Curry Media Logo
The Curry Report
November 18, 2009
 
In This Issue
Targeting Black Lawmakers
Ban on Racial Preferences May Get Appeal
Threat to Black Colleges
Obama Backers Fear Opportunities to Reshape Judiciary Are Slipping Away
Second Cop -- Not Kimberly Munley -- Brought Down Fort Hood Killer
Health Scare Tactics
What Does China Make of Obama?
Ikea's heart of darkness: A tale of racism, lies and Swedish meatballs
U.K. Shouts Racism Over Couples Retreat Poster
Targeting Black Lawmakers
Curry Headshot



By George E. Curry
NNPA Columnist

 

Although a House of Representatives ethics committee is known to be looking into the activities of at least 19 members of Congress, the only full-scale investigations underway are against seven Black lawmakers.

African Americans make up 15 percent of Congress but 100 percent of those subjected to a full-scale investigation, raising questions about a double-standard.

According to media accounts, House members under full investigation as of late July were Democrats Charles Rangel (N.Y.), Maxine Waters (Calif.), Bennie Thompson (Miss.), Carolyn Kilpatrick (Mich.), Donald Payne (N.J.),  Laura Richardson (Calif.) and Donna Christensen (U.S. Virgin Islands).

An investigation of an eighth member of the Congressional Black Caucus, Jesse Jackson, Jr. of Illinois, has been delayed at the request of the Justice Department, which is examining Jackson's alleged role in impeached Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich pay-for-play corruption scheme.

Prosecutors are looking into whether Jackson or his associates tried to buy President Obama's old senate seat. The House ethics committee inquiry is centered on whether Jackson used Washington and Chicago staff members to lobby for the seat.

Jackson and the other Black lawmakers have strongly denied breeching Congressional ethics rules. It is not unusual for inquiries to start, only to later have the subject of the investigation exonerated.

How targets are selected is being hotly debated.

Under the headline, "Racial disparity: All active ethics probes focus on black lawmakers," the political Website politico,com observed, "Not a single white lawmaker is currently subject of a full-scale ethics committee probe."

It continued, "The ethics committee declined to respond to questions about the racial disparity, and members of the Congressional Black Caucus are wary of talking about it on the record. But privately, some black members are outraged - and see in the numbers a worrisome trend in the actions of the ethics watchdogs on and off Capitol Hill."

The House ethics committee, known formally as the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct, is made up of 10 members, five Democrats and five Republicans. Rep. G.K. Butterfield of North Carolina is the only African American on the panel.

The Black members of Congress are being investigated on a variety of charges.

The personal finances of Rangel, chairman of the powerful Ways and Means Committee, are being investigated. Rangel said his son and a senior aide also have been questioned by the ethics committee. Rangel said the committee interviewed him about a conference he attended last year with four other members of the CBC in St. Martin. Although the conference at a luxury Caribbean  resort was said to have been sponsored by a nonprofit foundation, investigators say the trip was underwritten by such corporate giants as Pfizer, Citigroup and AT&T. Under House rules, private companies are prohibited from paying for congressional travel.

Rep. Waters is being investigated for arranging a meeting between the Treasury Department and the National Bankers Association, which represents Black banks. Her husband, Sidney Williams, owns stock in one of those banks, OneUnited, and served on its board until early last year.

Waters expressed confidence that she will be exonerated and said, "My longtime advocacy on behalf of women- and minority-owned institutions is well known and appreciated by these institutions, which have been historically denied access to government regulators to address their concerns."

Amid the discussion over the unfair targeting of African-American lawmakers, former Congressman William Jefferson of Louisiana has been sentenced to prison. On Friday, Nov. 13, Jefferson was given a 13-year sentence following his conviction on 11 of 16 corruption charges. He was charged with soliciting bribes in schemes to help American companies consummate deals in Nigeria and Ghana in exchange for money paid to him directly and to companies controlled by his wife, their five daughters, his son-in-law and a brother.

Jefferson became the butt of late night TV jokes after an FBI raid on his Washington home in 2005 turned up $90,000 in his freezer.The money was wrapped in tin foil and placed in stacks of $10,000. It was stuffed in Pillsbury frozen pie crust and Boca meatless burger boxes and Yes! Organic Market bags.

