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Tag Archives: As I see It


Let us discuss the uproar about Russia and Ukraine. The U.S. is busy working towards a disengagement in a war in Afghanistan and the Russo-Ukraine issue is all the Congressional war hawks can talk about. Wars cost money and lives and we cannot afford it. It is well that they feel so strongly about the issue in Ukraine but not so much about American issues of equality, global warming  and government reform (of all sorts). It is an amazing thing to see all of the rhetoric that emerges near election time (all of them). Here in Illinois we have several (too many) candidates for State and Federal offices who all claim to be the one we should select to represent us. Keeping in mind that no one candidate is perfect or can aspire to be perfect but these aspirants continue to make these claims until they actually get the office then  all their rhetoric  is just talk! It is impossible for anyone to determine what they will do once in office, they can only talk about what they want to do but they seem to forget that the person they are looking to replace has said similar things when running for the office. Politics is a dirty business that will soil the hands of all who are in it, the survival will  depend on what things they can get done with the least amount of fanfare and rise above the guano pile that swallows so many. We do not hear much about these things but we certainly hear about what wasn’t done and what should have or could have been done. The Affordable Care Act which was labeled as “Obamacare” has helped more that it hurt in spite of a rocky start and has shown that the “cancelled” insurance policies were in fact substandard. It is unfortunate that politics has become the way legislature works instead of the way it should, members presenting bills for the good of the country and discussions on them to make them the best they can be. Instead what we have are presentations that become arguments and political fodder along party lines. I have decided to continue my practice of voting against long term servers in an attempt to renew the political “gene” pool. I urge everyone to do the same and dismiss the hundreds of political ads that elevate or denigrate a political aspirant. Remember the old saw still applies” If it quacks like a duck, walks like a duck, then it must be a duck!”

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Recent airings of professional athletes “coming out” seems to be big news. There is no reason that I see for all of the coverage. These folks are no different than anyone else except that their sexual orientation is not main stream (what ever that means). That difference  should not be considered a difference as  many of us serve, work and live along side members of the LGBT segment of society and have no clue about them beyond “water cooler” conversation. Think about how many celebrities and other high profile people have “come out” to the shock and amazement of the public as a whole. What if all of us took the position to accept each person on their individual merit as opposed to their sexual orientation, race, religion or ethnicity -Wow! what a concept!! The people who are unwilling to accept anyone different are usually the flawed ones and unfortunately some are excellent persuaders in hate and deception (kind of sounds like a major legislative branch). The majority of us “mainstreamers” (99%) have no issue with one another and are able to see through the smoke and mirrors of  aired hate and subterfuge so it is left to us to unite with all and any like minded people (whoever they are) and continue to make the efforts for change in our society thereby affecting a change in our government.

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I have been pondering this post for a while and seeking to insure the idea of it is a pure as I can make it.

Years ago a well respected National organization was founded on premise of providing public service to non white Americans. That was the beginning of the Urban League. This is the brief story of their history.

“Our Mission

The mission of the Urban League movement is to enable African Americans to secure economic self-reliance, parity, power and civil rights.

Our History
The National Urban League, which has played so pivotal a role in the 20th-Century Freedom Movement, grew out of that spontaneous grassroots movement for freedom and opportunity that came to be called the Black Migrations. When the U.S. Supreme Court declared its approval of segregation in the 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson decision, the brutal system of economic, social and political oppression the White South quickly adopted rapidly transformed what had been a trickle of African Americans northward into a flood.

Those newcomers to the North soon discovered they had not escaped racial discrimination. Excluded from all but menial jobs in the larger society, victimized by poor housing and education, and inexperienced in the ways of urban living, many lived in terrible social and economic conditions.

Still, in the degree of difference between South and North lay opportunity, and that African Americans clearly understood. But to capitalize on that opportunity, to successfully adapt to urban life and to reduce the pervasive discrimination they faced, they would need help. That was the reason the Committee on Urban Conditions Among Negroes was established on September 29, 1910 in New York City. Central to the organization’s founding were two remarkable people: Mrs. Ruth Standish Baldwin and Dr. George Edmund Haynes, who would become the Committee’s first executive secretary.

Mrs. Baldwin, the widow of a railroad magnate and a member of one of America’s oldest families, had a remarkable social conscience and was a stalwart champion of the poor and disadvantaged. Dr. Haynes, a graduate of Fisk University, Yale University, and Columbia University (he was the first African American to receive a doctorate from that institution), felt a compelling need to use his training as a social worker to serve his people.
A year later, the Committee merged with the Committee for the Improvement of Industrial Conditions Among Negroes in New York (founded in New York in 1906), and the National League for the Protection of Colored Women (founded in 1905) to form the National League on Urban Conditions Among Negroes. In 1920, the name was later shortened to the National Urban League.

