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	<title>Comments on: The Failure of the Republican Party to deliver anything for Blacks</title>
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	<link>http://www.whereistheoutrage.net/wordpress/2008/06/17/the-failure-of-the-republican-party-to-deliver-anything-for-blacks/</link>
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		<title>By: Buncombe County Republican Party &#187; Latest News &#187; Chairman Johnson responds to Errington Thompson</title>
		<link>http://www.whereistheoutrage.net/wordpress/2008/06/17/the-failure-of-the-republican-party-to-deliver-anything-for-blacks/comment-page-1/#comment-57733</link>
		<dc:creator>Buncombe County Republican Party &#187; Latest News &#187; Chairman Johnson responds to Errington Thompson</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 20 Jun 2008 21:10:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.whereistheoutrage.net/wordpress/?p=6971#comment-57733</guid>
		<description>[...] On his blog, Where&#8217;s the Outrage, Dr. Errington Thompson posted an article entitled The Failure of the Republican Party to deliver anything for Blacks. [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] On his blog, Where&#8217;s the Outrage, Dr. Errington Thompson posted an article entitled The Failure of the Republican Party to deliver anything for Blacks. [...]</p>
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		<title>By: Albert Browder</title>
		<link>http://www.whereistheoutrage.net/wordpress/2008/06/17/the-failure-of-the-republican-party-to-deliver-anything-for-blacks/comment-page-1/#comment-57696</link>
		<dc:creator>Albert Browder</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Jun 2008 21:45:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.whereistheoutrage.net/wordpress/?p=6971#comment-57696</guid>
		<description>There are many great comments in this Discussion. I am surprised to see that there are conversations about how many blacks were appointed to this and that. I would be even more proud to know that that person was appointed because of their individual abilities, rather than skin color or party affiliation. I am a Youth Minister who works in a urban city Ministry. It breaks my heart to see a youth wearing a Dr. King or Malcolm X  t-shirt and yet act like a street thug or wanna be gangsta. I work everyday trying to instill in them that those to GREAT MEN would be horrified to see what they do everyday. The youth today need the leadership,guidance and mentoring of a adult male in their lives. They do not have that in their lives. Mom is working 2 or 3 jobs to make ends meet. No supervision.I ask for help from the black community to stand tall and mentor these young adults. As for the article Failure to Deliver? What is to be delivered? Are we to be given something? Is it about delivering anything for a particular people or is it for all people? I don’t believe we can move forward while looking backwards. Although we should learn from our mistakes in the past ,we should not live in the past. We need to see what life is truly about. We have all done wrong sometime in our lives. We all need to forgive as we have been forgiven. I pray for this country and its people.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There are many great comments in this Discussion. I am surprised to see that there are conversations about how many blacks were appointed to this and that. I would be even more proud to know that that person was appointed because of their individual abilities, rather than skin color or party affiliation. I am a Youth Minister who works in a urban city Ministry. It breaks my heart to see a youth wearing a Dr. King or Malcolm X  t-shirt and yet act like a street thug or wanna be gangsta. I work everyday trying to instill in them that those to GREAT MEN would be horrified to see what they do everyday. The youth today need the leadership,guidance and mentoring of a adult male in their lives. They do not have that in their lives. Mom is working 2 or 3 jobs to make ends meet. No supervision.I ask for help from the black community to stand tall and mentor these young adults. As for the article Failure to Deliver? What is to be delivered? Are we to be given something? Is it about delivering anything for a particular people or is it for all people? I don’t believe we can move forward while looking backwards. Although we should learn from our mistakes in the past ,we should not live in the past. We need to see what life is truly about. We have all done wrong sometime in our lives. We all need to forgive as we have been forgiven. I pray for this country and its people.</p>
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		<title>By: Timothy F Johnson</title>
		<link>http://www.whereistheoutrage.net/wordpress/2008/06/17/the-failure-of-the-republican-party-to-deliver-anything-for-blacks/comment-page-1/#comment-57684</link>
		<dc:creator>Timothy F Johnson</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Jun 2008 16:49:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.whereistheoutrage.net/wordpress/?p=6971#comment-57684</guid>
		<description>Errington, 

Thank you brother. I too would like to encourage more dialogue and deeper conversations. 

PS: Please remove my first response. Entirely too many spelling errors.

Thank you again.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Errington, </p>
<p>Thank you brother. I too would like to encourage more dialogue and deeper conversations. </p>
<p>PS: Please remove my first response. Entirely too many spelling errors.</p>
<p>Thank you again.</p>
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		<title>By: Timothy F Johnson</title>
		<link>http://www.whereistheoutrage.net/wordpress/2008/06/17/the-failure-of-the-republican-party-to-deliver-anything-for-blacks/comment-page-1/#comment-57683</link>
		<dc:creator>Timothy F Johnson</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Jun 2008 16:26:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.whereistheoutrage.net/wordpress/?p=6971#comment-57683</guid>
		<description>To My Good Friend Dr. Errington,

There is no doubt you have done a great job re-capping the past 40 years and the elusive relationship the Republican Party, in general has had with the Black community, overall. 

