Monthly Archives: January 2008

(So, I know King Day has passed, but I just had to address this)

“What are you doing for King Day?” – Ugh. I am so sick of that question!

My answer: “I ain’t doing squat!”

I can feel the appalled looks from my fellow African Americans already. How could I say such a thing? Easy!

I work toward “the dream” 364 days a year; the days that few in our community care about. MLK day is the 1 day out of the year that everyone and their momma wants to fake the funk and pretend like they’re moving the dream forward by attend some event for a few hours and watching “Eyes on the Prize” (Great series, by the way).

I’m not dogging those people – it is what it is, and it’s a start. All I’m saying is that don’t look at me like I’m the worst thing that has happened to us as a people because I don’t honor King Day the way we’ve been socially conditioned to. Working toward “the dream” is my life – it’s my job, it’s my career, it’s my passion, it’s my calling. And since the market is flooded that day, I’ve dedicated that as my day of rest.

I just had to let that be known…

“Objects in mirror are closer than they appear.” This, arguably, has been the political understatement of the year! With presidential hopefuls fighting for clout among many strong partisan voters, initially the conversation was about their position on the War in Iraq. There is another issue that has rear-ended most of the candidates, and has performed an economic “hit-and-run” on many families across the nation: Subprime Mortgage Lending.

With national enterprises and Fortune 500 companies, like CitiGroup and Merrill-Lynch, report their worse 4th quarter losses ever, and the federal government running from the “R” word (Recession) the political hot topic has everyone scrambling for monetary jumper cables. Foreign policy has taken a back seat to domestic economy issues, and at the forefront is the plan to tackle the subprime mortgage problem and re-boost the current economy out of it’s free fall into recession.

A little too “Econ 101” for you? Let me bring it home… 

Subprime lending practices have been an issue among the people for years. You remember those commercials for senior citizens that aired a few years ago – telling them to not be pressured into refinancing? Fast-forward to present day…now all communities are feeling the effects of these predatory techniques. And while senior citizens are definitely included in that group, rising to the top as the hardest hit are African Americans and other people of color. A few days ago, Democracy Now released a story citing the subprime mortgage crisis as the force set to cause African Americans to incur the greatest loss of wealth in modern U.S. History. Home ownership is the number one source and accumulation of wealth in the United States, people of color in general will be suffering and estimated loss of $213 billion (yes, billion with a B) dollars in wealth, accumulated through home ownership.

Initially predatory lenders and the profiteers on Wall Street (we’ll get to this later) fiercely denied the accusation that people of color were purposely sought out as the inheritors of these devastating loans. Evidence and studies have now surfaced to prove the exact opposite – big surprise. According to Federal Reserve data, 55% of blacks–compared with 17% of whites–received subprime loans to purchase or refinance homes in 2005, even if they qualified for lower-rate loans. Communities of color are disproportionately becoming housing wastelands. Inner-city neighborhoods where there are 10 houses on a block, and 7 of them are foreclosed, boarded up, and being auctioned. Which, in turn, has an adverse affect on property taxes, which has an adverse affect on education, which has an adverse affect on employment rates; and the cycle continues…snowball effect.

OK, I know some of you are still stuck on comment about Wall Street – where do they fit into this?

Mortgage lenders previously have steered clear of offering people loans they could not afford, because they were concerned about their monetary return. But, in walks Wall Street, and they strike a deal with mortgage lenders to the effect that Wall Street would buy the debt of the high cost loans, and resell it – which they continued to do over and over and over again. And it came to the point where lenders were not longer concerned about making money off of the initial loan because they were making their real money off the reselling. So you have all kinds of people, at varied stages of this process making money off the plight of this one home owner. Now, multiply that by millions of home owners. What knocked the cycle off axis was that eventually those loans needed to be paid, and despite all of the money being made by the wealthy – we are now seeing the crippling effects of this. Not only on the families that are losing homes, but also the major financial institutions.

Crazy how very few people viewed this as an economic problem while individuals were being affected, and big business was making money. Now the money train has stopped, and there’s a call for collection on all sides, and since Wall Street is being affected there’s a call for all hands on deck to solve a problem that’s been years in the making. And yet again – the economic underclass and people of color get the short end of the stick.

Two Words: Economic Slavery

People in this country are working harder than ever, and all kinds of interest rates are climbing higher and higher. The wealthy are making big bucks off the sweat and tears of the average working Americans, while people’s financial futures are destroyed. And while we are experiencing the relative systematic breakdown in real time, here comes the so-called cavalry.

“Dubya” and his federal goonies – who are more concerned about preventing his presidential legacy from being tarnished by economic recession, than about the economic health of millions in this nation. The proposed solution – tax rebates, which I’m sure, includes those big businesses somewhere in the fine print. Tax rebates, you ask? Yes, because historically when people get rebates from the government they spend it and spend quickly.