The interracial character of the League’s board was set from its first days. Professor Edwin R. A. Seligman of Columbia University, one of the leaders in progressive social service activities in New York City, served as chairman from 1911 to 1913. Mrs. Baldwin took the post until 1915.

The fledgling organization counseled black migrants from the South, helped train black social workers, and worked in various other ways to bring educational and employment opportunities to blacks. Its research into the problems blacks faced in employment opportunities, recreation, housing, health and sanitation, and education spurred the League’s quick growth. By the end of World War I the organization had 81 staff members working in 30 cities.

In 1918, Dr. Haynes was succeeded by Eugene Kinckle Jones who would direct the agency until his retirement in 1941. Under his direction, the League significantly expanded its multifaceted campaign to crack the barriers to black employment, spurred first by the boom years of the 1920s, and then, by the desperate years of the Great Depression. Efforts at reasoned persuasion were buttressed by boycotts against firms that refused to employ blacks, pressures on schools to expand vocational opportunities for young people, constant prodding of Washington officials to include blacks in New Deal recovery programs and a drive to get blacks into previously segregated labor unions.

As World War II loomed, Lester Granger, a seasoned League veteran and crusading newspaper columnist, was appointed Eugene Kinckle Jones successor.

Outspoken in his commitment to advancing opportunity for blacks, Granger pushed tirelessly to integrate the racist trade unions and led the League’s effort to support A. Philip Randolph’s March on Washington Movement to fight discrimination in defense work and in the armed services. Under Granger, the League, through its own Industrial Relations Laboratory, had notable success in cracking the color bar in numerous defense plants. The nation’s demand for civilian labor during the war also helped the organization press ahead with greater urgency its programs to train black youths for meaningful blue-collar employment. After the war those efforts expanded to persuading Fortune 500 companies to hold career conferences on the campuses of Negro colleges and place blacks in upper-echelon jobs.

Of equal importance to the League’s own future sources of support, Granger avidly supported the organization of its volunteer auxiliary, the National Urban League Guild, which, under the leadership of Mollie Moon, became an important national force in its own right.

The explosion of the civil rights movement provoked a change for the League, one personified by its new leader, Whitney M. Young, Jr., who became executive director in 1961. A social worker like his predecessors, he substantially expanded the League’s fund-raising ability and, most critically, made the League a full partner in the civil rights movement. Although the League’s tax-exempt status barred it from protest activities, it hosted at its New York headquarters the planning meetings of A. Philip Randolph, Martin Luther King, Jr., and other civil rights leaders for the 1963 March on Washington. Young was also a forceful advocate for greater government and private-sector efforts to eradicate poverty. His call for a domestic Marshall Plan, a ten-point program designed to close the huge social and economic gap between black and white Americans, significantly influenced the discussion of the Johnson Administration’s War on Poverty legislation.

Young’s tragic death in 1971 in a drowning incident off the coast of Lagos, Nigeria brought another change in leadership. Vernon E. Jordan, Jr., formerly Executive Director of the United Negro College Fund, took over as the League’s fifth Executive Director in 1972 (the title of the office was changed to President in 1977). For the next decade, until his resignation in December 1981, Jordan skillfully guided the League to new heights of achievement. He oversaw a major expansion of its social service efforts, as the League became a significant conduit for the federal government to establish programs and deliver services to aid urban communities, and brokered fresh initiatives in such League programs as housing, health, education and minority business development. Jordan also instituted a citizenship education program that helped increase the black vote and brought new programs to such areas as energy, the environment, and non-traditional jobs for women of color-and he developed The State of Black America report.

In 1982, John E. Jacob, a former chief executive officer of the Washington, D.C. and San Diego affiliates who had served as Executive Vice President, took the reins of leadership, solidifying the League’s internal structure and expanding its outreach even further.

Jacob established the Permanent Development Fund in order to increase the organization’s financial stamina. In honor of Whitney Young, he established several programs to aid the development of those who work for and with the League: The Whitney M. Young, Jr. Training Center, to provide training and leadership development opportunities for both staff and volunteers; the Whitney M. Young, Jr. Race Relations Program, which recognizes affiliates doing exemplary work in race relations; and the Whitney M. Young, Jr. Commemoration Ceremony, which honors and pays tribute to long term staff and volunteers who have made extraordinary contributions to the Urban League Movement.

Jacob established the League’s NULITES youth development program and spurred the League to put new emphasis on programs to reduce teenage pregnancy, help single female heads of households, combat crime in black communities, and increase voter registration.

