Senator Royce West, area SAC students team-up to fight holiday hunger

DALLAS -  State Senator Royce West (D-Dallas) and students from 40 Dallas County schools have renewed their efforts to fight hunger by participating in a food drive benefiting the North Texas Food Bank (NTFB).  The drive culminates with a food drop-off scheduled for Friday – November 21, 2008, from 4:30 – 5:30 p.m. at the North Texas Food Bank warehouse located at 4500 S. Cockrell Hill Rd., Dallas.

In 1996, Senator West created the Dr. Emmett J. Conrad Student Advisory Committee (SAC).  SAC is designed to elicit student perspectives on legislative issues that involve youth and schools. The program fosters opportunities for student leadership and volunteerism.

“I firmly believe that our young people are willing to get involved in their communities if given the opportunity,” said Senator West.  “This is our fifth food drive and our students and schools have participated in a number of activities to help those around us who are in need. Even in these tough economic times, it is unconscionable to think that in America, thousands across all age and racial groups wonder each day where their next meal will come from.

“We have found a worthy recipient, given the mission of the North Texas Food Bank. I encourage others to become involved,” Senator West said.

The North Texas Food Bank provides food to the hungry throughout 13 North Texas counties. Last year’s SAC Food drive yielded the donation of hundreds of pounds in canned goods to NTFB.

“Each year, Senator West inspires select middle and high school leaders to help close the gap on hunger,” said Jan Pruitt president and CEO – NTFB. “As they partner with us at the North Texas Food Bank, we’re especially honored to receive these donations as the demand for food has increased due to today’s economic conditions. These leaders of today will provide tomorrow’s solution for a hunger-free community.”

In past years, SAC has also participated in blanket and pillow drives including a 2001 donation sent to New York City following the terrorist attack. SAC students are regular visitors to the State Capital during legislative sessions.

 

The NTFB supports the nutritional needs of children, families and seniors through education, advocacy and strategic partnerships. Last year, 26 million meals were distributed. Each month, agency pantries distribute food to more than 50,000 families and on-site meal programs serve 435,000 meals/snacks.

For more information, please call Ahmad Goree at 214-741-0123 or Kelvin Bass at 214-467-0123.

Crime stoppers offers $5,000 Reward for info on Wyshina Harris Murder

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Last week the Dallas Morning News printed the story of the fatal shooting of a Dallas woman on her way to work.  Wyshina  Harris was gunned down in her car while driving through South Dallas.  You can read the DMN report of the incident here.

Crime Stoppers is offering a $5000 reward for any information related to the shooting.  Call the DPD Homicide Unit at 214-671-3661 or the North Texas Crime Stoppers tip line at 1-877-343-TIPS (8477) if you have any info.

Below are some of the wonderful words said on the web about Ms. Harris’ who had previously worked in the Education portion of Central Dallas Ministries.  God Bless Wyshina’s family, and I pray that justice is served on whoever perpetrated this crime.

Dallas Progress – Mike Davis

This morning, my friend Wyshina Harris was murdered. Another senseless killing in our city.

I will always remember when Wyshina lived in Turner Courts and we talked about how she was constantly going up to HS Thompson School to make sure her children got a good education.

Community Dialogue – Janet Morrison

  • My friend and former co-worker, Wyshina Harris, was killed yesterday morning.Just two weeks ago Wyshina was calling me, so excited that she had been able to cast a vote for an African-American president. It was her I posted about here. As I was standing in shock and awe as 6000 people around me cheered, it was Wyshina who called as soon as the announcement that Barack Obama had been named our president.

Change the Wind – Gerald Britt

Wyshina Harris, was a remarkable woman.
I say ‘was’ because she was murdered this morning in a senseless act of violence.
Wyshina was a part of our team at Central Dallas Ministries who worked in the Turner Courts Public Housing development until this summer until program cuts and Dallas Housing Authority’s decision to rebuild the development caused us to cut staff and move to another location. Even then she showed a beautiful spirit of dedication to the organization and most importantly to the community.

