% of Providence 11th graders “failed the test”.  These high numbers suggest that there is something deeply wrong with a system which has failed to adequately prepare a significant number of its students after 11 years of schooling.  There are numerous examples of other states with similar demographics whose students perform much better. No remedial or quick fix solutions will address the fundamental problem of a system that needs reform before children can adequately learn.  The NAACP understands the value of a high school diploma and that a student receiving one should at least have minimal English and math skills. For that reason, we are not in favor of social promotions, however, we are also not in favor of penalizing students who have not received a solid educational foundation. In summary, use the NECAP as a tool but not as a requirement.  Spend more time correcting the root cause of our students poor performance and less time creating what would be worse for our students… no high school diploma!

VIDEO: NAACP road trip to the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington


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The Providence NAACP chapter hosted a bus trip down to Washington DC for the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom where Martin Luther King gave his nation-changing “I have a dream” speech. Here’s a half hour documentary on the trip:

Acknowledgements:

Big thanks to the Providence NAACP for inviting me, to the Rhode Island Progressive Democrats for paying for my trip an to the International Socialist Organization for loaning me their video camera.

Providence NAACP

On the road with the NAACP for March on Washington 50th


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Onna Monia-John holds a banner that recently George Lima, a recently-deceased former East Providence representative and member of the Tuskegee Airmen brought home from the original March on Washington 50 years ago.
Onna Monia-John holds a banner that George Lima, a recently-deceased former East Providence representative and member of the Tuskegee Airmen brought home from the original March on Washington 50 years ago.

There were more than 50 of us scrambling around the Stop and Shop parking lot Friday night waiting for a bus to Washington DC for the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington and Martin Luther King’s “I have a dream” speech by the time the store manager came outside.

For whatever reason, he thought I might be able to give him the scoop. I’m assuming it’s because I was armed with a big, expensive and official-looking video camera but maybe it’s worth noting that I was also one of the few white people there?

IMG_4388
Jim Vincent, executive director of the Providence NAACP.

Most were from the Providence NAACP, who invited the larger community to join them and other New England chapters in a caravan of buses down the I-95 corridor to mark the moment so often recalled as a turning point in the Civil Rights Movement.

Our mission was part celebration of this historic occasion, but it was also a call to action. Maybe as many as 100,000 of us would come from all over the country to meet on the Mall, where Martin Luther King gave his inspiring “I have a dream” speech 50 years ago this Wednesday. Trayvon Martin has become the face of the modern civil rights movement more so than Barack Obama.

Road Trip

IMG_4411Our bus – one of those private sector tour buses that bring people to and from the casinos and Newport and elsewhere – fit all 54 of us somewhat uncomfortably. Only one person in addition to our driver didn’t have to share a seat. There was a bathroom in the rear that seasoned bus travelers know to avoid sitting near on long trips.

About half of us were NAACP members. The other half were either unaffiliated activists, interested people and/or members of the Rhode Island Progressive Democrats or the local chapter of the International Socialist Organization. I didn’t take an official demographic census, but I think about a dozen of us were white. Six of of the white people on our bus, including me, sat in in three rows of seats together near the front.

I sat with an older white guy named Jay Vasques, who is currently unemployed and works on organizing homeless people in New Bedford, where he lives. Vasques went to college with Lauren Niedel, a member of the Rhode Island Progressive Democrats who sat behind us. She sat next to Nancy St. Germain, also a Progressive Democrat who helped the NAACP organize the trip. Sometimes we self-segregate for pretty understandable reasons.

IMG_4405There were several different families on our bus. Joe Buchanan, a one-man grassroots political force from the South Side of Providence, took his grandson. “Yeah, you can ask me some questions,” he said when I asked to interview him. “You might not like some of my answers.” I did like his answers. He told me it didn’t matter so much what happens this weekend but rather what we all do when we get back to Rhode Island.

Pauline Perkins-Moye, of Newport, brought her grandchildren and several of their friends, as well as her 50-year-old son who was born two months after the first speech. “Martin Luther King had a dream and two months later I was born,” he joked, while his mom explained why, being seven months pregnant, she could only be at the first March in spirit.

That was as close as anyone on our bus had been to the first speech. A white guy named Richard from Worcester on the bus behind us was the only one I met on the way down who had. In the Stop and Shop parking lot in Providence he handed out audio copies of King’s speech.

