C.L.I.C.K. for Justice and Equality is an agent of communication alerting our social community of injustices and inequalities among the socially disadvantaged and disenfranchised individual. C.L.I.C.K. developed and created this website to assist the socially disenfranchised or disadvantaged individual in litigating their issues in Federal and State courts.

Friday, October 14, 2011

100 Black Men College Fair; PTA Meeting; A Campaign for Black Male Achievement, Improvement and Action; Controlling the Image of Black Men; Educating Boys of Color


Black Star Logo
Students in Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, Michigan, Indiana, Missouri are invited to attend one of the largest and best college fairs in the country!
All Parents Willing to Fight for the Education and Well-Being of Their Children Should Join  
   
Black Star Community PTA
on
 Saturday, October 15, 2011
9:30am - 11:00am
at
 The Black Star Project
3509 South King Drive, Suite 2B
 Chicago, Illinois
  
This Month:
Community Action Councils Presentation to CPS
Extended Town Hall in Austin 
Pursuing important educational issues
If "Occupy Wall Street" can be organized and executed in 3 days and if the Arab Spring can be launched in 4 days, how many days will it take for Black men to take control of the destiny of Black people in America and around the world? Join the November 12th Movement of Black men in action!
A Campaign for Black Male
Achievement, Improvement and Action
Rumble Young Man, Rumble!
  
 Saturday, November 12, 2011
9:00 am to 3:00 pm
Your City, Your Space, Your Leadership 
 
In cities across America, Black males are being called to Achievement, Improvement and Action.  In each city, 25 men from 25 organizations will meet for 6 hours and then engage in an key actions to improve their communities and our country.  These solutions and actions will be shared with men and organizations throughout America.  
 
One of the key features of this day will be a 10 a city video conference role call introducing 250 Black men who are doing the work to each other and to America.
 
Each session in each city will:
  • Contribute to a national solution on the issues of Black men
  • Create a clearing house of Black male achievement, improvement and action organizations in that city
  • Connect the people of that city to Black male improvement and achievement agencies in that city
  • Connect the work of Black male improvement and achievement  organizations in other cities across America
  • Connect men and elders with youth and women in their communities
  • Get Black men into action improving their children, families, communities and cities
  • Chronicle achievement and improvement of Black men and Black people in your community and across the county
  • Seek funding and resources to support organizations doing this work
Picture from the Million Man March in 1996
organized by the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan
Planning the Day:
 
Choose a Theme 
Choose a Space
Choose a Day
Choose a Facilitator/Moderator
Choose a Scribe/Recorder
Choose an Action
Choose 25 participants
Choose a Keynote Speaker or Expert Panel
Choose Youth Participants or Women Partners
Choose a Date for Next Meeting  
 
Themes and Topics for Black men to choose for their session/city:
 
1) Globalization and Black Men 
2) Entrepreneurship/Economics/Business/Personal Finance and Black Men
3) Health/Nutrition/Emotional Wellness and Black Men
4) Education and Black Men
5) Relationships - Male/Male - Male/Female - Young/Old - Light Skin/Dark Skin -Black Men and Other Races/Ethnicities
6) Crime, Incarceration, the New Jim Crow and Black Men
7) Strengthing Families, Building Communities and Creating Institutions and Black Men
8) Mentoring, Networking and Black Men
9) Fatherhood, Father Absence and Black Men
10) Spirituality, Religiosity, Faith and Black Men
11) History, Culture and Black Men
12) Other Themes
 
"Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee!
Your hands can't hit what your eyes can't see!
Rumble young man, rumble!" 
 
 
These cities have signed on to host A Campaign for Black Male Achievement, Improvement and Action summit on November 12, 2011.  Will you host a summit in your city?
 
1) Atlanta, Georgia
2) Chicago, Illinois
3) Jackson, Mississippi
4) Los Angeles, California
5) Louisville, Kentucky
6) Milwaukee, Wisconsin
7) Newark, New Jersey
8) New York City, New York
9) Peoria, Illinois
10) Rockford, Illinois
11) Washington, D.C. 
 