Hugh B. Price, appointed to the League’s top office in July 1994, took over the reins at a critical moment for the League, for black America, and for the nation as a whole. In the early 90’s, the fierce market-driven dynamic of “globalization,” was sweeping the world, fundamentally altering the economic relations among and within countries and reshaping the link between the nation’s citizenry and its economy, fostering enormous uncertainty among individuals and tensions among ethnic and cultural groups.

This economic change and the efforts of some to rollback the gains African Americans fashioned since the 1960s made the League’s efforts all the more necessary. Price, a lawyer with extensive experience in community development and public policy issues, intensified the organization’s work in three broad areas: in education and youth development, individual and community-wide economic empowerment, affirmative action and the promotion of inclusion as a critical foundation for securing America’s future as a multi-ethnic democracy.

Among Price’s most notable achievements was establishing the League’s Institute of Opportunity and Equality in Washington, DC, which conducted research and public policy analysis of urban issues and the Campaign for African American Achievement, a community mobilization and advocacy initiative created to raise awareness and promote the importance of achievement through the formation of the National Achievers Society, “Doing the Right Thing” recognition in local communities and the National Urban League’s Scholarship Program.

On May 15, 2003 the Board of Trustees of the National Urban League voted overwhelmingly to appoint former New Orleans Mayor Marc H. Morial as the League’s eighth President and Chief Executive Officer. As New Orleans Chief Executive, he was one of the most popular and effective mayors in the city’s history, leaving office with 70% approval rating. After being elected as one of the youngest mayors in the city’s history, crime plummeted by 60% a corrupt Police Department was reformed, new programs for youth were started and stagnant economy was reignited.

Since his appointment to the National Urban League, Morial has worked to reenergize the movement’s diverse constituencies by building on the strengths of the NUL’s 95-year-old legacy and increasing the organization’s profile both locally and nationally.

In his first year, Morial worked to streamline the organization’s headquarters, secured over $10 million dollars in new funding to support affiliate programs, created the first Legislative Policy Conference “NUL on the Hill’, revamped the State of Black America report, created profitability for the annual conference, and secured a $127.5 million equity fund for minority businesses through the new markets tax credit program. He introduced and developed a stronger strategic direction of the organization with a “five point empowerment agenda’ that focuses on closing the equality gaps which exist for African Americans and other emerging ethnic communities in education, economic empowerment, health and quality of life, civic engagement and civil rights and racial justice.”

This is the guiding principle of the Urban league and its many offices throughout the country or is it? The Local branch (Springfield Illinois) has apparently lost sight of what the Urban league is about. This branch has been the administrator for the Head Start program in Springfield and as such has through several CEO’s made some grave errors in judgment and administration. The current administration while not necessarily being the worst or the best has demonstrated a  lack of concern for the Clients in their charges under the Head Start program. In the last 5 years the (Head Start)program has deteriorated to a shell of its former status. The Springfield Urban league has reduced the teaching staff by 50 plus teachers, aides and advocates due to the desire and successful election of a Union for by the  staff. The SUL with no regard for the long range effect and detriment of the clients (Children and their parents) has reduced staff, fought the Union on contracts and harassed the Unionized staff to the point that many feel threatened on a daily basis in spite of Union protection. The cloud of despair that hangs over the Head Start program is visible and palpable yet no one reports on it. There have been Op-eds extolling the great achievements of SUL but these writings are by uninformed, under informed or spoon fed information. The real truth can only be gleaned from the Union and the folks under that Union not from someone being fed the fodder of misinformation that the League wants put out to the public. If the time were taken by some adventurous media type the truth while being out there could be brought forth in a better way than I can here.


So many people are amazed,taken aback or incensed by the information on how the Affordable Care Act works. That is there needs to be a large enrolment by younger people to offset the cost to older people, this does not mean that the young are subsidizing the old even though it appears so. All insurance is subsidized by the least likely to use the service. The policy holders who use the service get their money’s worth are subsidized by the people who have not and possibly will never have to use the services. This is how it works, there will always be some folks who may not be as deserving of the service but need it and they will be taken care of by the rest of us. This will always be and if thought of in the context of an individual-what if it were you who fell on hard times? There are too many of us who are basking in the ignorance of “let someone else do it”. It has been said, written and espoused by many but too few have stepped up to swing whether it’s a hit or a miss. The idea is to try!

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There are many voices on the temporary unemployment funding yet not many of the “elected” officials are quietly working to resolve the issue in the manner it should be. This uproar now is more about electioneering than legislating. We have had too many issues argued in the media and too few actually legislated properly. If the 500 plus spent less time in front of microphones and cameras perhaps we could get some proper legislation passed. Unfortunately the onus is really on the voters as we all need to read and view all information in the broadest sense as there are many nuances and slants on all news, which sound great but are not always as factual as they appear.