IMG_4401We watched two movies on the way down. ISO members brought a documentary about Howard Zinn’s “A People’s History of the United States.” They also encouraged us to become involved in local labor issues and invited people to a new book club called “Black Liberation and Socialism” that starts Thursday, September 5 at Patrick’s Pub in Providence.

The NAACP showed a powerful documentary called Broken On All Sides, about the American criminal justice system’s institutional bias against African Americans. The movie is closely related to The New Jim Crow, which is both the title of a best selling book about the racial disparity in prison populations and it’s also becoming a catchall expression for the ways in which conservative political policy on crime, education and social investment continue to make racial equality a dream rather than a reality.

The two movies were an interesting juxtaposition as the New Jim Crow would likely be the follow-up chapter to a People’s History. Almost everyone I spoke with on the bus trip down and all weekend long felt that America had done well to institute the easy parts of Martin Luther King’s dream, doing away with bigoted laws and public displays of discrimination. But that a more insidious form of racism has arisen since around the time that Ronald Reagan called ketchup a vegetable and his wife waged a war on drug users.

Washington DC

RFK Stadium parking lot
RFK Stadium parking lot

We pulled into RFK Stadium, the football stadium on the outskirts of the city where the Washington Redskins play, just in time for sunrise. We had been on the bus since about 9 the night before and while few of us got any decent sleep we were all happy to stretch our legs. There were boxes of free t-shirts everywhere and a few food trucks and port-a-johns on the far end of the parking lot, but no sinks or coffee.

A man from Boston seems quite pleased with his new shirt. There were many Trayvon Martin signs at the march.
A man from Boston seems quite pleased with his new shirt.

In short order most everyone was wearing matching yellow NAACP shirts, had caffeine headaches and bad breath, and this was before our half mile walk to completely overwhelm the local subway on our way into the city. It was a testament to the occasion that our spirits remained so high. One of my favorite parts of the entire trip was when a preacher from Cambridge, Massachusetts started belting out my favorite songs on the Metro.

“People get ready/ There’s a train a’ comin/ Don’t need no ticket/ Just get on board”

Upon arriving downtown Mary Gwam, Leah Williams and I, who met on the bus through Twitter the night before, decided to break off from the group to find some coffee. We stumbled upon a nearby deli that was doing some of

Me and Mary Gwann, on our way to the National Mall for the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington.
Me and Mary Gwann.

the catering for some of the speakers. There were hundreds of boxes waiting to be filled with sandwiches and chips. We offered to help them do the delivery, but when that didn’t work out we walked the long way to the Mall.

Both of Gwann and Williams live in South Providence and have been active in trying to re-open the Davey Lopes public pool. The right to learn to swim isn’t something that resonates very loudly with white liberals, but it’s a fine example of the nuance of how the New Jim Crow works. The public pools is more than just a place to learn to swim, it effectively serves as summer childcare for working parents in South Providence.

The Mall

IMG_4436If events on the National Mall such as Saturday’s appear on TV as if the crowd is a single organism acting in unison, from the inside it looks more like chaos. The closer we got to the Mall, the more the crowd size swelled. Soon enough we were inside a human swarm, with people marching and chanting and walking and protesting in every which direction.

Directly outside the gates, all sorts of people shared their message – from Raging Grannies singing anti-war protest songs to raging Christians, likening abortion to genocide and lynchings – with poster-sized pictures. A young man from New York used a megaphone to say, “We don’t need another march, we need a revolution.” Another young man from North Carolina used his megaphone to say, “We are all Trayvon Martin.”

There were as many Trayvon Martin signs and t-shirts around the reflecting pool of the Mall as there were of Martin Luther King or the NAACP. If nothing else, it seems as if the young black man in a hoodie didn’t die in vain. He has become a martyr for the modern civil rights movement.

"We are all Trayvon. The whole system is guilty."
“We are all Trayvon. The whole system is guilty.”

The closer one got to the Lincoln Memorial, the harder it became to negotiate the crowd. It would be a mistake to think anyone at the event could offer a decent crowd estimate. Those on the inside of this activist organism see only the few hundred people in their immediate vicinity and it’s almost impossible to see or get anywhere else. The Park Service flew over the crowd in helicopters I’m assuming for the purposes of counting and not monitoring the crowd.