These sessions are inspired by work done in Louisville, Kentucky in September of 2011 organized by Open Society Foundations.  This work is being done in honor of Muhammad Ali.  Please call 773.285.9600 to sign up your city and to get an organizing kit to create A Campaign for Black Male Achievement, Improvement and Action Summit in your city.  All cities participating will be listed.
 
Black Men Must Control
the Image of Black Men
"We need some men to step up and be like Nimrod, to take charge, to set things in order, to get our people back on track, to teach this next generation about real manhood, to build our people back up to being "terrible'' or awesome."

Chris Broussard,
ESPN NBA Reporter
In Louisville, Kentucky, Chris Broussard delivered a rousing keynote on improving the image of Black men for "Rumble Young Man, Rumble!" and Open Society Foundation's Campaign for Black Male Achievement at the Muhammad Ali Center 
Chris Broussard, ESPN NBA Reporter speaks at Rumble Young Man, Rumble in Louisville, Kentucky
 
A NEW IMAGE FOR BLACK MEN
  
Recognizing International Men's Day gives me a sense of brotherhood with all men around the globe, so I want to salute my  brothers of all races and ethnicities: Black, White, Asian, Hispanic, Indian, Native American, Arabic, and whoever else may be out there. And when you think of the international community of men as a brotherhood, you realize that our purpose as brothers is to try and help all men become all that God created them to be. To try and help each and every man fulfill his God-given purpose on this earth. Sadly, when you look at the history of the world,  that has typically not been the case. Instead of lifting each other up, men have held each other down.
 
We've used each other's race or ethnicity or nationality or religion as an excuse to oppress and discriminate against one another. Some say the answer is to become "color-blind'' but while I understand what they're saying, I don't think we need to be color-blind. God made us different colors, different races, different ethnicities. Your ethnicity is a part of who you are; it's not all you are, it's not the most important  part of who you are, but it's a significant part of who you are.

And if I have to ignore the fact that you're Asian or that you're Native American in order to be able to treat you with dignity and respect and love, then I'm not much of a man. God gave us these distinctions and created such variety within mankind to enhance our experience as human beings. So rather than viewing our differences as a reason to hate one another and abuse one another, we need to view our differences as opportunities to learn from one another and to strengthen one another, to strengthen the whole human family.

But again, throughout history, particularly here in America, that has not been the case. And you can see how destructive it can be when men behave as enemies rather than as brothers. We all know about the atrocities of slavery and the abuse of the Native American, but even though those institutions ended nearly 150 years ago, we can still see some of their negative effects. You see it in people's mentalities, you see it in the economic and educational disparities between Black and
White. You still see it woven into the fabric of some of the institutions of this country.

"Oh, but brother, we've got a Black president now, race doesn't matter. We're a post-racial society now.''

Yes, we do have a Black president, and I thank God for President Barack Obama and for Oprah and all the many wonderful success stories we have in the African-American community. But despite their successes, despite the fact that we as a nation have come a very long way in race relations, I'm here to tell you that race does still matter and that racism is still an obstacle that needs to be removed if we as men - all men - are going to truly be brothers.

If race doesn't matter - Why are 74 percent of the people sent to prison for drug offenses Black even though only 13 percent of the drug users and abusers in America are Black. I mean, if race didn't matter, then only 13 percent of the people sent to prison for drug abuse would be Black.
If race doesn't matter - Why don't we ever hear about cops maiming  and shooting and killing innocent White people like we see them do every so often to innocent Black people like Sean Bell, Abner Louima or Amadou Diallo? With White people, the cops seem to have patience; they don't jump to conclusions; they give them the benefit of the doubt. But too often with us, they assume the worse. But of course, race doesn't matter.

If race doesn't matter - Why do you get a greater punishment for possessing crack cocaine, which is more prevalent among Blacks, than powder cocaine, which is more prevalent among Whites, even though they're the exact same drug?  President Obama recently narrowed the gap between the punishments but he wasn't able to eliminate it entirely (100:1, 18:1).