The marked money was part of $100,000 Lori Mody, a businesswoman secretly cooperating with the FBI, gave Jefferson as they shared a four-hour, $1,023 dinner at a five-star Italian restaurant in Washington.

Ironically, despite all the jokes about "Dollar Bill," cold cash and frozen assets, Jefferson was not convicted on the charge associated with the recovered money. He was indicted for violation of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act in connection with allegedly bribing then- Nigerian Vice President Atiku Abubakar and other officials. According to federal prosecutors, Jefferson was supposed to give the money to Abubakar on his trip to the U.S. in 20005 but the official left before Jefferson made the transfer.

Jefferson was accused of taking about $500,000 in bribes and seeking millions more. His sentence of 13 years in prison is the longest for a member of Congress. By contrast, former Republican Congressman Randy "Duke" Cunningham of California pleaded guilty to accepting $2.4 million in bribes, conspiracy to commit bribery, mail fraud, wire fraud and tax evasion. On March 3, 2006, he was sentenced to eight years and four months in prison.

Even when former members of Congress are sent to prison, there is racial disparity.

 

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 www.twitter.com/currygeorge.

  

 

 
READ MORE COLUMNS BY CURRY  
Ban on Racial Preferences May Get Appeal
 

 Supreme Court


    

Both sides look to keep fighting -- perhaps to the Supreme Court

 

By Robin Erb
© Detroit Free Press

November 18, 2009

 

Michigan's ban on racial preferences in public university admissions and government hiring was in court again Tuesday, another step closer to its assumed destination: the doorstep of the U.S. Supreme Court.

"I don't see how they would give up, and we're not either," said George Washington, an attorney representing those fighting the ban.

 READ MORE 

 


Threat to Black Colleges

Jackson State logo
     

By Scott Jaschik

© Inside Higher Education

November 17, 2009

 

Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour on Monday proposed combining the state's three public black colleges into one of the institutions, Jackson State University. While Barbour said that campuses would continue to exist at what are now Alcorn State University and Mississippi Valley State University, the proposal marks the most dramatic state challenge in recent years to the continuation of some public black colleges -- and the move comes in the state whose higher education system was the subject of the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that governs college desegregation.

 READ MORE 

 


Obama Backers Fear Opportunities to Reshape Judiciary Are Slipping Away

 

Obama Congress 09  
 

 

By Charlie Savage

© New York Times

November 15, 2009

 

WASHINGTON - President Obama has sent the Senate far fewer judicial nominations than former President George W. Bush did in his first 10 months in office, deflating the hopes of liberals that the White House would move quickly to reshape the federal judiciary after eight years of Republican appointments.

Mr. Bush, who made it an early goal to push conservatives into the judicial pipeline and left a strong stamp on the courts, had already nominated 28 appellate and 36 district candidates at a comparable point in his tenure. By contrast, Mr. Obama has offered 12 nominations to appeals courts and 14 to district courts.

Theodore Shaw, a Columbia University law professor who until recently led the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund Inc., said liberals feared that the White House was not taking advantage of its chance to fill vacancies while Democrats enjoy a razor-thin advantage in the Senate enabling them to cut off the threat of filibusters against nominees. There are nearly 100 vacancies on federal courts.

 

READ MORE

Second Cop -- Not Kimberly Munley -- Brought Down Fort Hood Killer


 Sgt. Mark Todd

 Sgt. Mark Todd, the real Fort Hood hero.
 

By Greg Mitchell

© Editor and Publisher
November 13, 2009

 

NEW YORK (Commentary) With the publication of an interview with Sgt. Mark Todd, the actual cop who gunned down the killer at Fort Hood -- following its account of an unnamed eyewitness last night--The New York Times this afternoon finally underlined what some of us noticed from nearly the start: the media fell hook, line and sinker once again for a military account of what happened during the tragedy.

First, it was the "death" of the apparent mass murderer, Major Hasan, not corrected for hours. Then, for days, the story of how a white female cop brought down the shooter, even as she was receiving serious wounds.

 

READ MORE

Health Scare Tactics 
 
 GOP

A GOP blizzard of untrue statements

By Ruth Marcus
© Washington Post

 November 11, 2009

I'm hoping, for your sake, that you didn't spend your Saturday night as I did: watching the House debate health-care reform on C-SPAN.

Pathetic, I know. The outcome wasn't in doubt, and the arguments were as familiar as an old pair of slippers. Moral imperative! Government takeover! Long-overdue protections! Crippling mandates!

