4A EDITORIAL AND OPINION/Cftatlotte Tuesday, November 21, 2006 C|)arlotte The Voice of fhe Black Community J53I Camden Road Charlotte, N.C. 28203 Gerald O. Johnson C£o/publisher Robert L Johnson co-publisher/general manager Herbert L White editor in chief OPINIONS Lessons the children are teaching adults On November 14, the Children’s Defense Fund held a Beat the Odds Awards Dinner in Washington, D.C. With special guest Renee Zellweger and co-chairs Ali Wentworth and her husband George Stephanopoulos. CDF laxmched the Beat the Odds program in 1990 to celebrate young people who do well despite poverty violence, homelessness, family breakup, or substance abuse that make even the smallest achievements difficult. Students are . ‘■•'ip honored at special awards ceremonies and .^J receive a significant scholarship award and other prizes. Beat the Odds events are held in communities across the country and the five high school students just honored in Washington are extraordinary young people with inspiring stories. At age 13, Chloe was uprooted fiom her home in Florida and moved to her axmt’s house in South Carolina with her younger sister after them mother received a Naval deployment to the D.C. area. Eventually Chloe and her sister joined their moth er, but as she continually struggled to make ends meet, these became just the first in a series of evictions and regular moves for the family Soon theybegan keeping everything they owned in boxes because they never knew when the next move was coming After the family became homeless, the coimty placed them in a hotel ix>om an hour-long bus ride away fi'om Chloe’s school. But despite her challenging and constantly shifting cir cumstances, Chloe has maintained a positive outlook and a rare sense of confidence. She is a member of the National Honor Society and chooses to consider poverty her motivation instead of her ©tcttse. Michael lives by a motto: ‘You can follow the destiny you were bom into or you can carve your own path.” T/coking at his family environment, Michael’s destiny didn’t seem very bri^t. His mother suffers fix)m schizophrenia, and his father con ducted illegal activities to support his drug and alcohol use, including selling the family’s food stamps. At one point he exploited Michael’s computer talents by forcing him to choose between forging checks for him or going without food. But after his parents were caught cashing duplicated checks, IVfichael was sent to live with supportive legal guardians who have helped him use his once-escploited talents to start a technology club at his high school and become the webmaster for the Key Club. Michael dreams of becoming a politician so he can improve the lives of other people stuck in situations similar to the ones he’s faced. Natasha grew up in Jamaica without knowing her mother, who lived in the United States. Her father was often absent, too, leaving Natasha and her younger brotho’ for days or months at a time to take care of themselves. And when he retumed, he was sexually abusive. Natasha then lived at a facility for girls and with an unkind neighbor and her sexual ly-threatening husband before her mother finally brou^t her and her bretiier to the United States. But her mother was in an abusive relationship here that affected the entire family Child Protective Services eventually intervened after an episode of family violence, and Natasha went to live with her grandmother. Now, with a 3.8 GPA, she wants to use her education to empower youi^ girls to escape conditions similar to the ones she endured. Natasha says without ha- painful memories, she wouldn’t have learned the valuable lessons that have tau^t her how to become foigivii^, strong, and loving and given her the com-age to go after her dreams. Tlian looks forward to being the first in his family to gradu ate fipm an American hi^ school. They immigi*ated fi-om Vietnam in 1994 in hopes of a bettei* life, but despite his father’s background as a Vietnamese Army officei-, he has been sordy xmdei--employed in the United States and currently works in a T-shirt factory Than’s mother suffers fix)m chi-onic aiihiitis tliat prevents her fium working. Tb make matters worse, Tlian’s fathei- was recently hospitalized and diagnosed with a livei* disease that has threatened the family’s only source of income. Because he speaks English fluently Tuan sei-ves as tlie interpreter for his family which means he often has to miss school to go with his parents to the Social Security Administration or the hospital. But instead of being oveiwhehued by his circumstances, Tlian uses them as inspii-ation to achieve academically He maintains a 3.7 GPA and desaibes his future education plans with gieat maturity and sei-iousness that is rare for a high school senior, because he equates his success with the health and flitm-e of his family When Chai-lette was five, she lost hei- father to AIDS. At age 12, a family fiiend raped her Ovei* the next few years, addi tional ti-aumatic events destabilized hei* life