If race doesn't matter - Why even when Black people and White people have comparable credit are Blacks rejected twice as often as Whites for small business loans. If race doesn't matter.
 
If race doesn't matter - Why does a White man with only a high school diploma earn the same amount of money as a Black man with a college degree. If race doesn't matter.

The fact is, race does matter and it's been used and is still being used as a reason to hold us back. So I challenge my brothers, all my brothers, but particularly my White brothers to push to change these unjust laws and practices. Because remember, your purpose as a man is to help us - and all men - become all we can be.

Basically, whatever you think about yourself is what you're going to be. And many of us, in our heart of hearts, believe that a real Black man, an authentic Black man, a real 'ni.... is a pimp, a thug or a gangsta. And we're destroying ourselves, our families and our people because of it. It's to the point that some of our young men who have two college-educated parents in the home and who are middle-class or upper-class are dumbing themselves down to "keep it real'' to be what they think is an "authentic Black man.''
 
But why? Why do many of our men believe they can only be athletes or rappers or comedians or pimps, gangstas or thugs. In 1965, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, a white politician and sociologist, wrote a now famous report called the Moynihan Report. He wrote the report for President Lyndon Johnson and other United States government officials. And in that report, Moynihan wrote that the problems that plague the Black community and particularly the Black family are rooted in slavery.

He said slavery in America was the worst form of slavery in the history of the world and that it so damaged the psyche of Black men that it was still affecting us more than 100 years later. Now Malcolm X said the same thing, E. Franklin Frazier said it too, and our Afrocentric brothers have been saying that for years. But this white high-ranking government official said it too. Basically, he said in addition to all the outside obstacles that are holding them back, too many Black men have a slave mentality.

And if you're sitting here today thinking that you're a pimp, a gangsta or a thug, you've got a slave mentality. You're really nothing but a slave. You might bling-bling, you might have a nice whip, you might wear $150 sneakers, but you really ain't nothing but a slave. And brother, we love you and we need you to rise up from being a slave and become a man.

But as I've been saying all night, I'm a truth teller. I'm here to speak the truth. And the truth is that a pimp is not a real Black man, a gangsta is not a real Black man, a thug is not a real Black man. The truth is that you don't have to "slang crack rock or have a wicked jump shot'' to make it. The truth is that you can be much more than an athlete or a rapper.

One of the greatest things that was stolen from us as a people was our history. History is so important, because history tells you where you've been, tells you what your ancestors have accomplished and that if they could accomplish that, you can accomplish it. It builds pride in who you are, in your culture, your race, your nationality. That's why from Grades 1 thru 12 you're bombarded with American history.

But today, in 2010, it's time for a new destiny for Black men. It's time for a new image of Black men, a new model. We're throwing out the slave master's model, the model that's got us filling up the prisons and the graveyards, the model that's got us killing one another and playing games instead of taking care of business, the model that's got us using and abusing our women and children instead of loving and protecting them. It's time to regain our history and be real Black men.
But what is a real Black man? Well, there's a book that mentions Black men and Black nations well over 100 times, and I'll use this book tonight not to promote a certain religion but to promote truth. The Bible is regarded all over the world, by people of all races, as a book of truth. It's the best-selling book of all-time, it's been translated into nearly every language in the world, it's so respected that we use it as a symbol of truth in our courts of law, and we have our nation's commander-in-chief take the Presidential oath with his hand on it. There may be different interpretations, but no book is as widely associated with truth as The Bible.

So what does the book of truth say a real Black man is? First, brothers, it says he's awesome. That's right, awesome. I'm not making this up. In Isaiah chapter 18, verse 2, Ethiopians are called "a people terrible from their beginnings onward.'' The Hebrew word that's translated "terrible'' is Yare', which means awesome. It's the same word used to describe God several times in the Psalms and other books - the great and terrible God, or great and awesome God.