Urban Daily – Larry James

Last Saturday morning at about 7:00 a.m., Wyshina Harris, our dear friend and former team member here at Central Dallas Ministries was gunned down on her way to work. A wonderful person, a great mom, a hard working community leader, Wyshina Harris was murdered in cold blood on her way to work.
When she worked with us here at CDM, she provided wonderful direction for the children in our After School Academy located in Turner Courts, a Dallas Housing Authority development where she lived for a time.

Eric Holder Barack Obama’s Pick for Attorney General?

holder_eric_070427.jpgEric Holder, former deputy Attorney General in the Clinton Administration, is considered a top candidate to become America’s first African-American Attorney General.  According to numberous reports, members of President Barack-Obama’s transition team have spoken with Senate Republicans about their feelings on the matter.

Holder, along with Caroline Kennedy, were part of Obama’s vice presidential search team. He has also been a bundler for the Obama campaign, raising at least $50,000 for the president elect.

Here are some of Holder’s career highlights according to the Covington & Burling LLP  -the private firm where he is currently employed- website.

  • In 1988, Mr. Holder was nominated by President Reagan to become an Associate Judge of the Superior Court of the District of Columbia.
  • In 1993, President Clinton nominated Mr. Holder to become the United States Attorney for the District of Columbia.
  • In 1997, President Clinton appointed Mr. Holder to serve as Deputy Attorney General
  • He has also been identified by Legal Times as one of the “Greatest Washington Lawyers of the Past 30 Years.”

Here’s another interesting passage from the Covington & Burlington Website.

As U.S. Attorney, Mr. Holder created a Domestic Violence Unit to more effectively handle those types of tragic cases, implemented a community prosecution project to work hand in hand with residents and local government agencies in order to make neighborhoods safer, supported a renewed enforcement emphasis on hate crimes so that criminal acts of intolerance would be severely punished, developed a comprehensive strategy to improve the manner in which agencies handled cases involving the abuse of children, launched a community outreach program to reconnect the U.S. Attorney’s office with the citizens it serves, revitalized the Victim/Witness Assistance Program to better serve those individuals who were directly affected by crime and developed “Operation Ceasefire,” an initiative designed to reduce violent crime by getting guns out of the hands of criminals.

sharon_malone_holder.jpgHolder is a Columbia University alum, as is Obama, and is married to OB/GYN Sharon Malone Holder.  Mrs. Holder is graduated cum laude from Harvard University in 1981.

A source has reported to the Chicago Tribune that the job has already been offered to Holder “conditionally,” and hinges on the vetting process.  The main issues surrounding Holder is that he allowed -or more accurately said did not oppose-failed Bill Clinton’s presidential pardon for then-fugitive financier Marc Rich on his last day in office.  I don’t understand why that all falls on his shoulders, but I guess I need to do some vetting myself.

On the agenda for the next Attorney General:

  • Ending war crimes tribunals at Guantanamo Bay
  • The issue of warrantless wiretapping
  • Restoring confidence lost after the politically motivated firings of several U.S. Attorney’s by the Bush Administration.

I need to do a little more digging, but this looks like a great pick and it would assuage my concern of whether African-Americans will play a significant role in the Obama Administration.

Progressivism on the Rise – Shawn Williams in Dallas Morning News

Here’s the text of an article that I wrote which appears in Monday’s Dallas Morning News. It wasn’t up on the web yet.

The 2008 election marked the death of liberalism, or at the very least, hastened its demise.

Since the victory of Barack Obama and Democrats nationwide, an abundance of print space and airtime has been devoted to the plight of the conservative movement in America:

Was this election America’s apology for slavery? Why were so many Republicans booted from office? Who will lead the GOP out of the wilderness?

Many Republicans paint an overly rosy picture for a group so soundly defeated in a replay of its 2006 embarrassment. They argue in unison that the country is still ideologically right of center and that liberal fanaticism will be the country’s undoing.