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The end of this year is in some cases not much different than most except for a few things. Our Congress has proven that “they” cannot be trusted, the newcomers to Congress (splinter groups) under one major party or the other have through ill conceived tactics shut down the routine government services causing the military to go unpaid and underfunded, government workers to be furloughed without pay(even though their pay was retroactive) and many Voters (remember us?) to be affected through layoffs, service interruptions and mental anguish through media coverage that verged on panic along with the usual misinformation and semi truths. During the past 5 years after a historic event (President Obama’s election) we have seen the worst and best of America with the professional politicians, big money and yes racists leading the charge. The biggest hurdle we face is negating the harm done by the closeted and non closeted bigots who are in power as we may not have an opportunity soon enough to vote for better people to do the work of government. The bigotry is just one part-bigotry is not just about race, color, ethnicity, religious or sexual orientation, it is about all of it and we have a small segment of Americans who have forgotten about what America is about now and at the founding of our Country. The small issues will be resolved in time by normal people not well paid elected officials and are more beholding to big money than little voters.

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Recently the CEO of the Springfield Urban League has been selected to the Board of security bank, while this is quite an honor for her as CEO of The Springfield Urban League ,it is less of an honor for the Head Start program administered by the Springfield Urban League. Since 2010 the program has steadily declined while the administrators seemingly prospered. After several plus years of lack luster administration. Head Start is losing 2 to 3 locations due to administrative errors in judgment, shortsightedness and infighting against a duly elected Union. Through the determined and pointed opposition to unionization, many longtime employees were dismissed to the detriment of the program and its clients (which is most of the Eastside). It is certainly wonderful that that the CEO has been accorded this honor but what about the clients (parents and children) and employees of Head Start? This is a situation where a prominent person whose personal and public espousals indicate that the community is their prime focus but their actions tell another story. Ask the parents and employees of Head Start if their well being is being secured by this organization.

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Texas has a conundrum, at once there is the strong anti-abortion factor  and a strong smaller government sentiment. This smaller government potion has an effect on the anti-abortion (birth termination for cause) as the Texas government determines the rules regulation this procedure. While the State is strongly anti government and very Red, its actions deny the freedom of choice in the case of unwanted childbirth.  There appears to be no outreach to educate and support victims of rape or incest. The pressure  and regulation on the clinics providing this service only increases the possibilities of unwanted births being added to the welfare rolls they are so vocally against. Is it possible that they (the State) have misread what need to be done?

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There are many descriptions of how a person is perceived or perceives themselves yet no one can definitively say where their center is. There are centrists, leftists and rightists. The issue is that everyone’s center is different! There are degrees of centrism, leftism and rightist. It is easy to fall in the recognized category that defines these views and dispositions but the true measure of one’s leanings is found only by the individual through self examination and retrospect. There are several ways to get to this conclusion, one by may standards is religion through anyone of many sects (conventional and non standard) but even religion with the availability of spiritual leaders is more of an effect than a cause. The professional pollsters tend to ask what someone’s leanings are with questions designed to tilt the answer. This is the same erroneous route taken when scientists determine averages in a persons vital signs such as weight/height ratio, average blood pressure. There always  will be subtle and broad differences from the “norms” yet  the descriptives still hang on and become attached to views that do not fit the “norm”. If you find your own center through the process of examining what you truly believe you may find your views do not necessarily fit the “norm”.

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There are no more midline news agencies! Once there were the hard hitting, truth telling news outlets, these were print, on air ( radio then TV).  Truth was the order of the day in every story. These outlets for the most part have become mostly biased  to the left or right and extremely radical. There appears to be no desire for the centrist road that many news outlets once strived for. Once checkout stand staples  were  the outlaws and “yellow” rags now it appears that these tactics have migrated into mainstream publications catering to the basic fears of their readers. Years ago I wrote a speech for a college class and the theme was “you can’t believe everything you read in the paper”. As I related a fictional tale of a police raid and its result, I was surprised to see the interest in the fiction. The ending line was “this is fiction invented to show:” you cant’ believe everything you read in the papers”.  This particular speech was the one that got me a passing grade in that class. Apparently I was ahead of the game all those years ago, since the current media outlets have more  information that is more dubious in nature than truth and on air personalities whose personal beliefs are in conflict with what is real but we have many believing what they espouse primarily due to its airing. It is once more a time to pay particular attention to what’s presented by news outlets and understand that what’s presented does not represent all of us.

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