And it doesn't say you're awesome because you're dunking a basketball, or because you're producing a hot hip-hop beat. In Acts Chapter 7 verse 22, it says "Moses was learned in all the wisdom of the Egyptians.'' The Bible says Ethiopians and Egyptians were sons of Ham, and Ham is regarded as the Father of the Black race. So this book of truth says Black men are awesome and Black men had wisdom. It doesn't say they were flunking out of school, doesn't say they were wearing their pants down on their thighs, doesn't say they were making babies they didn't take care of. It says they had wisdom. Brothers, if you want to be a real Black man, you have to be a man of wisdom.

The book of truth also says Black men were readers. What? Too many of our young men are growing up thinking reading and education are not for Black men. I call my wife "Bay'' because my dad calls my mom "Bay.'' "Bay, how's this tie look?'' or "Bay, can you come here for a second.'' I like to have a tooth pick in my mouth because after dinner every night, my dad used to put a tooth pick in his mouth. He never told me specifically to call my wife Bay or to chew on a tooth pick. I just naturally picked it up from being around him. Well, for the 246 years of slavery here in America, it was against the law for Black folks to read.

But I'm telling you about a book that says otherwise. It's a book that says anyone who tells you reading ain't for Black people is ignorant to the history of Black people. Because in Acts Chapter 8, the apostle Philip met an Ethiopian Eunuch. And when he found this Ethiopian brother, he was reading. He was reading from the book of Isaiah, which is in the Bible. This was more than 2000 years ago, folks. So the slave masters, the ones who wanted to keep us down and make us clowns, told us reading wasn't for Black folks, but the book of truth tells us that more than 2000 years ago, Black people, Black men, were reading.

Brothers, we need to read, and we need to teach our sons and the boys of this younger generation to read, read, read. Because a real man is not only strong physically; he's also strong mentally. See, in slavery, we were taught to be strong physically but weak mentally. Strong so you could do more work in the fields, but weak so you never thought about rising up beyond slavery. But a real man is not only strong physically, but mentally as well. The strongest men we've produced in this country, the men who made it possible for us to be here today - Richard Allen, Frederick Douglass, Marcus Garvey, Martin Luther King - were all readers. So read the Bible, read the Autobiography of Malcolm X, read Roots by Alex Haley, read African and African-American history, read whatever you want. But read. Real men read.

So the book of truth tells us that Black men are awesome men of wisdom, that Black men are readers. And it also says Black men are spiritual. A real man is not only strong physically, but he's strong mentally and spiritually. In addition to a body and a mind, brothers, you've got a spirit. And if your spirit is weak and feeble, you'll be weak and feeble. You won't be a man of your word, you'll tell your wife one thing and do another, tell your kids one thing and do another, you won't be able to control yourself, you'll do things you know you shouldn't do, things you wish you could stop doing, nobody will be able to trust you. Heck, you won't even trust yourself. Privately, deep down inside, you'll be ashamed. But when you're strong spiritually, you're a real man.

And in Numbers Chapter 10 verse 29, it tells us about a man named Raguel. He was the father in law of the great prophet Moses. Moses married an Ethiopian woman, so we're going to assume Raguel was Ethiopian as well. Raguel means "friend of God.'' Brothers, if you want to be strong, be a friend of God. And just like you do with all friends, talk to Him, learn about him, study Him, do things that make him happy. You see too, as you study about Raguel, who was also called Jethro, that he was a family man. He had seven daughters and he treated them like princesses. He was intimately involved in their lives, they felt secure being under his roof, in his presence. So part of being a friend of God is taking care of your children. And I don't mean just buying them expensive sneakers or taking them to ballgames and amusement parks. I mean being there for them every single day - teaching them, training them, talking with them, laughing with them, enjoying them.

So brothers, we're forgetting about the Black man as pimp, player, gangsta, mack, thug - and
moving on to the Black man as Awesome, Wise, Strong Mentally and Strong Spiritually.

