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From: Gregory Brown To: undisclosed-recipients:; Bcc: [email protected] Subject: Greg Brown's Weekend Reading and Other Things.... 04/27/2014 Date: Sun, 27 Apr 2014 07:33:37 +0000 Attachments: TheseMaps_Show_Just_How_Segregated_New_York_City_Really_ls_Christopher_Madmis_Huff Post_04_15_2014.docx; The Harlem Globetrotters bio.docx; Ge tich,Jive_Longer, Tle_UltimateConsequence_of Income_Inequality_DEREK_THOMPSON_TheAtlantic_April_18, _2014.docx; McCutcheon_and_the_New_Banana_Republic_Norm_Ornstein_The_Atlantic_April_17,_2014.docx; Racial_Equality_Loses_at_the_Court_NYT_Editorial_Board_04_22_2014.docx; Some_Countries Realize You Have A Life Outside Work. The U.S. Isn't One Of Them liarry_Bradford_Huff Post_04_ 18_2014.2.docx; Lucio_Dalla_bio.docx Inline-Images: image.png; image(1).png; image(2).png; image(3).png; image(4).png; image(5).png; image(6).png; image(7).png; image001.jpg; image(8).png; image(9).png; image(10).png; image(11).png; image(12).png; image(13).png DEAR FRIEND Inline image 1 One of the greatest and most underrated sports teams in the world for more than eight decades is the world-wide ambassadors of basketball the legendary Harlem Globetrotters who have played in over 222 countries for more than 120 million fans, scoring over 20,000 victories with only 332 losses. They surpass every other team in the history of sports for number of games played. Today they are best known for their wildly-entertaining comedic routines and ball-handling skills on the court, and of course that famous song, "Sweet Georgia Brown." But the Harlem Globetrotters have a long history of serious basketball play and their beginnings were modest and for decades they were the best basketball team in the world and although they are not what they once was they are still making magic on the basketball court. In fact the style of the NBA today with its slam dunks, hook shots, no-look passing and superb ball handing goes straight back to style of play created by the Harlem Globetrotters.... The Globetrotters were the creation of Abe Saperstein of Chicago, who took over business and coaching duties in 2927 for a team of African-American neighborhood players originally known as the Savoy Big Five (after the famous Chicago's Savoy Ballroom where they played their early games). At a lime when only whites were allowed to play on professional basketball teams. Saperstein who was white, took over the booking and man ement duties as it was easier for him to negotiate with the white venue owners in the Midwest and The South. But Saperstein (the Barnum of basketball and sports entertainment in the United States) genius was to promote his new team's racial makeup by naming first Globetrotters (to get them an exotic ring) and then Harlem Globetrotters, after the famous African-American neighborhood ofNew York City. The son of a tailor, Saperstein sewed their red, white and blue uniforms (emblazoned with the words "New York") himself. The lineup in that first game, for which the Globetrotters were paid $75, was Walter 'Toots" Wright, Byron "Fat" Long, Willis "Kid"Oliver, Andy Washington and Al "Runt"Pullins. EFTA01199272 The Globetrotters won tot out of 117 games that first season and introduced many Midwestern audiences to a game they had not seen played before. In 1934 Saperstein to over the ownership of the team and continued to coach, manage, be the publicist and sometimes even substitute player, working overtime to book games for his team. And by 1934, eight years after their founding, the Globetrotters had played 1,000 games. This was quite a feat for an all-black team at the time — professional teams were "whites only." Initially the Globetrotters only appeared in Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Michigan, Montana, Washington and North and South Dakota often eating and living in buses, traveling from town to town, being denied accommodations in this jim-crow era. (The Globetrotters didn't actually play a game in Harlem unti11968.) Their first national championship appearance came in 1939, when the Globetrotters lost to the New York Renaissance. During a regular season game they were leading an opponent 112 to 5 . The lead was so outrageous that it made for a boring game, so team members entertained themselves and the crowd by being a little silly. That same year, the team began to add the silly antics they later became known for, including ball handling tricks and on-court comedic routines. The crowds loved it, and Saperstein told his team to keep up the clowning around, but only when they had achieved a solid lead. Saving their comic routines for strong-lead games, the Globetrotters continued serious ball play. 1946 saw both the team's first overseas trip to the US Territory of Hawaii, and the establishment of the National Basketball Association (NBA), which was a "whites only" league that allowed game play against the all-black Globetrotters. A turning point came when the NBA broke their "whites only" ruling in 1950, and began to draft black players. This made it more difficult for Saperstein to keep the competitive edge in the Globetrotters, as many black players began to receive flashy offers from the NBA. And despite their world-class hoop skills the Globetrotters were not recognized as a world-class team. That honor went to the "all white" teams in the NBL and the BAA, the segregated predecessors of the NBA. But in February 1948 the all-black Globetrotters got to face the all-white National Champions, the Minneapolis Lakers. The Lakers represented white