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The Curry Report
October 1, 2010
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In This Issue
A Long View of Bishop Eddie Long's Troubles
Accuser: Bishop Eddie Long is 'Almost Like a Drug'
Don Lemon: "I Was a Victim of a Pedophile When I Was a Kid"
Herding Donkeys
Black Quarterbacks Are Almost Ho-Hum
Whitest Oscars in 10 years?
The Fox TV Presidential Primary
Blue Haiti

A Long View of Bishop Eddie Long's Troubles


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By George E. Curry
NNPA Columnist
September 27, 2010

 

Not surprisingly, embattled Bishop Eddie Long turned to the Bible to defend himself against charges by four men who filed suit last week in which they charged that as teenagers, Long showered them with money, expensive gifts, cars and international travel to entice them into having a sexual relationship with him.

On Sunday, Long told his parishioners at New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in suburban Atlanta, "I want you to know one other thing. I feel like David against Goliath, but I've got five rocks and I haven't thrown one yet."

If the charges against Long are true, another passage in the Bible involving David might be more appropriate. David's seduction of Bathsheba is recounted in 2 Samuel 11. While walking on the roof of his house David, king of Israel and Judah, saw Bathsheba, the wife of Uriah, bathing.

Verse 4 reads: "And David sent messengers, and took her; and she came in unto him, and he lay with her..."

When Bathsheba sent word to David that she was "with child," David ordered Uriah home from battle, hoping he would have sex with his wife and think that he had impregnated her. But Uriah chose to remain on the battlefield. David then ordered his general, Joab, to leave Uriah stranded in battle. After Uriah was killed, David married Bathsheba but was later punished by the Lord.

At this point, it is unclear which David story best fits Eddie Long. Serious questions have been raised about his actions and judgment and it will be fairly easy to corroborate whether the teenagers traveled to the places they say they went with Long, whether they received expensive gifts and the number of times they talked to him on his cell phone.

In his suit, Jamal Parris, now 23, said Long insisted that he call him "Daddy" and coerced him into having sex with him. Two other plaintiffs - Maurice Robinson and Anthony Flagg - said on some trips, Long registered under the pseudonym Dick Tracey.

Accurint, a database owned by LexisNexis, lists a Dick Tracey as living at the Lithonia, Ga. address of Eddie L. Long, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

"Initially, Defendant Long engaged in sexual touching during their encounters and then escalated the activity to oral sodomy and other acts of sexual gratification," the Parris suit alleges. "Long would discuss the Holy Scripture to justify and support the sexual activity."

If the allegations are true, it would represent the height of hypocrisy. Long has strongly and repeatedly denounced homosexuality. His church offers counseling to encourage homosexuals to go straight. And in 2004, he and one his associate pastors, Rev. Bernice King, the youngest daughter of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., led a march to Dr. King's grave to support a national constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriage and to protect marriage "between one man and one woman."

When New Birth was chosen as the funeral site for Coretta Scott King, then-NAACP Chairman Julian Bond refused to attend the services because of Long's anti-gay views.

If found guilty, Long would join a long list of prominent religious leaders who have engaged in  sexual misconduct, including Jimmy Swaggart, Ted Haggard, Jim Bakker, Elijah Muhammad and former National Baptist Convention President Henry J. Lyons.  Institutions such as Boys Town, Congress, the Boy Scouts, and the Roman Catholic Church have also been rocked by sexual scandals.

Although Long did not directly deny the allegations against him while speaking at his church on Sunday, his attorney, Craig Gillen, earlier issued a statement saying Long "categorically denies the allegations."

Long said twice during the same sermon Sunday that he was not a perfect man, which wasn't the perfect comment to make under the circumstances.

In addition to raising questions about how the Black church addresses homosexuality, the Long controversy will undoubtedly renew concerns about so-called prosperity preachers who seem to place acquiring material wealth ahead of spiritual development.

In 1975, it was disclosed that Bishop Eddie Long Ministries, Inc., the charity Long established, made him its largest beneficiary, providing him with a salary of at least a $1 million a year over four years, a $1.4 million home and use of a $350,000 Bentley.

The opulent lifestyle of mega-church stars continues as the U.S. poverty rate increased to 14.3 percent in 2009, up from 13.2 percent in 2008. A quarter of all Blacks - 25.8 percent - live below the poverty line, which is defined as approximately $22,000 for a family of four.

Proverbs 31:9 reads, "Open thy mouth, judge righteously, and plead the cause of the poor and needy (King James version).

Bishop Eddie Long is entitled to the presumption of innocence as he prepares to defend himself in the judicial system. In the meantime, he and all other religious leaders should carry out the Biblical admonition to place the plight of the poor and needy ahead of material extravagance and aberrant behavior.


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  

Accuser: Bishop Eddie Long is 'Almost Like a Drug' (with video)
 

 Jamal Parris

 Jamal Parris, one of four who filed suit against Long.

By Dale Russell

(c)MyFoxAtlanta.com

September 29, 2010

 

ATLANTA, Ga. - A young man who says he received spiritual guidance from Bishop Eddie Long says life with the bishop was like a drug. Jamal Parris told FOX 5's senior I-Team reporter Dale Russell that a father-son relationship turned sexual, and he wants to get the story out to rid himself of the pain and protect others.

"Bishop Long is in the pulpit, Eddie Long is in the private," said Parris. "And we know Eddie Long. That's a whole other man."

READ MORE AND SEE VIDEO 


Don Lemon: "I Was a Victim of a Pedophile When I Was a Kid" 
Don Lemon
   
  

September 27, 2010

(CBS) In America, nearly half a million children are sexually abused each year. Over the weekend, we found out CNN anchor Don Lemon was one of them.