even further: first, her family was evicted fi-om their home. Then, one of her fiiends was shot at school. Next, students at her school were displaced when the building had to imdei-go a long mercm-y decontamination process. Finally her family moved in with her grandmotlier, who suffers fi-om Alzheimei-’s. But even wliile cai-i-ying the bui-den of hei* pei-sonal life, Chai-lette has i-efocused on hei- academics at a new chaitoi- school and become a leader in the classroom. Tlu-oughoiit it all hei- mother has been hei- soui-ce of sti-ength, and she taught Chai-lette that if you can’t be sti-ong for yom-- self, you can’t be sti-ong for anyone else. But this past summei- Chai-lette learned hei- mother has hmg cancer—so now Chai-lette wants to be sti-ong fca- her. I am so pi-oiid of these yoimg people. They and the thousands of yoimg people like them—many all ai-ound us and sti-uggling quietly each day to stay on ti-ack and do the right thing— deeply desei-ve oiu- i-ecognition, praise, and suppoi-t. Beii)ietls\'iUe. S.C.. native MARIAN WRIGHT EDELMAN is president and founder of the Children j Defense Fund Trent Lott has the reeord of a racist After expressing support four years ago for Senator Strom Thurmond’s pro-segre gation 1948 presidential cam paign, then-Senate Majority Leader TVent Lott went on Black Entertainment Tbievision to repudiate him self, calling his comments insensitive, repugnant and in^tcusable. Lott was apologizing for having said at Thurmond’s 100th birthday party ‘T want to say this about my state. When Strom Thurmond ran for president, we voted for him. We’re proud of it. And if the rest of the country had followed our lead, we would n’t have had aU Ihese prob lems over all these years.” When interviewed on BET by Ed Gordon, Lott, in an unsuccessful attempt to save his Senate leadership posi tion, said he was wrong to have voted against establish ing a Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. federal holiday and said that he now favors affirma tive action “across the board.” He said, “As majority lead^, I can help move an agenda that would hopefully be help ful to Afiican Americans and minorities of all kinda Eind all Americans.” The groveling didn’t stop there. ‘I’m trying to find a way to deal with the under standable hurt that I’ve caused,” he told Gordon. ‘T obviously made a mistake, and I’m going to do every thing I can do to admit that and deal with it and correct it. And that’s what I hope the people will give me a chance to do.” And what has Lott done to “correct it?’ Nothing. On the NAACP Legislative Report Card for the 109th Congress (Jan. 4, 2005-Dec. 22, 2005), Lott received an “F,” voting in favor of issues supported by the NAACP only 5 percent of the time. Instead of contrasting Lott’s words with his record,' the media has been covering Lott’s one-vote victory margin to become Senate Minority Whip as a story of redemp tion and vindicatioii. An Associated Press head line proclaimed, “Sweet Redemption; Republicans return Lott to Senate Leadership.” The New York Times called it an “unlikely study in professional redemp tion.” Tb its credit, the Los Angeles Times noted that Lott has “a credibility prob lem on issues of race.” In describir^ Lott’s noxious comments, some outiets wa:« especially timid. For exam ple, the Associated Press gin gerly described them this way “At Senator Strom Thurmond’s 100th birthday bash, Lott had saluted the South Carolina senator with comments later interpreted as support for Southern seg regationist policies.” Althou^ Lott denied being a racist on BET, his record aiguably supports such a con dition. Both Fair.org and MediaMatters.com,' media monitoring groups, have Trent’s civil rights record posted on tiieir sites, pointii^ out: In 1981, Lott filed a “fidaid of the court” brief opposing the IRS’s decision to termi nate Bob Jones University’s tax exempt status because it prohibited interradal Hating; In 1982, Lott voted against the extension of the Voting Rights Act; In 1983, he voted against creating a national holiday to honor Dr. Martin Luther King Jr; He voted against the Civil Rights Act of 1990, a measure that reversed five Supreme Court rulings that would have made it more difficult for people of color to win job discrimination lawsuits; In 1992, he spoke to the Council of Conservative Citizens, a successor to the White Citizens’ Council of the 1960s, saying “the people in this room stand for the right prindples and the ri^t phi losophy Let’s take it in the right direction, and our chil dren will be the benefida- ries;” In 1994, he voted to termi nate federal funding for the King Holiday Commission; In 1995, he criticized Rep. Bennie Thompson, Mississippi’s lone African- American member of Congress, for seeking FBI documents on the death of dvil rights leader Vernon Dahmer and • In 2001, he was the oxily U.S. Senator to vote against President Geoige W. Bush’s nomination of Roger Gregory an Afiican-American, to Ihe Fourth U.S Court of Appeals. In acknowledging