basketball, discipline, efficient, precision and orchestrated. As such, conventional wisdom said that no way the clowns on the Globetrotters could compete against the NBA Champions. What race, whose style would prevail and which athletes would make up America's greatest basketball team? With 18,000 fans screaming for their teams. The Globetrotters won by one basket. But many white sports fans saw the Globetrotters win ass fluke. But a rematch in 1949 was no joke, as the Globetrotters beat the Lakers handedly and beat them so badly that the Trotters began to clown to make the game interesting and fun. This caused many to begin to ask why aren't any African Americans playing in the NBA. 1950 was a tremendous year for the Globetrotters as they played to standing room only crowds in Madison Square Garden. In 1951, the Globetrotters were called upon by the US State Department to help counteract a communist youth rally in East Germany. They played in the Allied section of Berlin to an enthusiastic crowd. From this point on, the Globetrotters toured internationally and would also, throughout the sos, continuously compete against NBA teams. In following years they played for three different popes, for the Hollywood cameras during the making of the 1951 film "The Harlem Globetrotters," on the Ed Sullivan show and for sold-out crowds in the USSR and Eastern Europe. In 1958, they won their ninth-straight World Series of Basketball, and in 1959 they achieved their 7,000th career game and finished the season undefeated. They had risen to become one of the finest basketball teams in the world. After the Globetrotters embarrassed the World Champion Lakers twice, NBA teams were ready to draft black players and in 1950 Nat Sweetwater Clifton became the first black player in the NBA when he signed with the New York Nicks in 1950, breaking Saperstein's monopoly on black basketball talent And as the NBA begin drafting black players Saperstein made a radical bet by shifting his sights overseas of Europe, Asia, South America and Africa making the Globetrotters the first team to ever play before one million people in a single season. But the highest moment internationally might have been in 1951 when the Soviet Union organized a Communist Youth Rally in Berlin, they invited the Harlem Globetrotters to play in Berlin's Olympic Stadium in front of 75,000 fans, the largest crowd to ever watch a basketball game. At halftime a US Army helicopter landed in the stadium delivering Jessie Owens (the track star hero who had be stubbed by Hitler during the 1936 Olympics). The Mayor of Berlin, motioned to Jessie Owens and Saperstein to come over to him and he said, "sixteen years ago on this very spot Hitler refused to give you his hand, today I give you both of mine." The crowd went crazy as the Globetrotters not only crossed the color line they had now mended international relations between countries that been at war against each other seven years earlier. By the time owner Abe Saperstein passed away in 1966, the Globetrotters had played 8,945 games, in more than 1,200 cities and 82 foreign countries. They were known as serious athletes, but their image was evolving towards an entertainment troupe and national icon. And at a time of evolving Black consciousness, to many young African Americans their downing antics seem out of step. Still, the Globetrotters continued touring around the world to many times stadium crowds while expanding their white audience here in America. This reached a height during CBS's 1970s production of a cartoon called "The Harlem Globetrotter Show" — later "The Harlem Globetrotter Popcorn Machine"show — and with Globetrotter "appearances" on Scooby-Doo. President Gerald Ford called them "America's Ambassadors of Goodwill." In the '80s they were given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and the Smithsonian Institute's National Museum of American Social History opened a permanent exhibit honoring them. In 1985, the Globetrotters signed the first woman to play official basketball with men, Olympic gold medalist Lynette Woodard. In 1996 two Globetrotters, Michael 'Wild Thing" Wilson and Fred "Preacher"Smith set a Guinness World Record for dunking at 11 feet and 8 inches. Today there are at least three different Harlem Globetrotters teams touring the country and the 2014 season has the highest ticket sales ever. In September of 2002 the Harlem Globetrotters were inducted into the Basketball Hall ofFame. They continue to entertain across the country and, more recently, in an effort to gain back some of their serious ball-playing reputation, they have scheduled games against college teams and pick-up teams like Magic Johnson's All Stars. "Sweet Georgia Drown" is still playing and so are the Harlem Globetrotters. And if you have never seen the Harlem Globetrotters, I strongly urge that you do, as it will be EFTA01199273 an enjoyable evening, even if you don't know anything about basketball. I would be remissed if I didn't mention some of the great Harlem Globetrotter players including Reece "Goose" Tatum, Marques Haynes, Wilt 'The Stilt"Chamberlain (who played point guard), Connie The Hawk"Hawkins, Nat "Sweetwater"Clifton, Meadow "Meadowlark" Lemon, Fred "Curly" Neal and Lynette Woodard who became the first female Globetrotter. And probably the greatest thing that one can say about the Harlem Globetrotters is that after the game almost on one remembers the score but everyone is smiling. Plutocracy Versus Democracy There truly is a class war in America today that goes unnoticed because it is obfuscated by prejudice and misinformation. We are told