Um, excuse me Mr. “Dubya,” the American people do not need $800 tax rebates, though undoubtedly it would be greatly appreciated for a short period of time. I have just a few questions for you Mr. President. Where is this money going to be coming from? The budget is already shot to hell. And what exactly is this supposed to change? People get their measly $800, spend it to rejuvenate the economy, and are back in the same predicament they were in previously. It gets us no where!

Excuse me if I sound a bit perturbed, it’s because I am! What people need is adjustable rate mortgages to become fixed rate mortgages that they can afford, to keep their homes, and a portion of their credit intact. We need a long term solution, not a stop gap tactic to save a presidential “legacy.”

Politics, meet religion. Religion, this is politics… 

To some that meeting is a good thing, while others are probably screaming in horror at the very thought of those two things in close proximity (picture: Macaulay Culkin in “Home Alone”).  After all, politics and religion are seemingly contrasting forces, like day and night, logic and ideology, good and evil…right?  In reality, politics and religion can be intimate, powerful, and common entities. Both have the ability to profoundly divide as well as the capacity to strongly bind together.

But let’s be real. There’s a buzz, if you will, a vibe in the air surrounding progressives when it comes to the practicing faithful.  For many progressives, our values of equality, inclusion, and freedom of expression seemingly stand at odds with organized religion.

I have been looked at up and down, sideways, and crisscrossed by some of my fellow progressives (and to be honest – other Christians). First, they question (You’re a Christian?!), then they’re confused (Wait you believe in equality? Like for everyone?).  Then comes skepticism (A progressive practicing Christian, um, yeah, ok.), and finally the re-evaluation (a Progressive Christian…cool, I think.) Yes, yes, yes — as strange as it may seem, I am a practicing Southern Black Baptist Christian who believes in equality, inclusion, access, and all of those other social justice tag words.

Call me clairvoyant, but I can feel questions forming in your minds…what about abortion? Yes, I believe in reproductive rights & choice. What about LGBTQIA rights? Yes, I believe that discrimination of any kind and in any form is wrong! I do have strong political beliefs, but they stem from my strong religious beliefs.  I was not a Christian with a “drug” problem (drug to Sunday school, drug to church, drug to Bible study…).  I love going to services and functions at my church. I was not taught that God was about fire & brimstone, but that the Lord was fair but just, that Jesus was compassionate, concerned for people’s well being, and above all else, a radical and a political rebel! However, not everyone has had this experience with Christianity.

The political left indeed has a healthy skepticism of organized religion.  Rightly so (no pun intended); even before our generation, conservatives had staked claim to organized Christian religion.  The “Christian conservative movement” has been incredibly successful at framing the debate in the context of the conservative ideology of religion. Their “issues”, like school prayer and restriction of abortion rights completely turn off those on the left.   Many people of faith, however, reject the hatred that so often comes from the Christian conservative movement disguised as piety. Their faith teaches them to love their neighbor as themselves, and practice non-violence, patience, kindness, and compassion.  Many, in fact, feel that their religion instills in them a profound sense of social justice and a set of values – like equality, inclusion, and freedom of expression.

Sound familiar?

How many times have you encountered self-described progressives, but yet they are accustomed to dismissing people who don’t think like them, agree on all the issues, or who have a different set of priorities.  And then they wonder why it is difficult to tap people into working on their campaigns and advocating for their issues. You can keep politics and faith separate, and progressives can go on trying to organize a critical mass to build power. 

But where does that leave progressive Christianity – or better yet progressive Judaism or progressive Islam? Where does that leave those of us on the political left that are equally held by our religious ideologies and our political ideologies; those that believe that their faith strongly dictates their commitment to human rights, equality, and progressive politics?

Progressive organizers, take note: instead of running from people’s religious identity, we should explore it, especially with those that we would like to have as a part of our movement(s). If we do that, we may very well be able to move them simply by tying our organizing issue in with their values. Emotions & beliefs often light a bigger fire under people than logical reasoning does (if it was the other way around the world would look much different), and because people hold their values near and dear their commitment will be strong as well. The “right” understands this! It’s about time the “left” does too.

We need to look beyond what brings people to the work of social justice and think about the why.  When identifying potential allies for the tremendous work we have to do, we look to build relationships based on understanding three fundamental things about people:  their issues, or what specific concerns they want to address; their interest, or their stake in that particular issue; and their values – that moral compass inside all of us.  Getting to know people on this level makes it much easier to identify common ground.

The political right has branded organized Christian religion for far too long, while ignoring, radicalizing, and/or discounting other organized religion (mainly Judaism & Islam) all together. And the political left has ignored, demonized, and shunned Christianity while discounting Judaism and straddling the fence on Islam.  

There will always be people of faith on both sides of the political spectrum. However, it is to our success to acknowledge the religious community as brothers and sisters in the struggle, embrace and apply their affiliations to our causes, and move onward together.