Wes_Tiny_Abe_ wrote:Obama pardoning millions of illegals is not going to help the black's current situation at all.
It's only going to make things worse.
This is absolutely true.
Moderators: LyricalRico, nate33, montestewart

Wes_Tiny_Abe_ wrote:Obama pardoning millions of illegals is not going to help the black's current situation at all.
It's only going to make things worse.
dckingsfan wrote:Especially this quote: "Public education has traditionally been the great equalizer in America. The tragedy today is that the decline of public schools is one of the leading contributors to generational cycles of poverty."

DCZards wrote:dckingsfan wrote:Especially this quote: "Public education has traditionally been the great equalizer in America. The tragedy today is that the decline of public schools is one of the leading contributors to generational cycles of poverty."
...which goes back to the point I was trying to make a couple of days ago when I said we need to make sure there is good prenatal care for poor mothers, access to early childhood education programs, school-based wraparound services that address the social and mental needs of students, and well-paid teachers who have access to quality professional development.
All of these things, and more, are needed if we're serious about improving the educational outcomes of poor and low-income students.
nate33 wrote:DCZards wrote:dckingsfan wrote:Especially this quote: "Public education has traditionally been the great equalizer in America. The tragedy today is that the decline of public schools is one of the leading contributors to generational cycles of poverty."
...which goes back to the point I was trying to make a couple of days ago when I said we need to make sure there is good prenatal care for poor mothers, access to early childhood education programs, school-based wraparound services that address the social and mental needs of students, and well-paid teachers who have access to quality professional development.
All of these things, and more, are needed if we're serious about improving the educational outcomes of poor and low-income students.
Baltimore has the second highest per pupil spending in the nation. Clearly, money isn't the issue.
http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2013-0 ... -districts
DCZards wrote:dckingsfan wrote:Especially this quote: "Public education has traditionally been the great equalizer in America. The tragedy today is that the decline of public schools is one of the leading contributors to generational cycles of poverty."
...which goes back to the point I was trying to make a couple of days ago when I said we need to make sure there is good prenatal care for poor mothers, access to early childhood education programs, school-based wraparound services that address the social and mental needs of students, and well-paid teachers who have access to quality professional development.
All of these things, and more, are needed if we're serious about improving the educational outcomes of poor and low-income students.
dobrojim wrote:All the money in the world for education will not overcome what students see as
the obvious truth, finding a job that has long term serious potential to support
a family and generate wealth is exceedingly difficult. Investment in human
capital on the part of private enterprise has become a rarity. The sad thing is,
those companies that do embrace that philosophy usually win out in the long run.
Induveca wrote:Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:dobrojim wrote:I believe it's all about money. It's so much easier to do well when your parents did well.
It's so much harder to do well when your parents did not do well. So many virtuous as well
as vicious cycles. And there is a ton of institutional racism that has nothing to do with white
people consciously plotting in their own minds or with other white people, about how they
can keep 'the other' down. There is a great dearth of empathy in terms of understanding
the full life experiences of other people, especially those of a different race. African
Americans are still clawing to catch up from starting 250 years behind white Americans
in the struggle to be economically successful.
I agree, totally, jim.
Money is the problem now. Not racism. Hell, I think most whites show blacks all kinds of respect. Imitation is the greatest form of flattery. Sports icons, actors, a President, a neurosurgeon turned politician....it's not like African Americans have no voice.
The folks with no money are the ones not empowered. Only when an affluent dark person drives in the "wrong neighborhood" (where few blacks live and much profiling exists) is it about race.
Even then it's generally a cop with little money targeting someone with money who he perceives must have stolen the car or been involved in narcotics distribution. That's a money/jealousy thing as much as a race thing.
Most systematic problems boil down to money IMO.
CCJ dead on. Back when I had an expensive car I got pulled over all the time. Once a cop even threw the license into my face with force. Kept my head down and carried on.
It was a jealous light skinned Cuban guy.

dobrojim wrote:All the money in the world for education will not overcome what students see as
the obvious truth, finding a job that has long term serious potential to support
a family and generate wealth is exceedingly difficult. Investment in human
capital on the part of private enterprise has become a rarity. The sad thing is,
those companies that do embrace that philosophy usually win out in the long run.

Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:Zonkerbl wrote:Induveca wrote:
I've lived by the mantra "desperation is the best motivation" for decades. It drives you to succeed and take major risks. It made me leave NYC as a teenager to an empty studio in DC where there was a booming tech scene.
People with any talent should move from Baltimore, but that's been the mantra for decades now. You can't save a violent/dying former industrial city with no income opportunities or skilled labor. It's Detroit all over again. It's one of a handful of "Blue collar cities" that never evolved. This is an issue of the death of manufacturing in Baltimore/Detroit/Trenton/Upstate NY not the "plight of African Americans".
Migrate to survive, it's in all of our DNA....or none of us would hold blue passports.
Man I hate to agree with you but Dayton's the same way. RCA went to Mexico in the eighties, the air force kinda downgraded Wright Pat and boom. Dead city.
I think you should love and care for dying cities like you should love and care for aging parents. Make their passing as comfortable as possible.
New Orleans too. Man.
Well, I'm hoping what will happen is the internet will become so powerful that telecommuting will really take off. Then people who like to live in urban centers but want it on the cheap can buy a place in Detroit. Heck, Detroit will pay YOU to buy property there. Place is so empty there isn't even any crime anymore. Balti if you have family in the DMV. New Orleans if you like to party.
Dayton if you like... corn. Or Jesuits.
Zonker, I was at Wright Patterson back in the early 90s.
Speaking of corn, the first time I arrived at Scott AFB I noticed the cornfield. No way did I want to be stationed there....Of course that's what happened. I had orders to PCS to Andrews and a colonel who wanted me at Scott changed them. This after I was on an overseas remote for one year.
As fate would have it after I got to Scott this colonel liked my ex-wife more than me.
Ah, good times...
(I am way over that. Had totally forgotten, but corn reminded me.)

nate33 wrote:DCZards wrote:dckingsfan wrote:Especially this quote: "Public education has traditionally been the great equalizer in America. The tragedy today is that the decline of public schools is one of the leading contributors to generational cycles of poverty."
...which goes back to the point I was trying to make a couple of days ago when I said we need to make sure there is good prenatal care for poor mothers, access to early childhood education programs, school-based wraparound services that address the social and mental needs of students, and well-paid teachers who have access to quality professional development.
All of these things, and more, are needed if we're serious about improving the educational outcomes of poor and low-income students.
Baltimore has the second highest per pupil spending in the nation. Clearly, money isn't the issue.
http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2013-0 ... -districts

nate33 wrote:Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:HOW?
Every since slavery most black men haven't been able to raise their families. Bill Cosby played Heathcliff Huxtable. Not many dads like him exist.
I had a great dad (definitely not a perfect dad). Military officer who nurtured from when he was in his 50s until he died at age 84. Before that he provided and stayed married to my mom for over 25 years. I literally saw him redirect a white man who yelled at me and my mom. He did so without gunplay or violence, despite having been a combat veteran with two tours in Vietnam.
If not for his example and my mom's constant prayers I would be putting the I in ignorant.
nate, slavery destabilized black families and stigmatized black men, particularly.
My thought about the "hero mom" who beat her son was "Where is his dad?"
Nate33, I wish you could be a big black man for a week.
CCJ, I hope you keep challenging me on my arguments. I appreciate our back and forth on these issues.
While there can be no doubt that slavery destabilized black families, it is my understanding that black families had largely recovered within the next 75 years.
According to Thomas Sowell:
• In 1950, 72 percent of all black men and 81 percent of black women had been married.
• Every census from 1890 to 1950 showed that black labor force participation rates were higher than those of whites.
• Prior to the 1960’s the unemployment rate for black 16 and 17-year olds was under 10 percent.
• Before 1960, the number of teenage pregnancies had been decreasing; both poverty and dependency were declining, and black income was rising in both absolute and relative terms to white income.
• In 1965, 76.4 percent of black children were born to married women.
So in the 50's and into the 60's, the black family was doing pretty well by many measures. But since then, this is what happened:
Illegitmacy Rates

Zonkerbl wrote:nate33 wrote:DCZards wrote:
...which goes back to the point I was trying to make a couple of days ago when I said we need to make sure there is good prenatal care for poor mothers, access to early childhood education programs, school-based wraparound services that address the social and mental needs of students, and well-paid teachers who have access to quality professional development.
All of these things, and more, are needed if we're serious about improving the educational outcomes of poor and low-income students.
Baltimore has the second highest per pupil spending in the nation. Clearly, money isn't the issue.
http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2013-0 ... -districts
DC also has very high per capita spending per pupil, if memory serves.
Yeah, it's not money. It's about parenting. Throwing kids' parents in jail for non-violent crime is a sure-fire way to make sure the kids fail at school and life. It has to stop.