that the difference today is between the Conservatives and the Liberals. And when that doesn't work, we are told that it is the rich and the poor and if you are a cynic the haves and the have-nots. And depending on where you are on the economic ladder, it's the top 1.96 versus the 47%. But the real class war in America is about entitlement and I am not talking about Social Security or Medicare or Food Assistance Programs or Welfare for the poor. I am not even talking about the bailout of the big banks that saved Wall Street. I don't even mean the entitlement that the wealth of the country trickles down instead of percolating upward. I am talking about the naked grab for power and control by a few in pursuit of their own self-interest. I am talking about investment bankers, corporate executives and political pundits who truly believe that they contribute more to society than firefighters, teachers, nurses and police men and women and how the money of a few now manipulates our electorate, and that they really believe that this is their prerogative. As a result of the new donor class in politics today, the system is rigged in favor of the wealthy. The historian Plutarch warned us long ago of what happens when there is no brake on the power of great wealth to subvert the electorate. "The abuse of buying and selling votes he wrote of Rome, "crept in and money began to play an important part in determining elections. Later on, this prnross of corruption spread in the law courts and to the army, andfinally, when even the sword became enslaved by the power of gold, the republic was subjected to the rule of emperors." We may not have a ruling class per se but we do have a Senate in which, as a study by the political scientist Larry Bartels revealed, Senators appear to be considerably more responsive to the opinions of affluent constituents than to the opinions of middle-class constituents, while the opinions of constituents in the bottom third of the income distribution have no apparent statistical effect on their senators' roll call votes." We also have a House of Representatives controlled by the far right that is now nourished by streams of "dark money" unleashed thanks to the gift bestowed on the rich by the Supreme Court in the Citizens United case. As a result, one of our two major parties is now dominated by radicals engaged in a crusade of voter suppression aimed at the elderly, the young, minorities and the poor; while the other party, once the champion of everyday working people, has been so enfeebled by its own collaboration with the donor class that it offers only token resistance to the forces that have demoralized everyday Americans. Writing in the Guardian recently, the social critic George Monbiot commented, So I don't blame peoplefor giving up on politics... When a state-corporate nexus of power has bypassed democracy and made a mockery of the voting process, when an unreformed political system ensures that parties can be bought and sold, when politicians [of the main parties) stand and watch as public services are divvied up by a grubby cabal ofprivateers, what is left of this system that inspires us to participaterAnd whether you want to hear it or not, today there is the shredding of the social contract. Ten years ago the Economist magazine — no friend of Marxism — warned: "'The United States risks calcifying into a European-style class-based society."And as a recent headline in the Columbia Journalism Review put it: 'The line between democracy and a darker social order is thinner than you think." We are close to losing our democracy to the mercenary class. So dose it's as if we're leaning way over the rim of the Grand Canyon waiting for a swift wind to take us airborne. Twenty years ago, when Supreme Court Justice William J. Brennan was asked how he had come to his liberal sentiments. "It was my neighborhood,"he said. Born to Irish immigrants in 1906, as the harsh indignities of the Gilded Age brought hardship and deprivation to his kinfolk and neighbors, he saw "all kinds of suffiring — people had to struggle." He never forgot those people or their struggles, and he believed it to be our collective responsibility to create a country where they would have a fair chance to a decent life. If you doubt it,"he said, 'read the Preamble (to the Constitution)."This current generation doesn't acknowledge that they had a neighborhood. Many believe that it was just their ingenuity and hard work that got them to the place where they are today. As such they often feel that they owe others nothing. EFTA01199274 People forget the Great Depression and prior to the creation of the safety net. People forget the era when millions of children had to school in the fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth grades because they were needed in the fields to pick cotton or work in factories to help support their families. People forget when Franklin Roosevelt was President and tens of millions of Americans listened to his radio "fireside chats" as if they were gospel; or the 1950s and 1960s when our parents and older siblings went to college on the GI Bill; and were the beneficiary of public schools, public libraries, public parks, public roads and two public universities. How could you now think that these things were not good and how could you think that Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid not good. And for African Americans like myself, the Voting Rights Act and the Equal Rights Amendment. Or maybe they were born after these events, which is why they see little value in these achievements and the