The revelation seemed to surprise him as much as it did the panel of young people he was addressing on live TV.

It happened during the course of a CNN broadcast. Lemon was interviewing young members of the New Birth...

 READ MORE AND WATCH VIDEO

Herding Donkeys

 

Obama Speaking 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  

 

Ari Berman

The Nation

 September 29, 2010

 

 

Editor's Note: This article is an excerpt from Ari Berman's Herding Donkeys: The Fight to Rebuild the Democratic Party and Reshape American Politics [1], published this month by Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
 
A month after the 2008 election, Barack Obama summoned his Democratic Party chair-in-waiting, Virginia Governor Tim Kaine, to Chicago and explained how his presidency and party could prosper going forward.

"How many presidents have tried to meaningfully tackle healthcare?" Obama asked Kaine, who would soon replace outgoing party chair Howard Dean.

"Every Democrat since Truman," Kaine responded.

"How about energy reform?" Obama continued.

"I remember Nixon saying we were importing too much foreign oil, and now we import three times as much," Kaine replied.

"So if they didn't succeed," Obama asked rhetorically, "was it because they weren't smart enough?"

"No, they were smart," Kaine answered.

"Was it because they didn't know the ways of Washington?" Obama followed up, pressing his point like a vintage constitutional law professor.

"No, they knew the ways of Washington," Kaine added.

"So if I try to do these heavy lifts just like they did, what are my chances?" Obama wondered.

"Pretty much zero," Kaine responded.

"Yeah, so what we have to do is figure out a different way to do it," Obama answered.

"If you just rely on your inside-the-Beltway savvy," Kaine agreed, "that's never going to be enough to make fundamental and important changes, because the forces of inertia inside the Beltway are just going to get in your way."

They both concluded that preserving what Kaine called the "outside-the-Beltway popular muscle" that defined Obama's campaign would be an essential ingredient for the new president's success.

 

 READ MORE 

 

 

Black Quarterbacks Are Almost Ho-Hum

 
Michael Vick (running)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 

 

 

By: Deron Snyder

© The Root

September 30, 2010

 

There are signs that equal opportunity has finally reached the most glamorous -- and racially charged -- position in professional football.

Here's a good measuring stick for progress in the National Football League: The league not only welcomes African-American quarterbacks who are good to great but even makes room for the merely average, the truly suspect and one major reclamation project.

Donovan McNabb, who guided the Philadelphia Eagles to five NFC Championship games and one Super Bowl, now leads the Washington Redskins. Charlie Batch, a longtime backup who started just four games in the previous six seasons, threw three touchdown passes to help the Pittsburgh Steelers remain unbeaten. Jason Campbell, who was named the Oakland Raiders' starter after four mediocre seasons in Washington, lost the job at halftime in Week 2.

And then there's the notorious Michael Vick, who in 2001 became the first black quarterback taken No. 1 in the NFL draft. Now, after serving 21 months in jail for operating a dogfighting ring, he's the talk of the league in his second season with Philadelphia, where he's taken over as the starter and has led the Eagles to consecutive victories.

Of the 87 quarterbacks on NFL rosters, 14 are black, including five starters

 

READ MORE 

 

 

Whitest Oscars in 10 years?
Monique with Oscar 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  

 .

 Don't Look for any winnners next year

 

By Gregg Kilday and Matthew Belloni

© The Hollywood Reporter

September 30, 2010

 

Will white be the only color on the red carpet at the 83rd Academy Awards?

Although Oscar contenders are just lining up at the starting gate for the annual run for the gold, there's a real possibility that for the first time since the 73rd Oscars 10 years ago, there will be no black nominees in any of the acting categories at the February ceremony. In fact, there are virtually no minorities in any of the major categories among the early lists of awards hopefuls.

 
The Fox TV Presidential Primary
 
Sarah Palin shrugging
  
 

By Jonathan Martin and Keach Hagey

© Politico

September 27, 2010

 

With Sarah Palin, Newt Gingrich, Rick Santorum and Mike Huckabee all making moves indicating they may run for president, their common employer is facing a question that hasn't been asked before: How does a news organization cover White House hopefuls when so many are on the payroll?

The answer is a complicated one for Fox News. (See: 
GOP's struggles play out on Fox)

As Fox's popularity grows among conservatives, the presence of four potentially serious Republican candidates as paid contributors is beginning to frustrate competitors of the network, figures within its own news division and rivals of what some GOP insiders have begun calling "the Fox candidates."

With the exception of Mitt Romney, Fox now has deals with every major potential Republican presidential candidate not currently in elected office. 

 

 

READ MORE 

 

Blue Haiti
 
Haiti earthquake 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 
 
 
 
 

 

 

My Monique Clesca

© New York Times

September 30, 2010

 

LOOKING out the window as the plane descended, I saw that Haiti had changed color. The familiar earthy brown tones of the mountains surrounding Port-au-Prince were no longer visible; instead, everything I could see was deep blue - the color of the thousands of tarpaulins covering the landscape.

I had last seen my country one afternoon back in January, when I was evacuated four days after the earthquake. Returning last month for a four-week trip, I was afraid to see what I would find.

A soft rain greeted me when I stepped off the plane, as if to wash away my anxiety. So did the energizing rhythm of a calypso band playing under a nearby canopy. Dancing post-earthquake, I thought, had to be indecent. Instead I rocked slightly to the beat, smiled at one musician and put some dollars in his hat. The airport had been partly destroyed, and there was no air-conditioning at baggage claim, but I was happy to be home.

 

 

READ MORE 

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