William Kristol points to recent polls that show only 22 percent of voters called themselves liberal compared to 34 percent who considered themselves conservative. This, in part, leads Mr. Kristol to the conclusion that Republicans are in good shape for the 2010 election cycle.

Recently, House Republicans Eric Cantor and Mike Pence made the same argument, lampooning liberalism and the high taxes and moral laxity that they claim comes with it.

But what conservatives and pollsters fail to realize is that the term liberal is becoming obsolete. It’s similar to how Martin Luther King is referred to as “the last Negro” because he never embraced the term “black” in reference to African-Americans. Just as Negro would eventually give way to black, the term liberal is making way for the more popular moniker of progressive.

In an interview during the Democratic National Convention, I was asked about my political affiliation. I told the reporter that I did not affiliate with a party but consider myself progressive-minded.

To my dismay, when the interview appeared, the word progressive was substituted with liberal. I made an immediate phone call to the journalist who wrote the article asking that the error be corrected immediately.

Conservatives have demonized the word liberal to the point that I steer clear of it at all cost. The progressive movement is rooted in liberalism, harking back to John F. Kennedy, who identified health care, housing, schools, jobs, civil rights and civil liberties as liberal causes.

The Democratic focus on these issues – especially jobs and healthcare – has led to growing majorities in the U.S. House and Senate.

Progressivism is not about big government programs trying to solve the nation’s social ills. And the movement embraces broad and diverse ideologies that in the past were viewed as mutually exclusive.

For instance, some progressives are pro-life – and at the same time adopt a green lifestyle. A progressive may tout fiscal responsibility as well as tougher hate crime laws. And many progressives in California voted for Barak Obama as president as well as for Proposition 8 banning same sex marriage.

Too many conservatives, by contrast, have taken a “my way or the highway” approach. That’s why John McCain is customarily relegated to the fringe of his party. And it’s why Log Cabin Republicans are never afforded national attention by the GOP.

Conservative pundits wrongly assume that moderates continue to reside to the right of center, even as more evidence suggests that the move is to the left. But the base of the Republican Party has no use for the center, be it left, right or otherwise.

Now that the Democrats have control of both houses of Congress and the White House, they may be tempted to veer left towards their liberal roots. Talk of reinstituting the Fairness Doctrine is evidence of this potential lapse in judgment.

I have little use for the partisan cesspool of conservative talk radio, but I would join with other progressives in defending the rights of those hosts and their listeners.

To their credit, progressives have found a way for people of varying ideologies to coexist in the name of larger interests, like winning elections. Let’s hope the term liberal may now die in dignity.

Barack Obama Weekly address viewed by 650,000 so far; GOP struggles to get in the game

President Elect Barack Obama delivered his second weekly address online via YouTube this weekend. Not much new by way of information, but this is another way that Obama is getting people involved in the process. Look for the Republicans to get their Republican response online by January.

If so, then that’s another positive for America. The GOP launched their lame Republican For A Reason website last week in another attempt to bridge the online gap (insert Bridge to Nowhere Joke here). And their touting almost 40,000 people in their Facebook Group. I wonder where are they with Ning, Twitter, and Utterz?

Photo’s from Election Watch Party

Theo Johnson of TheoTalks.net has posted photos that he took at the Friendship-West/Dallas South Election Watch Party. Theo is quoted in the month’s Jet magazine as he was interviewed at the party.

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Here’s part of the article (Judy Howard Ellis) that appears on page 33.

The excitement was palpable at Friendship-West Baptist Church in Dallas as the congregation opened its 5,000 seat santuary for a watch party. As crowds watched the election returns from huge screens in the sanctuary and in smaller rooms in the church, Theo Johnson looked ahead.

“Just looking at how he ran his campaign, I’m really impressed with that and the people he puts around him,” Johnson said. “I just know he will do the same as president.”