services that they provide. In one way or another, plutocracy versus democracy is the oldest story in America: the struggle to determine whether "we, the people" is a moral compact embedded in a political contract or merely a charade masquerading as piety and manipulated by the powerful and privileged to sustain their own way of life at the expense of others. One doesn't have to harbor any idealized notion of politics and democracy. Because there is nothing idealized or romantic about the difference between a society whose arrangements roughly serve all its citizens (something otherwise known as social justice) and one whose institutions have been converted into a stupendous fraud. That can be the difference between democracy and plutocracy. Toward the end of Justice Brennan's tenure on the Supreme Court, he made a speech that went to the heart of the matter. He said: 'We do not yet have justice, equal and practical,for the poor, for the members of minority groups,for the criminally accused,for the displaced persons of the technological revolution,for alienated youth,for the urban masses... Ugly inequities continue to mar the face of the nation. We are surely nearer the beginning than the end of the struggle." One hundred and fifty years ago, Abraham Lincoln stood on the blood-soaked battlefield of Gettysburg and called Americans to "the great task remaining." That "unfinished work," as he named it, remained the same then as it was when America's founding generation began it. And it remains the same today, as we and every generation has to breathe new life into the promise of the Declaration of Independence to assure that the country and its democracy continues for all. Enough of the platitudes (even if they are mine) because when I was growing up there was a saying for these types of people, 'they don't realize that their shit stinks"and if you can't smell your own feces and don't look down around you will end up stepping in your own shit. And that's how we ended up in stupid wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. What Do 7 Billion People Do? EFTA01199275 • over 400 million 1.9 billion are are entrepreneurs too young to work a• 430 million are (ages 0-15) 11 unemployed • as it , 577 million are older in than 64 WHAT DO • 7 BILLION 800 million work industrial jobs PEOPLE DO? er 1.7 billion 1.4 billion work work in agriculture in services Funders and Founders sources: cia.gov, census.gov, gemconsortium.org Really puts things in perspective doesn't it ! [;Rancher Cliven Bundy speaks during a news conference near his ranch on April 24. 2014 in Bunkerville. Nev. As you have probably heard by now the Conservatives who have been backing Cliven Bundy the anti-government rancher in Nevada who became the latest cause celeb of the far right have abandoned him in droves as a result of his latest comments, saying that some of the negroes he sees today are better off as slaves. "I wanted to tell you one more thing I know about the Negroes. When Igo through Las Vegas, North Las Vegas and I would see these little government houses. And infront ofgovernment house, the door was usually open and the old people and the kids - and there is always at least a hay"dozen people sitting on the porch. They didn't have nothing to do. They didn't have nothingfor the young girls to do. And because they are basically on government subsidy, and know what do they do? They abort their young children, they put their young man in jail, because they never learn how to pick cotton. I've often wondered, are they better offas slaves picking cotton and having a family life and doing things, or are they better offunder government subsidy? They got lessfreedom." The absolute irony is that Bundy who owes the government more than a million dollars in grazing fees has the audacity to disparage African Americans living in government subsidized housing. What is difficult to convey in writing is the phonetics of his pronunciation as he slurs the word Negro to the point of "niggar." The truth is that this unveils the ugly side of anti-government, anti-federalist ideologies in America that often times reflect the views of people who also happen to be racist. And let's throw in birterism. As all of these are offensive. To hear it, to see it and to read it. EFTA01199276 This is not to say that all Conservatives or Tea Party supporters are racist but there is a sort of intersection between racism, white supremacy, current militia secessionist movements and the fiercest strain of anti-government sentiment and nobody should be surprised. And it should not be a surprise by efforts to marginalize him as just an aberration by his former supporters, as it is this toxic undercurrent that has long fed the ideology of these folk. So it is no surprise when someone like Bundy says publicly what many of these people say to each other privately. Racism doesn't have to be overt. So when you hear major political figures and media types on the far-right talk about the President being illegitimate we know what that means, and the government being lawless we know exactly what that means, as it feeds the rhetoric of hatred on the far-right. And the fact that most of the Republican figures including Rand Paul and Ted Cruz are hying to walk back their support for Bundy with his beef against the Bureau of Land Management and are now denouncing his racist comments is not enough. It is the culture of racist rhetoric and self-righteousness within this part of the Conservative movement that is often ignored by the leadership as it is both a disease and a disgrace but there is no amount