to Ed Gordon that he had been wrong to vote -against the fed eral holiday honoring Dr. King, Lott said: “Im not sure we in America, certainly not white America and the people in the South, fully understood who this man was, the impact he was having on the fabric of Ihis country” Linda Chavez, a leading conservative, didn’t buy that one. “Sorry Senator, that state- • ment reflects willful igno rance. No one who lived through the dvil rights era can fail to appreciate the sodal transformation that occurred throu^ the efforts of Rev. King and other dvil rights leaders. “Sen. Lott’s problem is not that he didn’t understand what Rev King was fighting for, but that, at that time, he was on the other side.” If Lott was sincere when he said he favors affirmative action “across the board,” there could be no better time than now to prove it. If he’s not sincere, we should see Ttent Lott for what he is; a politidan willing to say any thing to regain power. GEORGE E. CURRY is editor- in-chief' of the National Newspaper Publishers Association News Service and BlackPressUSA.com. Web site: www.georgecurry.com. Turning Prince Georges into Compton? There is certainly a correla tion between race and eco nomics when it comes to com munities within the United A modei'ate workmg-dass white commu nity will change into an upper middle • class black community It will be presti gious for a while and then it will be tar- geted by bad policy and over the years ero sion staits to sit in and then crime invades its core. The aime gets so bad that prop^- ty values start declining and the quality of life becomes pitiAil. In a few decades you have what is known as a “golden ghetto.” The final act is diTig infestation. Why does this happen? As my relatives emigrated fium Louisiana to Los Angdes in the ‘40s and ‘50s, I saw communities make the above transition. Thei'e was “Lovely Compton.” 'Twoofmy cousins integrated Fremont High. Anotha' cousin helped integi'ate Washii^ton High. My Aunt Mary and her clan integrated In^ewood. Aunt Lula and her clan bought a house at Hoover and Florence across the street from a syna gogue. Decades later the Rodney King Riot would erupt three blocks down the street. When I was dischaiged from the Army in 1974, Procter & Gamble assigned me to Detroit. Beautiful ndgliborhoods like Rosedale Park and Palmer Woods were heading south with a bullet - a whole lot of bullets. It hit bottom with the eruptions of the inevitable diug wars. 'The most prestigious black county in the United States today is the D.C. suburb of Prince Georges County, Maryland. It has the highest black family income in the nation, which makes it a tar get for bad policy to be fol lowed by crime and drug infestation. Recently I read a few stud ies that showed the General Services Administration (landlord for federal offices) had a systematic way of redlining Prince Georges County from any regional development. Its affect afte- decades was starting to take its toll. The majority of work ers had to travel out of the county Thirty-five percent of all Beltway travelers are commuters from Prince Georges County A county that is overly residential and lacking in business vitality - retail, industiial and office space. So let’s take a quick look. My two sons go to the University of Maryland, which is in Prince Georges County. UMD consistently has one of the highest crime rates among U.S. colleges. Last semester, a fellow ath lete of theirs answered his dorm door. A hit man pushed his way in and put a gun to his head and said ‘You didn’t deliver the stash and now you have'to go.” It took him 10 long minutes to convince the assassin that it was his room mate or someone else he was after. He moved out of the dorm but was never the same. He is leaving at the end of this semester. Two blocks down the street from my boys, a home was recently invaded by robbers. One of the victims called 911 as he hide in a closet. 'The cops arrived and demanded the robbers to come out. They chose to come out with guns a blazing. Cops won - one thug dead, one thug wounded and one escaped. There are so many burglaries in their neighborhood tiiey and their i-oommates pitched in and bought a dog to watch the house while they attend dass. Daily and I mean daily car- jackir^, rapes, kidnappings, home invasions, murders, etc. abound the news coming out of Prince CJeorges County D.C. has nothing on it. In fact, the D.C. Chief of Police had his personal car stolen. They found it abandoned in Prince Georges County A few days ago we hit rock bottom. A board member of the National Black ChambCT of Commerce had his home invaded at night. They tied up his three children, struck his wife and demanded with a gun to his head “Cash, jew elry and drugs.” This is horrifying. It is hap pening with reckless aban don and is starting to get very personal. I am going to sound the alarm. Let’s protect our communities. HARRY C. ALFORD is presi dent/CEO of the National Black Chamber of Commerce. Website: w\\w.nationalbcc£>rg.