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African American
Related: About this forumMy Brother's Keeper - Initiative for Young Black Men
Obama Starts Initiative for Young Black Men, Noting His Own Experiencehttp://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/28/us/politics/obama-will-announce-initiative-to-empower-young-black-men.html?_r=0
So many recent discussions and yet nothing gets to the heart of that matter as much as this . . .
We just assume this is an inevitable part of American life, instead of the outrage that it is, Mr. Obama told an audience of business leaders, politicians, philanthropists, young black men from a Chicago support program, and Mr. Martins parents. Its like a cultural backdrop for us in movies, in television. We just assume, of course its going to be like that.
These statistics should break our hearts, he added. And they should compel us to act.
These statistics should break our hearts, he added. And they should compel us to act.
More -
Mr. Obamas remarks come as the end of his time in office is in sight, with the president mindful of the legacy that his administration will leave behind on race and other civil rights issues like same-sex marriage and immigration. Mr. Obama has embraced the right of gay men and lesbians to marry, and Eric H. Holder Jr., his attorney general, has aggressively sought to ensure that all eligible Americans have access to the ballot box.
Although Mr. Obama nods on occasion to his history-making status as the nations first black president, he has sought to avoid being defined entirely by his race. He most often emphasizes that he is the leader of all Americans. But in recent years, the president has spoken more about the black experience in the United States most strikingly after the death of Mr. Martin, when Mr. Obama said, If I had a son, hed look like Trayvon
.
On Thursday, the president combined his personal remarks on race with a broader call to focus on the larger agenda: economic insecurity and stalled mobility for Americans of any color. The plain fact is there are some Americans who, in the aggregate, are consistently doing worse in our society, Mr. Obama said, groups that have had the odds stacked against them in unique ways that require unique solutions, groups whove seen fewer opportunities that have spanned generations.
Although Mr. Obama nods on occasion to his history-making status as the nations first black president, he has sought to avoid being defined entirely by his race. He most often emphasizes that he is the leader of all Americans. But in recent years, the president has spoken more about the black experience in the United States most strikingly after the death of Mr. Martin, when Mr. Obama said, If I had a son, hed look like Trayvon
.
On Thursday, the president combined his personal remarks on race with a broader call to focus on the larger agenda: economic insecurity and stalled mobility for Americans of any color. The plain fact is there are some Americans who, in the aggregate, are consistently doing worse in our society, Mr. Obama said, groups that have had the odds stacked against them in unique ways that require unique solutions, groups whove seen fewer opportunities that have spanned generations.
I wonder if he reads DU?
So how will you get involved? I figured it if I put this elsewhere it would dissolve into stupidity about how "no one ever gave me nothing" diatribes so instead - what can those in the know and with the heart to bring change do to shift this constant reality (shameful one as far as I'm concerned) in America?
http://www.whitehouse.gov/my-brothers-keeper
Understanding The Problem
The data proves it: Boys and young men of color regardless of where they come from are disproportionately at risk from their youngest years through college and the early stages of their professional lives.
By the time they hit fourth grade, 86 percent of African American boys and 82 percent Hispanic boys are reading below proficiency levels compared to 54 percent of white fourth graders reading below proficiency levels.
African American and Hispanic young men are more than six times as likely to be victims of murder than their white peers and account for almost half of the country's murder victims each year.
The data proves it: Boys and young men of color regardless of where they come from are disproportionately at risk from their youngest years through college and the early stages of their professional lives.
By the time they hit fourth grade, 86 percent of African American boys and 82 percent Hispanic boys are reading below proficiency levels compared to 54 percent of white fourth graders reading below proficiency levels.
African American and Hispanic young men are more than six times as likely to be victims of murder than their white peers and account for almost half of the country's murder victims each year.
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