June 17th New York City NAACP is holding a silent march

Last year in New York City, police stopped and interrogated black men and boys between the ages 14 and 24 a total of 168,126 times.
The total population of black men and boys aged 14 through 24 in New York City is 158,406.
That means the amount of times police stopped black men and boys in this age group exceeds the total number living in the city.
In fact, last year, more than 85% of the 685,000 people stopped by the NYPD were African American or Latino, most of them children and young adults. This is up from less than 100,000 stops a decade ago. Then, like now, 90% of those stopped are completely innocent.
All this adds up to nothing less than the most aggressive street-level racial profiling program in the country.
On June 17th, we’re demanding an end to this alarming and abusive practice. The NAACP is holding a silent march in New York City to call for an end to New York’s notorious “stop and frisk” program. Our marchers won’t be speaking, so I need you to write the messages that will serve as their voices during the march.
Help the NAACP end the abuse of stop and frisk. Create a message for the banners, signs, and posters carried by thousands through the streets of New York on June 17th:

http://action.naacp.org/silent-march-message

In contrast to previous demonstrations, we will march in silence as an illustration of both the tragedy and serious threat that stop and frisk and other forms of racial profiling present to our society. The silent march was first used in 1917 by the NAACP – then just eight years old – to draw attention to race riots that tore through communities in East St. Louis, Illinois, and build national opposition to lynching.
Now, 95 years later, we will use this powerful protest to shine a light on the great injustice of stop and frisk and begin rebuilding national opposition to racial profiling. The march will be the first step in a nationwide federal and state-level campaign to address the problem of racial profiling.
Because we will remain silent as we march, your words will be especially important.
If you’re outraged that police, security guards and even community watch volunteers in so many neighborhoods continue to treat young people of color differently, or if you’re concerned for your children, or your neighbors’ and friends’ children, then channel these emotions into a message of 15 words or less and share it with us today. We will pick five messages to print for the march.
Be the voice of the silent marchers on June 17th. Submit your message for our protest signs today:
http://action.naacp.org/silent-march-message
Thank you,
Ben
Benjamin Todd Jealous
President & CEO
NAACP

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Farrakhan Speaks on Hate of Our President

THIS IS NOTHING MORE THAN THE TRUTH.. THIS COMING NOVEMBER 2012

PEOPLE BETTER WAKE UP (TURN OFF THEIR IPOD,IPAD, MAC, IPHONE

AND TUNE IN TO REALITY. DON’T FOCUS ON THE MESSENGER, BUT THE MESSAGE

Save Lives and Healthcare $$$$

Such [kidney] transplants ultimately save money as well as lives. The federal Medicare program, which pays most treatment costs for chronic kidney disease, saves an estimated $500,000 to $1 million each time a patient is removed from dialysis through a live donor transplant (the operations typically cost $100,000 to $200,000). Coverage for kidney disease costs the government more than $30 billion a year, about 6 percent of the Medicare budget.

Everybody is looking to Obama to save the world and to save health care. Here is a contribution that you could make to national health care!

Email from a friend:

Subject: Fwd: NYTimes.com: 60 Lives, 30 Kidneys, All Linked

March is National Kidney Month and it is a good time to remind everyone of the importance of organ donation.  I am not asking you to mail me a kidney, but I am asking that you forward this email to as many people as you can.  All it takes to be part of a transplant chain is a willing donor.  For someone who needs a kidney, that person does not have to be a match.  Someone else in the transplant chain can be matched up to the person in need.

Thanks for sharing!

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/19/health/lives-forever-linked-through-kidney-transplant-chain-124.html?emc=eta1

My Response

Thanks for this email. It was personal  for us. My mother lived with us the last 5 years of her life after her kidneys failed. I have forwarded it to my extended family.

Bob

Barbara Jordan born this day

Barbara Jordan stampBarbara Jordan, born February 21 1936, was one of the most   respected and influential American politicians of the 20th century.  She captured the attention and admiration of the nation with her intelligence and integrity, eloquent oratory, ardent defense of the Constitution, and staunch advocacy of equal rights for all American citizens.

This stamp was released as the 34th in the Black Heritage stamp series in September 2011.

In 1976 Barbara Jordan, a congressional representative from Texas, was the first African American and the first woman to be chosen to deliver the keynote speech to the Democratic Party National Convention. The Democratic Party today would do well to listen to this speech and reaffirm the principles that are the foundation of the party.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDMX58A6vII

Can We Take The Pledge?

2012 Legislative Campaign Kick Off

FROM THIS DAY FORWARD…
WILL YOU BE THERE TO RAISE YOUR VOICE FOR JUSTICE?

A. PHILIP RANDOLPH INSTITUTE, SEATTLE CHAPTER and Washington Christian Leaders Coalition

Invite you to join us for our 2012 Legislative Campaign Kick Off
Jobs * Education* Gang Prevention
We’re organizing for our future”

Key Note Speakers:
Rev. Carey Anderson, Senior Pastor
First African Methodist Episcopal Church

Jeff Johnson, President
Washington State Labor Council

WHEN:
Saturday February 25, 2012
TIME: 10:00 AM TO 12:00 AM
(VIP Candidate Meet and Greet 9:00 AM)

WHERE:
First African Methodist Episcopal Church (FAME)
1522 14th Avenue Seattle, WA 98122

 

This event will educate and prepare our community for our legislative day activities in Olympia
February 29, 2012.
People get ready 2012 is here!
The people’s movement starts today to organize for a better future tomorrow.
Will you be there?
For more information contact Seattle APRI at (206) 770-7697 or email us at APRISeattle@hotmail.com

 

Youth Worth Watching

Please please check them out listen, sing and share. Click on the link below. Kudos to our Young People… They are “Keeping it Moving”.. Thanks Velma

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xeGrgewqEXw&feature=player_embedded

This is worth watching . Please take time to visit the site. Then pass it on.

Ericka Huggins, Former Black Panther Party Leader, to Speak at Gonzaga

The Melding of Spiritual Activism and Social Justice is the title of a lecture to be given by Ericka Huggins on February 13 at 7 pm at Gonzaga University’s Jepson Wolff Auditorium. Ms Huggins is an “activist, poet, professor, and former Black Panther Party Leader and political prisoner”.

 

Great Forward from Edward Thomas Jr.

Every day emails and email forwards I often would like to share with my friends and family come from Edward. I don’t always get to them in a timely way.  Edward sent one on  January 31 about a great show on finances on Moyers & Company. I checked out the site today and found another one on the organizer Saul Alinsky. You can view the full episodes. Glad to see Bill Moyers is back.

I am asking Edward to become a regular contributor so he can post directly on 4comculture.com.  Hope he will come on board.
Bob L

 
Forward: Edward Thomas Jr.
Subject: Information
If anyone is interested the Bill Moyers and Company show tonight covered important financial news.
 Check out www.BillMoyers.com.  On that show he introduced the book “Throw Them All Out” – Peter Schweizer.
Edward

Gospel Explosion: Black History Month Celebration

February 10 7 pm Seeley G. Mudd Chapel: Join Whitworth students and Spokane-area choirs for this annual celebration of Black History Month. Contact Stephy Nobles-Beans 509.777.4568 or sbeans@whitworth.edu

March 8 7:30 pm Robinson Teaching Theater, Weyerhauser Hall: Great Decisions Lecture: Megan Hershey “Democratic Challenges and Change in Contemporary Africa”. Hershey won the Carlton T. Hodge Prize in African Studies and Fulbright Hays Research Abroad Grant for her work with NGOs addressing HIV/AIDS in Kenya.