Friday, October 12, 2007

Finger Pointing


Keep in mind that when you point a finger at someone, there are three pointing back at you and the scientific community is united in that fact.

I wrote in July concerning a Ragister article about the number of blacks in Iowa prisons versus whites.

Recently the Ragister went back to that rant.

Now the disparity the Ragister points to is in school suspensions.

They cite three elected black officials who call it an “African American crisis” and have challenged the Presidential candidates to address it when they campaign in Iowa.

Last month Joanie Phony Edwards weighed in...

"We cannot build enough prisons to solve this problem. And the idea that we can keep incarcerating and keep incarcerating - pretty soon we're not going to have a young African-American male population in America. They're all going to be in prison or dead. One of the two."

Unknowingly and without wasting time and money on a commission, the three black leaders may have solved half of the problem when they stated...

the suspension numbers have helped fuel high prison rates

Polk County Judge Odell McGhee addressed a forum about the prison issue and sounded too much like Bill Cosby or Juan Williams.

McGhee, per the Ragister, placed responsibility flatly at the feet of the black community, saying its families and its churches had failed the young.

McGhee insisted that far too many black families had lost control of their children.

He urged parents to set and stick to rules, provide discipline, make sure their children have goals and support their kids' accomplishments.

"...in this jurisdiction on average, you've committed a lot of crimes to get to prison."

I'm sure that'll get him labeled an Uncle Tom.

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