However, I feel you did not provide your audience with enough information to include the fact that in 1966 Edward Brooke, a Black Republican from Massachusetts was elected to the U.S. Senate and re-elected in 1972. I find it even more interesting that you don’t mention it took 20 more years for another Black person and the first woman, Senator Moseley-Braun to get elected to the Senate and another 12 years, before the election of Senator Obama. 

While you are well versed in history, I find many people I speak with are not. 

In 1854, when the Republican Party was founded, it was known as the anti-slavery party. The 20 Congressional founders wanted to end slavery not because it was the popular thing to do, but instead it because it was the right thing to do. At the conclusion of the Civil War, the first blacks elected to Congress were Republicans and from southern states. In 1898, when the Wilmington riots took place, 2,000 blacks and 1,000 white Republicans were lynched and forced from their homes by Democrats. The KKK was started by the Dixiecrats, who were Southern Democrats, affectionally known as yellows dogs.

Coming into the present times, are you not going to acknowledge J.C. Watts historic accomplishments, General Powell’s numerous accomplishments or Secretary Rice historical accomplishments? 
Are you willing to be so partisan that you wouldn’t even acknowledge the fact that President Bush has appointed more Blacks to senior level positions in his administration than any other President in history, to include the so call first Black President-William Jefferson Clinton?

And this year alone, three Blacks have been elected National Committee Men and Woman from South Carolina, North Carolina and Michigan. Black Republicans are being elected around the country and are current candidates for local to national offices. Furthermore, Black community activist, like myself, are being elected to lead our local volunteers. Re-establish our rightful places, without forgetting we are “Black Republicans not Republicans who happen to be Black”

Finally, for those who love history, we know history keeps track of our past. Those failing to acknowledge and learn from it are doomed to repeat it.
Please do not think the Republican Party is asleep at the wheel or unaware of its past history and relationship with people of color. If they reach out to us and we don’t reach back, we can’t and shouldn’t expect anymore than we have traditional received. 
Like you, I am proud of what Senator Barak Obama, the fifth Black U.S. Senator and the second Black Democratic Senator in our nation’s history, has accomplish. But, I am fearful for us, as Black Americans, submitting ourselves to this single minded thinking that the Democratic Party is and will be our only political option. 

I am free to think, feel and vote my preference. I pray to God that the mental shackles will free more of us to think for ourselves, seek out the real truth and vote for the person who will actually represent us without controlling us.

That’s what I continue to believe and think Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was saying to us during his work for civil rights and that is the legacy that remains with me. 

As a lifelong Black Republican, are his words useless and meaningless because of his political affiliation? I&#039;ll leave that up to you to decide.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>To My Good Friend Dr. Errington,</p>
<p>There is no doubt you have done a great job re-capping the past 40 years and the elusive relationship the Republican Party, in general has had with the Black community, overall. </p>
<p>However, I feel you did not provide your audience with enough information to include the fact that in 1966 Edward Brooke, a Black Republican from Massachusetts was elected to the U.S. Senate and re-elected in 1972. I find it even more interesting that you don’t mention it took 20 more years for another Black person and the first woman, Senator Moseley-Braun to get elected to the Senate and another 12 years, before the election of Senator Obama. </p>
<p>While you are well versed in history, I find many people I speak with are not. </p>
<p>In 1854, when the Republican Party was founded, it was known as the anti-slavery party. The 20 Congressional founders wanted to end slavery not because it was the popular thing to do, but instead it because it was the right thing to do. At the conclusion of the Civil War, the first blacks elected to Congress were Republicans and from southern states. In 1898, when the Wilmington riots took place, 2,000 blacks and 1,000 white Republicans were lynched and forced from their homes by Democrats. The KKK was started by the Dixiecrats, who were Southern Democrats, affectionally known as yellows dogs.</p>
<p>Coming into the present times, are you not going to acknowledge J.C. Watts historic accomplishments, General Powell’s numerous accomplishments or Secretary Rice historical accomplishments?<br />
Are you willing to be so partisan that you wouldn’t even acknowledge the fact that President Bush has appointed more Blacks to senior level positions in his administration than any other President in history, to include the so call first Black President-William Jefferson Clinton?</p>
<p>And this year alone, three Blacks have been elected National Committee Men and Woman from South Carolina, North Carolina and Michigan. Black Republicans are being elected around the country and are current candidates for local to national offices. Furthermore, Black community activist, like myself, are being elected to lead our local volunteers. Re-establish our rightful places, without forgetting we are “Black Republicans not Republicans who happen to be Black”</p>
<p>Finally, for those who love history, we know history keeps track of our past. Those failing to acknowledge and learn from it are doomed to repeat it.<br />
Please do not think the Republican Party is asleep at the wheel or unaware of its past history and relationship with people of color. If they reach out to us and we don’t reach back, we can’t and shouldn’t expect anymore than we have traditional received.<br />
Like you, I am proud of what Senator Barak Obama, the fifth Black U.S. Senator and the second Black Democratic Senator in our nation’s history, has accomplish. But, I am fearful for us, as Black Americans, submitting ourselves to this single minded thinking that the Democratic Party is and will be our only political option. </p>
<p>I am free to think, feel and vote my preference. I pray to God that the mental shackles will free more of us to think for ourselves, seek out the real truth and vote for the person who will actually represent us without controlling us.</p>
<p>That’s what I continue to believe and think Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was saying to us during his work for civil rights and that is the legacy that remains with me. </p>
<p>As a lifelong Black Republican, are his words useless and meaningless because of his political affiliation? I&#8217;ll leave that up to you to decide.</p>
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		<title>By: ecthompson</title>
		<link>http://www.whereistheoutrage.net/wordpress/2008/06/17/the-failure-of-the-republican-party-to-deliver-anything-for-blacks/comment-page-1/#comment-57682</link>
		<dc:creator>ecthompson</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Jun 2008 16:23:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.whereistheoutrage.net/wordpress/?p=6971#comment-57682</guid>
		<description>Tim - 

