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The Curry Report
November 10, 2009
 
In This Issue
Documenting Limbaugh's Racist Comments
Secret Service Strained as Leaders Face More Threats
Louisiana Newlyweds Want Justice of Peace Fired
Racists trash interracial couple's yard with swastika-branded, black-faced golf balls
Breaking the Last Racial Taboo
Obama urged to issue black boxer Jack Johnson a posthumous pardon
The Great Hair Debate in the African American Community
Crowning of First Non-Black Miss Hampton Divides Campus
What the Morehouse Man Wears
'Worrying' About Interracial Children
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By George E. Curry
NNPA Columnist

 

After creating an imbroglio because he refused to perform a marriage ceremony for a White woman and a Black man, Louisiana Justice of the Peace Keith Bardwell resigned under pressure. However, his stated reason for denying the couple a marriage license is still perplexing: "There is a problem with both groups accepting a child from such a marriage," he told the Associated Press. "I think those children suffer, and I won't help put them through it."

Let's see, interracial children could suffer so much that one might become mayor of Washington, D.C.  Another multiracial child might grow up to become CEO of the NAACP. One poor kid could develop into another Tiger Woods. And one, heaven forbid, might even become president of the United States. Each person holding those positions is biracial and they have "suffered" all the way to the top.

What Bardwell did not say is that in the South in particular, White men have sexually exploited African-American women for years, dating back to the days of slavery. It's the liaison between Black men and White women that troubles died-in-the wool racists such as Bardwell.

His home state of Louisiana passed Jim Crow laws requiring separate facilities for African Americans and Whites on railroads and streetcars, ordering racially segregated schools, banning interracial marriage and cohabitation, outlawing dancing between members of different races at social functions and making it illegal for Black and White families to live in the same dwellings.  The 1896 Supreme Court ruling in Plessy v. Ferguson, upholding the constitutionality of racial segregation, originated in Louisiana.

In the landmark study "American Dilemma," Gunnar Myrdal wrote in 1944 about the South's "fixation on the purity of white womanhood."  Myrdal observed, "The South has an obsession with sex, which helps to make this region quite irrational in dealing with Negroes generally..."

That irrationality is still deep inside such diehards as Bardwell. He is the poster boy for those who argue that even with the election of a Black president, the U.S. is not close to being a post-racial country.

St. Louis License Collector Michael McMillan, a rising political star, learned about Bardwell while watching CNN.

"At first, I thought it was a hoax," said McMillan, the product of a biracial union. "It was so ridiculous that I thought it couldn't be true."

But it was. McMillan added, "Unfortunately, a lot of people hold those views."

Misgenation laws forbidding interracial unions were enforced in the 13 colonies. They were in effect in 16 states until the Supreme Court overturned them in 1967 as a result and of a White man and his Black wife challenging Virginia law. In Loving v. Virginia, the court ruled, "Under our Constitution, the freedom to marry, or not to marry, a person of another race resides with the individual and cannot be infringed by the State."

Over the years, Americans have developed more tolerant attitudes toward interracial marriages. This may be, in part, because 22 percent of Americans report having a close relative who is married to someone of a different race, according to a 2006 Pew Research Center report titled, "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner." For African Americans, the figure is even higher - 37 percent.

In 1987, a Pew Research Center report showed that 48 percent of respondents agreed that it is "all right for blacks and whites to date each other." By 2003, that figure had risen to 77 percent.

Many high-profile public figures have interracial mates, including Tiger Woods, Halle Berry, Kobe Bryant, Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Diana Ross, Julian Bond, Charles Barkley and Clarence Thomas.

African Americans and Hispanics are more accepting of interracial dating than Whites.  Ninety-one percent of Blacks, 90 percent of Hispanics and 71 percent of Whites approve of interracial dating.

There is also a major generational divide on this issue. According to the study, 91 percent of those born after 1976 said such dating is acceptable; only 50 percent of those who reached adulthood during World War II agreed.

In 1970, fewer than 1 percent of all married couples were made up of spouses of a different race. By 2000, that figure had grown to 5 percent, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

The most common type of interracial couple in 2000 was the White husband and Asian wife, representing 14 percent of all interracial couples. Black husbands and White wives accounted for 8 percent of all interracial couples. In Black-White marriages, 73 percent of the husbands are Black. In 75 percent of Asian-White marriages, the husband is White.

Michael McMillan of St. Louis says because of his complexion, he is frequently mistaken for being White.

"I've had people say things to me that were racist and ignorant," he said. "I've heard them call Black people the N-word and say how lazy and stupid they were. I've had to tell them that I'm African American and that I take issue with everything they've said. A lot of them turn from pale or pink to bright red in embarrassment."

 

George E. Curry, former editor-in-chief of Emerge magazine and the NNPA News Service, is a keynote speaker, moderator, and media coach. He can be reached through his Web site, www.georgecurry.com You can also follow him at twitter.com/currygeorge.  
  
