Bush's Unprecendented Attack on African Americans

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For four years Bush didn't meet with the Congressional Black Caucus and paid no heed to African Americans, except, of course, to repeat the Republican mantra of how terribly concerned we all are and how we just want to include you under the big Republican tent. But yesterday, reinvigorated by his election mandate, Bush called the caucus and fed them a line of bullshit. Arguing that his "reforms," ranging from education to Social Security, will help blacks, he offered an insulting cliche: "Civil rights is a good education. Civil rights is opportunity. Civil rights is home ownership. Civil rights is owning your own business. Civil rights is making sure all aspects of our society are open for everybody." When you get past the rhetoric, Bush's ownership society amounts to an unprecedented attack on black people. Social Security reform that turns over substantial hunks of a person's account to Wall Street, where the vicissitudes of the marketplace can yo-yo it up and down, is little help to anyone, let alone blacks. The only source of retirement for 40 percent of all African Americans is Social Security, according to Melvin Watt, a Democratic rep from North Carolina. Without it, poverty rates among blacks would double. The American Journal of Public Health reported in December that 886,000 more blacks died between 1991 and 2000 than would have died had equal health care been provided. The health of minorities, many of whom live in poor industrial brownfields, can only get worse if Congress passes Bush's "Clear Skies" clean-air legislation, which promises a 70 percent reduction in sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide, and mercury emissions by 2018. [more]
  • Pictured above: New Pro Black Senator Bill Frist, Republican of Tennessee, center, at a news conference on Tuesday in support of Condoleezza Rice. With him, from left, were Handkerchief Heads for Hire, Rosa Whitaker, president of the Whitaker Group consulting firm; C. DeLores Tucker, a former secretary of state of Pennsylvania; and Andrew Young, a former American ambassador to the United Nations. [more] All Available at low cost.