By the time the speakers began, I had lost everyone I knew from Rhode Island so I decided to make my way up front to see if my big fancy video camera would allow me to penetrate the police line separating the public from the press, which somewhat fittingly, is located between the people in the crowd and the people with the power.

As you may expect, having a large, expensive-looking video camera and being white at a civil rights rally is every bit as good as having an actual press pass. I walked through security four times.  Once I did so just to show a college blogger how it’s done and my grand finale was sneaking by a guard who had just watched me get escorted out only minutes earlier. I did that one just as a joke, which lost all it’s humor when a black man was screamed at by the same Park Service Police officer for doing the same.

Attorney General Eric Holder said he would not be the nation’s top cop and Barack Obama would not be president if it weren’t for Martin Luther King and his dream. And California Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi said she was at the March on Washington 50 years ago and wondered who at today’s event go on to become the speaker of the House. This is the part of King’s dream that has been realized: in 2013, a black man or a woman can rise to the top.

Attorney General Eric Holder speaking from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial.
Attorney General Eric Holder speaking from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial.

Al Sharpton, on the other hand, spoke for the people who have not yet realized the dream. And it’s very interesting to note that he parsed it as a class struggle rather than a racial struggle. The New Jim Crow actually targets people of all colors, he seemed to be saying.

50 years ago Dr. King said that America gave blacks a check that bounced in the bank of justice and was returned marked insufficient funds. Well we’ve redeposited the check. But guess what? It bounced again. But when looked at the reason this time it was marked stopped payment.

They had the money to bail out banks. They had the money to bail out major corporations. They had the the money to give tax benefits to the rich. They had the money for the one percent. But when it comes to Head Start, when it comes to municipal workers, when it comes to our teachers, they stopped the check. We gonna make you make the check good or we gonna close down the bank.

Perhaps Congressman John Lewis, of Atlanta, Georgia, is the closest political connection America has to the March on Washington. He was there on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial when King gave his speech. Politico reports King told Lewis to tone down his rhetoric. 50 years and 40 arrests later, he spoke in very revolutionary terms for a Democratic congressman.

Back in 1963, we hadn’t heard about the internet. But we used what we had to bring about a nonviolent revolution (applause) And I say to all of the young people that you have to push and to pull to make America what America should be for all of us.

I got arrested 40 times during the sixties … Beat and left bloody and unconscious. But I’m not tired, I’m not weary, I’m not prepared to sit down and give up. I am ready to fight and continue to fight, and you must fight.

Coming home

Many of us were strangers on the way down to DC but by the way back we had become brothers and sisters. We exchanged email addresses and friended each other on Facebook. Led by a woman with the most beautiful voice, we all joined in singing some old protest spirituals together.

“We shall overcome,” we all sang together.

Front and center on the Mall for the 50th anniversary party of the March on Washington.
Front and center on the Mall for the 50th anniversary party of the March on Washington.

NAACP, RI Prog Dems and me celebrate MLK together


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Something nice is starting in Rhode Island tonight and here’s hoping it lasts longer than just the weekend. A bunch of lily white liberals like me and some members of the Rhode Island Progressive Democrats are jumping on a bus paid for in part by area chapters of the NAACP and we’re all traveling together down to DC to celebrate Martin Luther King, the Civil Rights Movement and the 50th anniversary of the “I have a dream” speech.

It’s one small road trip for fans of MLK and equality, and hopefully the beginning of a longer journey for the Providence NAACP and the Rhode Island Progressive Democrats, who – whether working collaboratively or not – are united in wanting to see King’s dream become a reality in Rhode Island and elsewhere.

Ebenezer Baptist Church, Atlanta
Ebenezer Baptist Church, Atlanta

 

 

NAACP sponsors bus trip to ‘Dream’ speech anniversary


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march on washingtonIt was 50 years ago this summer that Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. reinvigorated America’s sense of enduring betterment with his game-changing “I have a dream” speech and you can be there for the anniversary in Washington DC with – not only President Barack Obama – but also your sisters and brothers of the NAACP Providence Branch and others in the Ocean State progressive movement.

The NAACP is sponsoring a bus trip, and inviting the greater progressive community, to the anniversary celebration of Dr. King’s inspirational speech on the Mall in the nation’s capitol.