READ MORE COLUMNS BY CURRY  


Hope didn't heal the divide
 

 Obama Poster


   

By George Curry

BEYOND THE SPIN

© Philadelphia Inquirer

November 6, 2009

 

When Barack Obama was elected president, 70 percent of Americans were convinced that race relations would improve as a result. A year later, however, optimism about solving race problems in the United States has dropped to where it was nearly 50 years ago, according to a recent Gallup Poll.

 

The Oct. 29 poll asked respondents: "Do you think that relations between blacks and whites will always be a problem for the United States, or that a solution will be worked out?" Gallup reported, "Responses to this long-standing trend today are almost exactly where they were in December 1963, when Gallup first asked the question. Fifty-five percent of Americans in 1963 were hopeful that a solution to the race-relations problem would eventually be worked out. Now, some 46 years later, the 'hopeful' percentage is an almost identical 56 percent."

 

READ MORE

Remembering Obama's Historic Election

Obama Speaking
  
 

By George E. Curry

©TheDefendersOnline.com

November 5, 2009

Like knowing where you were the moment John F. Kennedy was assassinated, the defining question for this generation is: Where were you and what were you doing when you learned that Barack Obama had been elected president?

 

 

Obama's half brother steps in the spotlight to tell his own story
 
Mark Obama  

 

 

By Keith B. Richburg
© Washington Post
 November 5, 2009

GUANGZHOU, CHINA -- The mixed-race son of a brilliant but troubled Kenyan academic and a white American woman writes an emotionally wrenching book about his search for identity and self.

But this is not the familiar story of President Obama. It is the tale of his publicity-shy younger half brother,

Mark Okoth Obama Ndesandjo, who has lived in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen for seven years and has just produced a loosely autobiographical work of fiction titled "Nairobi to Shenzhen: A Novel of Love in the East."

Speaking out publicly for the first time Wednesday, Ndesandjo made only a few references to his famous brother, saying: "We are family. I love my family, and we are in touch." He attended Obama's presidential inauguration in January, and he said he plans to see his brother when the president makes an official visit to Beijing this month.

Ndesandjo credits Obama's election last year with allowing him to come to terms with his painful past and motivating him to finish his book 

 

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Racial disparity: All active ethics probes focus on black lawmakers.

 Maxine Waters

 
 

By John Bresnahan

© Politico

November 3, 2009

 

The House ethics committee is currently investigating seven African-American lawmakers - more than 15 percent of the total in the House. And an eighth black member, Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. (D-Ill.), would be under investigation if the Justice Department hadn't asked the committee to stand down.

Not a single white lawmaker is currently the subject of a full-scale ethics committee probe.


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Clippers Owner Allegedly Didn't Like To Rent To Blacks, Latinos; Pays Record Settlemen
 

 Donald Stewart Clippers


By Dennis Romero

© LA Weekly

November 3, 2009

 

 

Tenants at some of Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald T. Sterling's more-recently acquired Koreatown properties allege that the basketball magnate weeded out black and Latino residents in favor of Koreans who were perceived as being people who don't "complain" as much, according to one fair-housing advocate.

It looks like the Clippers organization loses again, though: A discrimination lawsuit against Sterling was settled for $2.725 million, the U.S. Department of Justice announced Tuesday

 

READ MORE  

Abdul-Jabbar Goes Public With Leukemia Fight

 

 
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

By William C. Rhoden

© New York Times

November 10, 2009

 

In addition to his signature sky hook and a legacy of winning at every level, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was known for his stamina and fitness. During a 20-year N.B.A. career that included six championships and six Most Valuable Player awards, Abdul-Jabbar had one serious injury, a broken wrist. Other than that he had enjoyed a healthy career.

So the news Monday that the 62-year-old star athlete turned writer and coach was battling leukemia came as a stunning revelation.

READ MORE  

 Why No One Talks Back to Cathy Hughes
 
 
Cathy Hughes
 

The empress of black radio is using public airwaves to personally attack her enemies in Congress in the name of black progress. Who's going to put her in check?
"Reality Radio," a series of announcements in which radio pioneer Cathy Hughes asks the black community to fight a new law in Congress that she claims would "murder black-owned radio."
Performance Rights Act (HR 848), a bill that would require radio stations to pay royalties to artists for playing their music. 
 
READ MORE
Detecting glimpses of humanity in D.C. sniper
 
John Muhamad 

 
 
 

 
 

By Maria Glod
© Washington Post
November 10, 2009

If attorney Jon Sheldon's final plea to save the life of John Allen Muhammad fails, he will go to Virginia's death chamber Tuesday night to watch the sniper die.

Most of those who will gather at the Greensville Correctional Center in Jarratt readily see the execution as just punishment for the man who masterminded a wave of random shootings that left 10 people dead and terrorized the Washington region for more than three weeks in October 2002. The father of one victim says he would gladly kill Muhammad with his own hands. The prosecutor who sent Muhammad to death row said he plans to watch the lethal injection.

Then there's Sheldon and co-counsel James G. Connell III, who have been working tirelessly to save Muhammad's life.

They condemn the man's crimes. But during the past three years, they have spent hours talking with him -- in person and by phone -- and they have come to see some humanity in the man many see only as a monster.

 

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