But there's one more thing, in Genesis Chapter 10, verse 8, the Bible tells us that the Black man is a builder. He's a creator. It tells us about a brother named Nimrod. Nimrod was the son of Cush, grandson of Ham. Cush is a Hebrew word that means Black; it's basically the same as the Greek word Ethiopia. And the Bible says that Nimrod was a "mighty hunter before the Lord.'' Now this was right after God had destroyed everyone and everything on the earth - except Noah, his three sons and their wives - with a flood. So they were starting over. They had hit rock bottom. They needed somebody to step up and take charge, somebody to set things in order. And this Black man, Nimrod, did it. It says in verse 10 that he built kingdoms, that he got the people back on track. He didn't just go for his. He didn't mope, give up or feel sorry for himself. He took responsibility for making sure his people were taken care of.

And that's what God's telling us as Black men to do. Because when you look at us today - Oh yeah, thank God for the President and all the successes we've had as a people - but overall, we're on the bottom. We're last in every measurable category of productivity - we've got the highest rates of fatherlessness, of divorce, of HIV infection, of unemployment, of dropping out of school. And we need some men to step up and be like Nimrod, to take charge, to set things in order, to get our people back on track, to teach this next generation about real manhood, to build our people back up to being "terrible'' or awesome.

So brothers, let's believe and be what the book of truth says we are, not what the slavemaster said we were. Let's be men of wisdom, let's be readers, let's be friends of God, and let's be men who take responsibility for building up our people.

Then, in the future, when we come together at the International table of brotherhood, we won't come begging for help, we won't come as a problem to be solved, as a quandary to be fixed. We'll come as real Black men. We'll come as brothers. 
Fathers Incorporated and Kenneth Brasewell Organize Fathers Across America
 
Fathers Incorporated Awarded $7.4 Million to Manage National Responsible Fatherhood Clearinghouse
 
By Fathers Incorporated 
October 7, 2011
 
NEW YORK, NY, October 4, 2011- Fathers Incorporated (FI), a national not-for-profit has engaged in responsible fatherhood work on a national and international level since 2004. Recently the organization began a multi-year cause marketing campaign entitled "TIES NEVER BROKEN" to raise the visibility of both Responsible Fatherhood and Mentoring. We are proud to announce that the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) has awarded Fathers Incorporated $7.4 million (over a 3-year period; contingent on continued funding) to manage the National Responsible Fatherhood Clearinghouse (NRFC).

"This contract award allows FI to continue this critical work and great efforts of the White House, DHHS/OFA, and the National Fatherhood Initiative," says Kenneth Braswell, Executive Director of Fathers Incorporated. "Our team will approach this body of work by integrating innovative marketing systems to inform and educate families. In this effort we hope for the work to evolve and become a mainstay for America's fathers, families, and the field," continues Braswell.

The core of the clearinghouse contract will occur through social marketing and multi-media platforms, traditional communications, and product development. In addition the contract calls for the support of national federally sponsored events, conferences and other activities.

We are excited to continue our support of FI as they meet the challenge from the President to support responsible fatherhood and mentoring," says Joshua Dubois, Special Assistant to the President and Executive Director of the White House office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships. The NRFC will continue to support HHS' Administration for Children and Families, Office of Family Assistance (OFA) announcement of $119,393,729 in grants awarded to 120 grantees to promote healthy marriage and responsible fatherhood.

Fathers Incorporated is also embarking in several projects in the next few years that include working to inspire the participation of the faith-based community; "Power Down;" a campaign to encourage parents to acknowledge their children's technology habits; "Rumble Young Man Rumble," mentorship development strategies at the Muhammad Ali Center and several other activities to highlight the importance of father involvement. FI is working in partnership with ChildFind of America, ICF International, Mathematica Policy Research and BLH Technologies.

For additional information on Fathers Incorporated please visit www.fathersincorporated.com or the National Responsible Fatherhood Clearinghouse at www.fatherhood.gov.
In North Carolina, Get Ready to Educate Black Boys and Boys of Color
 
 

SAVE THE DATE
6TH Annual Gathering of Leaders  
 GREAT SCHOOLS ARE NOT AN ACCIDENT Successful Learning Communities for Boys and Young Men of Color  
     
April 26 - 28, 2012   
North Carolina Central University
Durham, North Carolina


 
Greetings COSEBOC friends and colleagues,  
 
 
Mark Your Calendar!
April 26-28, 2012
 
The 6th annual Gathering of Leaders will take place in Durham, North Carolina, on the campus of North Carolina Central University.
 
