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Wednesday, October 20, 2010
A Call to Action - Atlanta Select Family and Friends
A Call to Action to Save
Black Men and Black Boys
Phillip Jackson
Many times when I run e-blasts like today's, people call me and write to me complaining that they are angry with me for sharing this information. They are not angry because the information is false, they are angry because the information is true. Somehow, they think that if I do not share this information, it will make things better for Black men and Black boys.
I refuse to live under that assumption.
Some Black people tell me that other races of people will think badly of us if they see this information and might use it against Black people. That is not my worry. Other races of people know our plight better than we do. They see it, from a distance, everyday. My fear is that we, Black people, will not use this information to improve the plight of Black men and Black boys.
I certainly do not give much credence to the statistics of government, thinktanks or universities, but I am not foolish enough to ignore their research and studies.
The Titanic was under the illusion that it could not sink. It sank. Many Black people are under the illusion that we as a race of people will survive with no real effort from us. I believe we are in danger of the same fate as the Titanic.
Today's email is a call to action. Yes, another one. Because of it, I hope that all men and women, but especially Black men and women, will become mentors, become tutors, become parent advocates, become educators, physically clean up our communities, start businesses, care for our elderly, take our youth to worship, and especially nurture and protect Black boys.
Please see the deepening plight of Black men and Black boys below that is becoming an international crisis and then get into action changing it.
Phillip Jackson
The Black Star Project
blackstar1000@ameritech.net
773.285.9600
America Has Lost Several Generations Of Black Boys with No Plan to Save the Next
America Has Lost A Generation Of Black Boys
March 21, 2007
There is no longer a need for dire predictions, hand-wringing, or apprehension about losing a generation of black boys. It is too late. In education, employment, economics, incarceration, health, housing, and parenting, we have lost a generation of young black men. The question that remains is will we lose the next two or three generations, or possibly every generation of black boys hereafter to the streets, negative media, gangs, drugs, poor education, unemployment, father absence, crime, violence and death.
Most young black men in the United States don't graduate from high school. Only 35% of black male students graduated from high school in Chicago and only 26% in New York City, according to a 2006 report by The Schott Foundation for Public Education. Only a few black boys who finish high school actually attend college, and of those few black boys who enter college, nationally, only 22% of them finish college.
Young black male students have the worst grades, the lowest test scores, and the highest dropout rates of all students in the country. When these young black men don't succeed in school, they are much more likely to succeed in the nation's criminal justice and penitentiary system. And it was discovered recently that even when a young black man graduates from a U.S. college, there is a good chance that he is from Africa, the Caribbean or Europe, and not the United States.
Black men in prison in America have become as American as apple pie. There are more black men in prisons and jails in the United States (about 1.1 million) than there are black men incarcerated in the rest of the world combined. This criminalization process now starts in elementary schools with black male children as young as six and seven years old being arrested in staggering numbers according to a 2005 report, Education on Lockdown by the Advancement Project.
The rest of the world is watching and following the lead of America. Other countries including England, Canada, Jamaica, Brazil and South Africa are adopting American social policies that encourage the incarceration and destruction of young black men. This is leading to a world-wide catastrophe. But still, there is no adequate response from the American or global black community.
Worst of all is the passivity, neglect and disengagement of the black community concerning the future of our black boys. We do little while the future lives of black boys are being destroyed in record numbers. The schools that black boys attend prepare them with skills that will make them obsolete before, and if, they graduate. In a strange and perverse way, the black community, itself, has started to wage a kind of war against young black men and has become part of this destructive process.
Who are young black women going to marry? Who is going to build and maintain the economies of black communities? Who is going to anchor strong families in the black community? Who will young black boys emulate as they grow into men? Where is the outrage of the black community at the destruction of its black boys? Where are the plans and the supportive actions to change this? Is this the beginning of the end of the black people in America?
The list of those who have failed young black men includes our government, our foundations, our schools, our media, our black churches, our black leaders, and even our parents. Ironically, experts say that the solutions to the problems of young black men are simple and relatively inexpensive, but they may not be easy, practical or popular. It is not that we lack solutions as much as it is that we lack the will to implement these solutions to save black boys. It seems that government is willing to pay billions of dollars to lock up young black men, rather than the millions it would take to prepare them to become viable contributors and valued members of our society.
Please consider these simple goals that can lead to solutions for fixing the problems of young black men:
Short term
1) Teach all black boys to read at grade level by the third grade and to embrace education. 2) Provide positive role models for black boys.
3) Create a stable home environment for black boys that includes contact with their fathers.
4) Ensure that black boys have a strong spiritual base.
5) Control the negative media influences on black boys.
6) Teach black boys to respect all girls and women.
Long term
1) Invest as much money in educating black boys as in locking up black men.
2) Help connect black boys to a positive vision of themselves in the future.
3) Create high expectations and help black boys live into those high expectations.
4) Build a positive peer culture for black boys.
5) Teach black boys self-discipline, culture and history.
6) Teach black boys and the communities in which they live to embrace education and life-long learning.
Phillip Jackson
Executive Director of the Black Star Project
Chicago, Il.
blackstar1000@ameritech.net
773.285.9600
Your comments are welcomed.
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