of walking back that can change the fact that these politicians are pandering to these ugly fringe elements for their own political agenda. Remember that Bundy doesn't believe in The Federal Government. '7 abide by all of Nevada state laws. But I don't recognize the United States government as even existing." So you have to ask why Republicans like Rand Paul, Rick Perry and Ted Cruz who would like to be President would support a person who doesn't believe in the government that they aspire to lead — but again we know the answer, they are opportunistic hypocrites. And the big irony is that although Bundy and his supporters are blasting against President Obama's 'Big Government' and the Bureau of Land Management, they forget to mention that it was their all-time favorite Republican, Ronald Reagan, who signed the executive order extending those federal grazing fees indefinitely. So if this is the government overreact that Sean Hannity and other Bundy supporters truly believe they should blame it on The Gipper. But of course we know that they won't, especially because for them facts don't matter. ****** g.; Inline image 5 As a three year-old, the first political song/slogan that I sang was "I Like Ike"which always brought a huge smile to my father's face as he was both a proud Republican and huge supporter of General Dwight D. Eisenhower, who serve as the Supreme Commander of the Allied Forces that defeated Germany and Japan in WWII and then handedly defeated his Democratic opponent Adlai Stevenson in 1952 for the Presidency of the United States. Although he used the CIA to depose the democratically elected president of Iran and reinstalled The Shah during his first year in office and used nuclear threats to conclude the Korean War with China, he also enacted a New Look policy of nuclear deterrence that gave priority to inexpensive nuclear weapons while reducing the funding for conventional military forces, with the goal of keeping pressure on the Soviet Union and reducing federal deficits at the meantime. In domestic social policy which mattered more to African Americans, he sent federal troops to Little Rock, Arkansas, for the first time since reconstruction to enforce federal court orders to desegregate public schools. Today, everybody likes Ike. Liberals see Dwight Eisenhower's foreign policy as a model of strategic restraint. Conservatives view him as a tough but shrewd warrior president. But there's another side to Ike, one that's often ignored: The story of his political life after leaving the White House. Ike in winter became a ferocious hawk on Vietnam who helped propel America deeper into the quagmire. Eisenhower was the son of pacifist Mennonites who fretted about his love of military history. He became a hero of World War II and the architect of D-Day. And Ike also understood the price of war. After becoming president in 1953, he hammered out a truce in the Korean War. In 1954, Eisenhower resisted entreaties to intervene in Vietnam following the French defeat at Dien Bien Phu. Indeed, during the last seven-and-a-half years of Eisenhower's presidency, only a single American service member was killed by hostile fire (in Lebanon in 1958). Eisenhower famously left the White House in 1961 warning about "the military-industrial complex." But for me the crowning moment was when Eisenhower used a strong decent against the British, French and Israelis when they gave Egypt's President Abdel Nasser 24 hours to rescind his nationalization of the Suez Canal and then attacked. And it was Eisenhower's efforts EFTA01199277 through the United Nations that defused the conflict, which gave Egypt sovereignty over the Canal with the British, French and Israelis guaranteed rite of passage. These odes to Eisenhower's foreign-policy judgment always end with his retirement in 1961 to a farm in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. But Eisenhower lived for another eight years. He didn't retreat from public life and paint pictures of world leaders like George W. Bush, but remained a major figure on the national stage. He enjoyed enormous respect and credibility as a war hero, the Republican Party's elder statesman, and after 1964, one of only two ex-presidents still alive (the other being Harry Truman). Lyndon Johnson relied heavily on the counsel of a man who knew the burdens of office. With the United States on the brink of a major intervention in Vietnam, the nation needed Ike's sense of caution and restraint, and his recognition that the use of force can trap a country in foreign adventures. Unfortunately, Eisenhower's good judgment vanished during the 1960s, as he urged officials into ever-greater escalation in Vietnam. As Andrew Johns detailed in his book on the Republican Party and the war, Vietnam's Second Front, Eisenhower sought victory in Vietnam by almost any means. In February 1965, Eisenhower spent two hours explaining to LBSs inner circle the vital importance of "denying Southeast Asia to the Communists,"and the need to massively expand the bombing of North Vietnam. But air power didn't work, and by the summer of 1965, South Vietnam was crumbling in the face of a Communist insurgency. LBJ faced a critical decision about whether to send large numbers of American troops, and Ike urged the president to Americanize the war. When you once appeal toforce in an international situation involving military helpfor a nation, you have to go all out!" Eisenhower told Johnson. 'We are not going to be run out of afree country that we helped establish." 