thanks for your thoughtful remarks.  

I don&#039;t want you or anyone else to change party affiliation, just because I&#039;m so.  You have come to the Republican Party based on your beliefs.  You believe that your believers wind up with the ideals of the Republican Party.  You&#039;ve come to a conclusion, not out of some knee-jerk reaction but because of thoughtful reflection.  I appreciate that.

I&#039;m sure that you didn&#039;t want to overlook the Black Congressman during the period of reconstruction.  Although their 10 years in the US House of Representatives and the Senate were relatively short, they were the Trail Blazers.  People like John Menard of Louisiana and Hiram Revels (the first black senator) of Mississippi were just a few of the 22 blacks that were elected to the House of Representatives or the U.S. Senate during Reconstruction.  (It was the Republican Party which passed a sweeping legislation that allowed these events to occur -- the 14th amendment, the Reconstruction act of 1867 and the 15th amendment.)

I acknowledge and applaud the accomplished them so Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice.  I also acknowledge their failures.  As human beings, none of us are perfect.

I also at knowledge that the Democratic Party is not perfect.  Over the years, the Democratic Party has made numerous mistakes.  They&#039;re really too many mistakes for me to even adequately outline in a short comment.  But, I will try, for completeness sake.  Some of the reforms of the 60s clearly went too far.  Welfare for everyone, really helped no one.  The behemoths of Medicare and Medicaid, are the classic double edged sword.  On one hand, millions of Americans would benefit from these programs.  On the other hand, these programs have grown government, they become victims of fraud and abuse.  I believe, overall, they have hurt the medical community as doctors and hospitals have seen the reimbursements decreased over the last 20 years.  Yet, the pharmaceutical industry has thrived under this program.  The motorized wheelchair industry has exploded.

I invite all Americans -- black, white, brown and all other colors to join our conversation.  It is conversations like these that make America stronger.  I look forward to having more of them.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Tim &#8211; </p>
<p>thanks for your thoughtful remarks.  </p>
<p>I don&#8217;t want you or anyone else to change party affiliation, just because I&#8217;m so.  You have come to the Republican Party based on your beliefs.  You believe that your believers wind up with the ideals of the Republican Party.  You&#8217;ve come to a conclusion, not out of some knee-jerk reaction but because of thoughtful reflection.  I appreciate that.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m sure that you didn&#8217;t want to overlook the Black Congressman during the period of reconstruction.  Although their 10 years in the US House of Representatives and the Senate were relatively short, they were the Trail Blazers.  People like John Menard of Louisiana and Hiram Revels (the first black senator) of Mississippi were just a few of the 22 blacks that were elected to the House of Representatives or the U.S. Senate during Reconstruction.  (It was the Republican Party which passed a sweeping legislation that allowed these events to occur &#8212; the 14th amendment, the Reconstruction act of 1867 and the 15th amendment.)</p>
<p>I acknowledge and applaud the accomplished them so Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice.  I also acknowledge their failures.  As human beings, none of us are perfect.</p>
<p>I also at knowledge that the Democratic Party is not perfect.  Over the years, the Democratic Party has made numerous mistakes.  They&#8217;re really too many mistakes for me to even adequately outline in a short comment.  But, I will try, for completeness sake.  Some of the reforms of the 60s clearly went too far.  Welfare for everyone, really helped no one.  The behemoths of Medicare and Medicaid, are the classic double edged sword.  On one hand, millions of Americans would benefit from these programs.  On the other hand, these programs have grown government, they become victims of fraud and abuse.  I believe, overall, they have hurt the medical community as doctors and hospitals have seen the reimbursements decreased over the last 20 years.  Yet, the pharmaceutical industry has thrived under this program.  The motorized wheelchair industry has exploded.</p>
<p>I invite all Americans &#8212; black, white, brown and all other colors to join our conversation.  It is conversations like these that make America stronger.  I look forward to having more of them.</p>
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