I'm not a huge fan of the House measure, but I was glad to see it straggle across the finish line, if only to keep the process going. And, by the end of the long debate, I was cheering for it even more because of the appalling amount of misinformation being peddled by its opponents.

I don't mean the usual hyperbole about "a children-bankrupting, health-care-rationing, freedom-crushing, $1 trillion government takeover of our health-care system," as Texas Republican Jeb Hensarling put it. Or the tired canards about taxpayer-funded abortion or insurance subsidies for illegal immigrants.

Or the extraneous claims about alleged Democratic excesses, as in this from Georgia Republican Jack Kingston: "Let's remember the Pelosi plan for jobs: an $800 billion stimulus plan that caused unemployment to go from 8.5 percent to over 10 percent."

Caused? We can debate whether the stimulus was effective, although the best evidence is that it prevented things from being even worse. No rational person believes the stimulus "caused" unemployment to rise.

I mean the flood of sheer factual misstatements about the health-care bill.

The falsehood-peddling began at the top, with Minority Leader John Boehner:

 

READ MORE 

 
What Does China Make of Obama? 

 

 
China map 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 
 

  

 

By Russell Leigh Moses

© The Guardian of UK

November 15, 2009

 

Race is an insensitive issue in China. The sighting of someone who is not of the majority Han race does not stop conversation here, but sparks comments of all sorts - of surprise, wonder, bewilderment and defensiveness.

 

READ MORE  

Ikea's heart of darkness: A tale of racism, lies and Swedish meatballs
 
Ikea
 

 

Stenebo says Ikea execs often refer to foreigners as "niggers" and deny them promotions. All of Ikea's top executives come from the same small region of Sweden as Kamprad, Stenebo alleges; he also characterizes Kamprad's heir apparent, Peter, as an "incompetent racist."

READ MORE

U.K. Shouts Racism Over Couples Retreat Poster
Couples Retreat poster 

 
 
 

 
 

 

 

 

By Natalie Abrams

© TV Guide

November 16, 2009

 

The film Couples Retreat follows four couples who go on a retreat in hopes of fixing their relationships. So why are there only three couples on the international poster? 

Faizon Love and Kali Hawk, who are both African American, are mysteriously missing from the movie posters in the British ads, which prompted some in the U.K. to question whether the decision to omit these cast members was based on their race

READ MORE 



You can now follow me on....
 
Twitter
 
 
 
 
Speaking Engagements
Microphone
 
.
 
  
 
December 5-6, 2009
Final Call's 30th Anniversary
Chicago, Ill.
 
January 14, 2010
Francis Marion Univ.
Florence, S.C.

February 9, 2010
Tennessee State Univ.
Nashville, Tenn.
 
February 18, 2010
Georgia State Univ.
Atlanta, Ga. 

July 18-23, 2010
XVIII International Conference on AIDS
Vienna, Austria
 
 
 
 
 
 
Book George Curry for a Speech 
 
Podium
Let Curry Spice Up Your Next Event 
Quick Links
 
Join Our Mailing List!
"Keeping it Real with Rev. Al Sharpton"
Al Sharpton Headshot
Listen to George Curry every Tuesday 2-3 P.M., EST, on Sharpton's Radio Program 

 
"The Bev Smith Show"
Bev Smith
 
.

Listen to George Curry on "The Bev Smith Show" every Friday, beginning at 7:12 p.m., EST
 
 

 
Books by George E. Curry 
 
Emerge
 
The Best of Emerge Magazine
Edited by
George E. Curry
 
"This whopper of an anthology perfectly captures black life and culture...This retrospective volume is journalism at its best: probing, controversial and serious...Although Emerge was devoted unequivocally to African-Americans, Curry's vision and editorship of this book will instruct, provoke and sometimes entertain or inspire any reader."
- Publishers Weekly

AAction
 
 
 The Affirmative Action Debate
Edited by George E. Curry

"... Collects the leading voices on all sides of this crucial dialogue...the one book you need to understand and discuss the nation's sharpest political divide."
 


 
Gaither
 
 
 Jake Gaither: America's Most Famous Black Coach
By George E. Curry

"Curry has some telling points to make on the unlooked for effects of court-ordered desegregation."
- The New York Times
 
"... an excellent example of sports writing."
- Library Journal