'When you once appeal toforce in an situation involving military helpfor a nation, you have to go all out!" As the fighting descended into stalemate, Eisenhower resisted a negotiated peace: I have no patience whatsoever with the people that want to pull out of Vietnam at once, or are otherwise prepared to surrender principle." In 1966, he spoke to LBJ by phone, telling him that winning in Vietnam was more important than fighting poverty or reaching the moon. The following year, Eisenhower urged Congress to declare war on North Vietnam, so that Americans would stay focused on the mission rather than getting distracted by the Great Society. Meanwhile, he exhorted LBJ to expand the war. "This respecting of boundary lines on the map, I think you can overdo it,"he said. The U.S. should pursue the Communists into Laos, Cambodia, and even North Vietnam, and ignore the "Ikoolcs'and 'hippies' and all the rest that are talking about surrendering." The plan was so hawkish it made Richard Nixon nervous. Nixon felt that Ike may be right from a 'military standpoint," but the diplomatic and political consequences would be dangerous, running "a substantial risk of widening the ground conflict in Vietnam." In the lead-up to the 1968 elections, Ike threatened to hammer candidates who took a dovish stance: "If any Republican or Democrat suggests that we pull out of Vietnam and turn our backs on the more than thirteen thousand Americans who died in the cause of freedom there, they will have me to contend with. That's one of thefew things that would start me off on a series of stump speeches across the nation." If Ike in winter had retreated from public life, and railed against the peaceniks from his farm in Gettysburg, it might have mattered less. But during his retirement Eisenhower was a highly influential player who reinforced LBJ's hawkish views and made it more difficult to find an exit strategy from a tragic conflict. General Douglas MacArthur once said that old soldiers never die, they just fade away. The nation might have been better off if Ike, as a counselor on Vietnam, had faded away and Eisenhower's glowing foreign- policy reputation today ignores his tragic post-White House cheerleading for escalation in Vietnam. Inline image 6 As Forest Gump's mother use to say, "stupid is what stupid does"and there is nothing more stupid that the sweeping House Bill 6o, also known as The Safe Carry Protection Act, will allow licensed gun owners to carry their firearms into public places, including bars, nightclubs, schools, churches and government buildings that Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal (R) signed on Wednesday. And although the controversial proposals that didn't survive were the 'campus carry provision, which would have legalized the carrying of guns on campus, and changes that would have required houses of worship to allow guns unless leaders ban them. (Instead, religious leaders can "opt-in"to allow guns into their congregations). The bill, which takes effect July 1, also legalizes the use of silencers for hunting, clears the way for school staffers to carry guns in school zones and lets leaders of religious congregations choose whether to EFTA01199278 allow licensed gun holders inside. And it allows permitted gun owners to carry their weapons in government buildings — including parts of courthouses — where there is no security at the entrance. Web link: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/04Lnigorgia-gun-bill n qi49640.html Last September the American Journal of Medicine published a study on guns, violence and mental health, found that gun ownership is a bigger factor than mental illness when it comes to firearms deaths. But the data suggest that both play roles. Earlier research has found that places with high rates of gun ownership have more firearms deaths, but critics of those findings say that it could be that people living in dangerous places are apt to buy firearms to protect themselves. And the question of mental illness has surfaced again and again, with shootings in Aurora, Colo., Newtown, Conn., Oak Creek, Wisconsin, Virginia Tech and the Washington Navy Yard, where 12 people were killed last year by a man who appears to have had escalating mental health issues and although not included in the study, again with the shooting earlier this month at Fort Hood. In this study, doctors in New York looked at data on gun ownership, crime rate, firearms-related deaths and depression from 27 developed countries, including the United States, Japan, Great Britain and South Africa. The United States had the highest rate of civilian gun ownership, at almost go guns per 100 people. The next two countries on the list were Switzerland and Finland, with about 43 guns per too people. Japan, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom had the lowest gun numbers, ranging from less than one gun per too in Japan to six in the U.K. The countries with more civilian guns also had the highest rates of firearms deaths, with the United States leading the list at to deaths per 100,000, based on an international mortality database. Gun ownership was strongly associated with firearms deaths. The only outlier was South Africa, which had 13 guns per too people, but a firearms death rate almost as high as in the U.S. They found the correlation between gun ownership and gun deaths was massive. While gun ownership is rare in Japan and the United Kingdom, it's high in both the US and South Africa. In Japan it's 0.06 per 100,000 people. In South Africa, it's 9.4 per 100,00o people. In the UK, the rate is 0.25 per 100,000, while in the US it is 10.2. It is universally acknowledged by experts