“The COST per person is $50 FOR 50 YEARS!!” said Jim Vincent, chapter executive director in an email. “The true cost is $85 per person but the NAACP Providence Branch will be subsidizing each person who travels wit us on this historic occasion!! IT’S THAT IMPORTANT!!!”

For more information, email Nancy St. Germain at nstgermain3@verizon.net.

The bus leaves from the Stop and Shop on Branch Avenue in Providence on Friday, August 23 at 11 pm and returns Saturday at approximately 6 pm.

Just in case you need a refresher on how truly powerful King’s speech was, here it is in full:

RI Progress Report: Raimondo Questions Chafee’s Leadership on 38 Studios Loan


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Narrative of the day: Treasurer Gina Raimondo blamed her former pension reform partner Gov. Linc Chafee for not paying close enough attention to the risky loan guarantee that state made to Curt Schilling and 38 Studios.

She told the Providence Journal, “A company does not run out of money overnight. A company is not a year behind [on] product development overnight. So the question is: how has the state been monitoring this investment; how and what has the governor and his staff, in conjunction with the EDC … how have they been working the deal?”

It’s a legitimate question, but it also shines a bright light on the growing rift between Raimondo and Chafee, who may end up squaring off against each other for the governor’s office in 2014.

Raimondo said she has sought information from the governor’s office and has not yet received a reply … we know the feeling, as RI Future is still waiting to hear back from your staff on a weeks-old request for an interview with you!

Ian Donnis on Anthony Gemma’s positive early season poll numbers against incumbent David Cicilline: “That’s like assuming some guy currently batting .340 is going to maintain his excellence through a grueling a 162-game baseball schedule.”

Look for many to use the 38 Studios debacle as a reason to remake the EDC.

The NAACP, an organization near and dear to state Sen. Harold Metts, has endorsed marriage equality. Last I checked, Sen. Metts is against it.

 

 

The Passing of Robert L. Carter, and School Desegregation in the Metropolitan North


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Robert Carter

Robert CarterI was saddened to hear of the death of Judge Robert L. Carter yesterday, at the age of 94.  The passing of this great generation of civil rights reformers (Fred Shuttlesworth and Derrick Bell are gone too) was of course inevitable — Dr. King would be in his 80s, if he were still with us.  But studying their words and work, one is reminded of just how limited our visions of justice are these days.

I had the great privilege of spending a week with Carter a few years ago, as a participant in an NEH seminar on civil rights up at Harvard.  He was sharp, passionate and inspiring, as he regaled us with story after story about his legal work with Thurgood Marshall and the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, and walked us through his informative memoir, “A Matter of Law.”  If I remember correctly, I was a bit combative in some of our exchanges.  Carter insisted on the transformative potential of school desegregation cases in the urban North, which he constantly pushed from within the NAACP in the mid/late 60s.  I argued that the real issue was metropolitan housing segregation, and that a focus on the cities alone would achieve nothing more than tokenism, resistance, and white flight.  He countered by emphasizing, rightly, the value of setting legal precedents.  This was, after all, how the Brown decision was achieved in 1954:  a long, slow walk through the court system.  It was particularly important to get the courts to focus on impact, not intent, in the application of constitutional doctrine to segregation in the North.  Once that was achieved, things could open up in much more transformative ways.

As background for my home ownership book, I’ve been doing some research on civil rights, the law and housing policy from the mid-60s to the mid-70s, and I’m in a much better position now to make sense of what Carter was trying to tell me — and of his legacy.  During this all-too-brief period, there was a possibility (albeit a thin one) that the nation might finally confront the pattern of metropolitan inequality and segregation (by race and class) that had emerged in the wake of World War II.  Real discussions of the necessity of ‘opening up the suburbs’ were taking place, not only within the civil rights and fair housing movements, but also within the Johnson administration, the courts, and even in the early days of Nixon’s first term (George Romney, Secretary of HUD, characterized suburbia as a ‘white noose’ around the neck of urban America).  Most parties to this discussion recognized that both access to employment and to quality public education hinged on whether American metropolitan areas could be restructured.  In other words, the future of the American opportunity structure was at stake — but time was of the essence.  The nation was on the cusp of a massive expansion in suburban development (and of home ownership), but the shape which our social geography would take was still somewhat plastic.  The intellectual, judicial and policy tools were there to trace direct connections between social geography and opportunity, and to expand civil rights jurisprudence beyond the limited individualistic ontology that had previously defined it.