In an effort to build on the foundation set by our previous Gatherings, we have selected our 2012 theme "Great Schools Are Not an Accident: Successful Learning Communities for Boys and Young Men of Color." We are very excited about this theme, and will follow up with more details in our next email.
 
For more information, visit our website
 
Best Wishes,
Ron
 
 
About COSEBOC
COSEBOC is a collaborative network of schools that nurture success in boys of color.  Working with these schools, COSEBOC is committed to high standards, exemplary instruction, and the building of coalitions within and outside the community.  The intended long-term outcome of this coalition will be boys of color who are fully equipped to achieve academically, socially and emotionally.  These schools will  serve as models for the educational community, enabling educators to replicate the promising practices modeled in these schools. For more information, visit www.coseboc.org
Quick Links

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Spring, 2011 [PDF]
 
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Membership Brochure
 
mail-in membership form[PDF]

2011 Gathering Photos
 
Philadelphia, PA
 
2010 Gathering Photos
 
Washington DC

2009 Gathering Photos
 
New Orleans

 
www.coseboc.org
 
for more information
 
 
 
 
 
As the Arab Spring has led to the middle eastern revolution, it is time for the American Fall to lead to the parent revolution!
The Power of a Parent Advocate   
 
Some of the presenters at this education summit included Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Warrren Buffett, Melinda Gates, Arnie Duncan, President Bill Clinton, LeBron James, Geoffrey Canada, Michelle Rhee, Cheryl Hyman, Randy Weingarten and governors from 10 states.  
 
Across the country, parents are leading the charge for "trigger" laws to overhaul failing schools, to scale back high-stakes testing - and everything in between. Natalie Morales moderates this discussion at the Education Nation Summit.
 
Phillip Jackson talks about a complete and achieveable parent revolution, not just "parent trigger laws", but parents taking over the control of their children's education by any means necessary!
 
Panelists for The Power of a Parent Advocate include Phillip Jackson, Peg Tyre, Brenda Martin, Ben Austin, Dennis Walcott, and Janet Barresi. 
 
Click Here to see the 60 minute panel with Phillip Jackson and other parent advocates discussing parental engagement at the 2011 NBC Education Nation in New York City, New York.
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Friday's Daily Brief

Friday, October 14, 2011
POLITICS
Beyond the Battlefield: As Wounded Veterans Struggle To Recover, Caregivers Share The Pain
NEW YORK
Occupy Wall Street: Park 'Cleanup' That Would Have Displaced Protesters Cancelled
BUSINESS
Community Bank To Pay Customers To Open Accounts In Response To BofA's Fees
TECHNOLOGY
iPhone 4S Goes On Sale
WOMEN
Why Your Career Is Stalling (When You're Doing Everything Right)
BLOG POSTS
Al Gore: Thoughts on Occupy Wall Street
With democracy in crisis, a true grassroots movement pointing out the flaws in our system is the first step in the right direction. Count me among those supporting the Occupy Wall Street movement.
Emilio Estevez: On Directing Martin -- Man or Ma-Sheen?
"Wait!" Stop! Cut!" I order. The camera stops running. The crew, cast and background artists return to their starting marks. "Stop being Martin," I say to him in front of everyone to hear.
Robin Quivers: Money, Education and Love
We women have heard over and over again that for men, it's all about looks. But research shows the more educated you are, the more weight you can carry and still remain very attractive to the opposite sex.
Michele Williamson: How to Create the Perfect Marriage Proposal
Proposing marriage can be an overwhelming task. It may be a challenging feat, but if you follow the tips below you can have your own perfect marriage proposal.
Dr. Joel Hoffman: Five Ways Your Bible Translation Distorts the Original Meaning of the Text
Unfortunately, etymology, internal structure, and cognates are the three pillars of Bible translation. And with them, the power of history and a focus on the wrong parts of metaphor degrade all English Bibles even more.
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