around the world that mental illness also correlated with firearms deaths, but the connection was much weaker than for gun ownership. The association pretty much disappeared depending on how the researchers crunched the numbers. There was no overall association between gun ownership or mental illness and the overall crime rate in the 27 countries. The researchers say this questions the premise that people arm themselves to protect themselves from crime. This study, like earlier ones, finds a correlation but no direct cause, as a result the study didn't show that gun ownership or mental illness are causing the deaths. But what we do know is that in homes that have guns the people living in those homes are five times more likely to be a victim of firearm violence. And I have been in more bars and night clubs then I would like to acknowledge where fights broke out So I can only imagine how many people would have died if the combatants had been strapped. As John Avlon, editor in chief of The Daily Beast commented, "if they had allowed guns in the bars thatfrequented in my teens and twenties I would either be in jail or dead. " And for political leaders in Georgia to not understand this They are stupid with a "r and this is my rant of the week.... WEEK's READINGS These Maps Show Just How Segregated New York City Really Is I know that many Americans will tell you that we live in a post-racial society but this is not true. My home city, New York City, may be one of the most diverse cities in the world, but it's also one of the most segregated cities in the United States. Take a look at these maps from Daniel Kay Hertz, a masters student at the Harris School ofPublic Policy at the University of Chicago. Hertz used data from the 2012 Census American Community Survey to show how segregated New York City really is. The GIF below shows first, a map of New York City neighborhoods that are less than 2 percent black and less than 2 percent white, then neighborhoods with less than 10 percent. The takeaway: a wide swath of the city is segregated, if not hyper-segregated. EFTA01199279 Segregation in New York Z% Black 2% White darselltaltiertscom Segregation in New York ■< 10% Black ■< 10% White New York's segregation, however, doesn't necessarily look like segregation in other American cities. As Hertz writes, there "aren't very many monolithically black neighborhoods left in New York." Here's a map of neighborhoods in New York that are over go percent black. This, Hertz writes, is because "black neighborhoods have become significantly mixed, in particular with people of Hispanic descent." Hertz also added that his maps focus on "white-black segregation because that,for various social and historical reasons, has been byfar the most significant geographic separation in American cities, certainly in the Midwest and Northeast." Hertz decided to put together the above maps after so many people were shocked by last month's Civil Rights Project report on school segregation. The report found that New York City has the most segregated schools in the country. Of the city's 32 Community School Districts, nearly 20 had 10 percent or fewer white students in 2010. The report also calls most of the city's charter schools "apartheid institutions,"as white students make up less than one percent of students at 73 percent of city charter schools. Racial segregation remains an enormous problem in America, and it's lasting longer than anyone expected. The average black person lives in a neighborhood that is 45 percent black. Without segregation, his neighborhood would be only 13 percent black, according to professors John Logan and Brian Stults at Brown and Florida State. Studying the 2010 Census data, Logan and Stult evaluated segregation in major cities with a dissimilarity index, which identifies the percentage of one group that would have to move to a different neighborhood to eliminate segregation. A score above 60 on the dissimilarity index is considered extreme. NEW YORK, N.Y. — Most of Manhattan is white south of 125th Street, with the exception of Chinatown. South Brooklyn is mostly white, with pockets of Asians and Hispanics, and Northeast Brooklyn going into Queens is heavily black. Queens and the Bronx are highly diverse. The New York City area's black-white dissimilarity score is 79.1, according to a study of 2010 Census data by professors John Logan and Brian Stults of Brown and Florida State University. A score above 60 on the dissimilarity index is considered very high segregation. EFTA01199280 • Newark, NJ's black-white dissimilarity score is 78.0, according to a study. • Chicago, IL's black-white dissimilarity score is 75.9, according to a study. • Philadelphia, PA's black-white dissimilarity score is 73.7, according to a study. • Miami, FL's black-white dissimilarity score is 73.0, according to a study. • Cleveland, OH's black-white dissimilarity score is 72.6, according to a study. The most segregated major city in America is Detroit, MI. Detroit's inner city is almost exclusively black, except for a small Hispanic corner in the southwest called "Mexicantown." The suburbs like Grosse Pointe, Dearborn, and Ferndale are heavily white. Detroit's black-white dissimilarity score is 79.6, according to a study of 2010 Census data by professors John Logan and Brian Stults of Brown and Florida State University. Again, a score above 60 on the dissimilarity index is considered very high segregation. The articles that I examined primarily focused on white-black segregation because that, for various social and historical reasons, has been by far the most