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Theo was at Friendship-West as part of our bloggers lounge on election night. In the picture above you can see me getting my blog on in the right part of the photo. Check out more of Theo’s photos from election night by clicking here.

Cassandra Butts – The Law School Classmate

Here’s an excerpt from an interview that Cassandra Butts gave to PBS Frontline:

FrontlineWhen did you first meet Barack Obama?

Butts:            It was one of the first few days of our law school experience. We met at the financial aid office at Harvard Law School. We were going through the process of filling out a lot of paperwork that would make us significantly in debt to Harvard for years to come. We bonded over that experience.

Imagine that.  The elitist Barack Obama was in line filling out financial aid papers. Who is the last President that could relate to needing financial aid? But this isn’t a post about Barack Obama.

butts.jpgBefore joining the Obama campaign in its early stages, Butts served as senior vice president for domestic policy at the Center for American Progress and is known in political circles from a stint as senior adviser to Democratic Congressman Richard Gephardt.

Speaking of early, Butts worked along side John Podesta on the Obama transition team weeks before the election. She oversaw the groups within the team that were dedicated to selecting personnel. She now serves as chief counsel for the transition team.

While many in the Obama camp have risen with him, Butts has made her own way across the political landscape. In 2004 –prior to Obama’s powerful keynote address- Butts was much more of a Washington insider than he.

While Cassandra Butts wealth of skills and experience could fit a number of roles in the Obama administration, she has been mentioned by The Politico as possible White House staff secretary.

Toby Shook to prosecute Paris Texas murder suspects in death of Brandon McClelland

Mary Madewell and the Paris News report that Toby Shook has been assigned as special prosecutor in the murder cases of Shannon Finley and Ryan Crostley.  Finley and Crostley are accused of murdering Brandon McClelland, whose body was presumably run over by a pickup truck.

This comes after Lamar County District Attorney Gary Young recused his office from the prosecution.   “Even though nothing legal prohibits my office from handling this case,”  Young tells the Paris News, “it’s been acknowledged that I previously defended Mr. Finley when I was in private practice.

Shook is a former Dallas County prosecutor, who tried the Texas Seven and worked on the Darlie Routier case.  He launched an unsuccessful bid to become Dallas County District Attorney in 2006, losing the election to current D.A. Craig Watkins.  Shook’s appointment was made by State district Judge Jim Lovett.

I’m glad to see that Young stepped aside and Shook is a decent choice because of his experience in high profile cases. One lawyer that I spoke with today said Shook “might be the best prosecutor and trial lawyer in the state.”

Now the jury selection is the next process to watch because I’ve received some troubling reports about the selection process up there.

Charles Ogletree: Professor of the Obama’s

This is Part 3 in a week long series titled African-Americans in the Obama Administration: A Look Ahead. Today’s post focuses on Harvard Law Professor Charles Ogletree.

In its November Issue, the American Bar Association Journal listed Charles Ogletree as a potential Assistant Attorney General in the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice. Could there be a better choice? The Harvard professor’s research interests include:

· Comparative Criminal Justice Systems

· Criminal Justice Administration

· Public Defender Systems

· Race and Criminal Justice

Ogletree was one of Barack Obama’s law professors, and he also taught Michelle Obama who left Harvard the year before the President-Elect came to the school.

Ogletree advised Obama on reforming the criminal-justice system as well as other issues of race during the campaign. The ABA Journal also has an interesting note on what Ogletree thought about Clarence Thomas’ nomination to the Supreme Court.

When the NAACP believed it was obligated to support Clarence Thomas in his confirmation battle for the Supreme Court, Ogletree wrote a 30-page report that changed its mind.

Mr. Ogletree was part of the team that searched for Obama’s running mate which ultimately lead to the selection of Joe Biden. Ogletree doesn’t fit the “post-racial” mode of many African-Americans in the Obama camp, so it would be interesting to see how his thoughts on issues like reparations would be received by the mainstream.

Thursday: Cassandra Butts – The Law School Classmate