And Carter was right there, at the forefront.  Unfortunately for all of us, this brief window of opportunity to unwind metropolitan inequality had slammed shut by the mid-70s.  There were small victories and experiments at the local and state level, here and there; the Mount Laurel decision, by the New Jersey Supreme Court in 1975, for example.  But my argument about the ‘window’ is mostly aimed at the federal level.

Nixon gets some of the blame, as much because of his racial demagoguery as his urban and housing policies.  His Supreme Court appointments get a lot of it, too.  The San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez (1973) and Milliken v. Bradley (1974) decisions carved a direct path to the urban school crisis we presently confront.  Despite occasional exceptions at the state level, federal courts also continued to limit the reach of constitutional claims against exclusionary zoning, rendering fair housing law a dead letter in much of the country.  Suburban white America captured the lion’s share of the responsibility, and retains it today.  While the Republican Party has become the unapologetic champion of white suburban privilege (see this recent piece by Daniel Denvir, on urban issues in today’s GOP), the Democrats refuse to see what even George Romney (let alone Robert L. Carter) saw 40 years ago:  that racial and class segregation is a recipe for disaster for the country.

Thanks, Mr. Carter, and rest in peace.  That window is still closed, sadly.  But it is surely cracked.  And that, as Leonard Cohen once wrote, is how the light gets in.

Originally posted on Chants Democratic.

At the “Civil Rights Under Attack” Forum

The RI Mobilization Committee sponsored an interesting array of speakers Wednesday night at the Beneficent Church in downtown Providence centered around the theme of Civil Rights. First up was Iman Ikram Ul-Haq, from Masjid Al-islam mosque, North Smithfield, who talked about Islamophobia. The Iman made some interesting observations about the recent attacks in Norway and the rush to judgement by the media in identifying the attacker as a Muslim terrorist when in fact the man was a white Christian militant. The audience in attendance split during the question and answer session over the idea of free speech. Some felt that free speech includes the right not to be offended, but others maintained that offensive speech needs to be protected. The Iman was very courteous but personally I feel that he should have given more thought as to how to confront Islamophobia in a constructive way.

Next up was Onna Moniz-John, of the NAACP and the Urban League, a tireless advocate for the elimination of racial profiling. She related her ongoing struggle to deal with this issue legislatively, and her disappointment that a bill in the recent legislative session was scuttled at the behest of the police chiefs from the various RI communities. (One of many disappointing outcomes in the latest session.) Racial profiling exists, and needs to be dealt with, and Ms. Moniz-John offered us a real route towards dealing with this problem. She is a very affecting speaker.

Next up was Will Lambek of the Olneyville Neighborhood Association and Marlon Cifuentes, talking about Secure Communities, an Orwellian-named government program that puts people from south of the border on the fast track to deportation without any hint of due process. This program had been ostensibly instituted to deal with the very worst violent offenders, but in practice has been used as a means by which to deport anyone for any reason. Efforts to dissociate states from this program have been successful in some states, including New York, but Attorney General Peter Kilmartin and Governor Lincoln Chafee have both ignored requests to meet on this issue.

Last to speak was John Prince of DARE, who spoke about the Prison Industrial Complex, and his own dealings with it. After serving more than his fair share of time for his youthful indiscretions, Prince has become a tireless fighter for prison reform. I feel that the way a society treats its prisoners is the metric by which the society should be judged. On this count, the United States is not doing so well.

One of the eeriest things revealed this night is how all these various problems are related in such a way as to lead a person of color directly from his malfunctioning school directly into the Prison Industrial Complex. A person may be racially profiled, pulled over, arrested on some pretense, run through the court system, and wind up in jail, beginning a life cycle that may result in years of incarceration. It was pointed out by an audience member that the privatization of prisons and the continuance of the failed war on drugs has created a real profit motive to continue the failing schools and the building of more prisons.

Over all it was a very informative evening of refreshing and positive activism within our community. There is much to be done, and I came away feeling that though the situation is dire, it is far from hopeless if we continue to work on these issues.


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