significant geographic separation in American cities, certainly in the Midwest and Northeast. But by far the second most significant separation — white-Latino segregation — is also very extreme in New York. The same Census analysis that found NYC was the second-most-segregated metro area in terms of white and black people found that it was the third-most-segregated metro area in terms of white and Latino people. The Promise of Freedom: For formerly enslaved people, freedom meant an end to the whip, to the sale of family members, and to white masters. The promise of freedom after the Civil War and through Reconstruction held out the hope of self-determination, educational opportunities, and full rights of citizenship. After the Civil War, millions of formerly enslaved African Americans hoped to join the larger society as full and equal citizens. Although some white Americans welcomed them, others used people's ignorance, racism, and self-interest to sustain and spread racial divisions. By 1900, new laws and old customs in the North and the South had created a segregated society that condemned Americans of color to second-class citizenship. African Americans turned to the courts to help protect their constitutional rights. But the courts challenged earlier civil rights legislation and handed down a series of decisions that permitted states to segregate people of color. In the pivotal case of Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that racially separate facilities, if equal, did not violate the Constitution. Segregation, the Court said, was not discrimination. In 1952 civil rights lawyers of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, headed by future Supreme Court Justice, Thurgood Marshall argued that the Plessy v. Ferguson decision misinterpreted the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment—the authors of this amendment had not intended to allow segregated schools. Nor did existing law consider the harmful social and psychological effects of segregation. Integrated schools, they asserted, were a fundamental right for all Americans. gfrhe Problem We All Live With Earl Warren wrote the decision for the Court that struck down `Separate But Equal.' He agreed with the civil rights attorneys that it was not clear whether the framers of the Fourteenth Amendment intended to permit segregated public education. The doctrine of separate but equal did not appear until 1896, he noted, and it pertained to transportation, not education. More importantly, he said, the present was at issue, not the past. Education was perhaps the most vital function of state and local governments, and racial segregation of any kind deprived African Americans of equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment and due process under the Fifth Amendment. In the Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court decision Earl Warren wrote: "Segregation of white and colored children in public schools has a detrimental effect upon the colored children. The impact is greater when it has the sanction of the law, for the policy of separating the races is usually interpreted as denoting the inferiority of the Negro group... Any language in contrary to this finding is rejected. We conclude that in the field of public education the doctrine of 'separate but equal' has no place. Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal. " —Pal Seamen. ChlefJmtice of the US. Supreme Court. The problem with segregated neighborhoods is that they lead to increase xenophobia, more ignorance, less tolerance, as segregated non-white neighborhoods tend to have much higher violent crime rates, and much more modest to little or no business districts and significantly less job opportunities and investment infrastructure. The problem with segregated neighborhoods is that there are often targets of contempt and hatred. And in spite of public perception Racism is pervasive in American society and remains a silent code that systematically closes the doors of opportunity to young and old alike. Visibly identifiable members of racial and ethnic oppressed groups continue to struggle for equal access and opportunity, particularly during times of stringent economics, strident calls for tax revolt, dwindling natural resources, inflation, widespread unemployment and underemployment, and conservative judicial opinions that are precursors to greater deprivation. Unless curbed, these conditions invariably lead to greater ethnic and racial rivalry and to greater political, social, and economic oppression. ****** EFTA01199281 Inline Image 9 In the Atlantic Magazine last week I ran across an interesting article by Derek Thompson — Get Rich, Live Longer: The Ultimate Consequence of Income Inequality — about how the income gap affects the longevity. Brookings economist Barry Bosworth crunched the data on income and lifespans for the Wall Street Journal, and the numbers tell three clear stories. 1. Rich people live longer. 2. Richer people's lifespans are growing at a faster rate. 3. The problem is worse for women than for men. First, let's look at the guys. A rich man (top decile) born in 1940 can expect to live to years longer after he turns 55 than a poor man (bottom decile). That longevity gap grew by four years in one generation. How Much Longer Will a 55-Year-Old Man Live? Average additional life expectancy (in years) at age 55. by mid-career income • Bom in 1940 Born xi 1920 Richest 10% 34.9 29.0 81-90% 33.0 27.7 71-80% 31.4 26.5 61.70% 30.3 25.8 51-60% 29.6 25.4 41.50% 28.9 25.0 31-40%
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