Shawn P. Ranting on Channel 8′s Sunday Daybreak

I received a call last week from Brad Watson asking me if I would have any interest in participating in a new feature on WFAA News 8′s Sunday Daybreak.  The political portion of the program just launched a new segment called “The Rant,” where local media types will have a chance to provide commentary content of their choice.

Of course I said yes, and recorded my first rant that will air this Sunday (Feb. 1) morning.  The show starts at 8 a.m., but my rant will probably run between 9 and 9:30.  Don’t blink you may miss me.  It’s a rotating feature, so I may be on once ever 8 weeks or so.

Thanks to Brad, Berna Dean Steptoe and all the good folks at Channel 8 who helped me out.  I felt like a cobination of Rickey Bobby from Talledaga Nights and The Anchorman.  Set your DVR if you’re headed to the 8 o’ clock service and let me know what you think.

If you really like it, shoot Brad and email at bwatson@wfaa.com.

President Obama calls Wall Street bonuses “shameful”

President Obama had some harsh words to Wall Street Bankers who are accepting TARP (Troubled Asset Relief Program) money while receiving big bonuses and buying private jets.  He sat down in front of reporters yesterday to discuss his frustration with the situation.

For the full text of the President’s remarks visit WhiteHouse.gov .

“One point I want to make,” said the President sitting with Secretary of Treasury Tim Geithner by his side, ” is that all of us are going to have responsibilities to get this economy moving again.”

He went on to say that he had read an article where Wall Street bankers had given themselves $20 billion worth of bonuses.  He called their actions “the height of irresponsibility” and “shameful.”

Wow, a President who reads the paper.  Obama even gives some insight on the Super Bowl after he rails on Wall Street.  This video is well worth watching.

Old School Friday: Remakes

I would assume that this one would be a popular choice, but I’m going with Killing Me Softly for my first pick on Old School Friday’s Remake Edition.

Robert Flack

Fugees

I assume this pick won’t be as popular. I’m going with Stranger in My House first performed by Ronnie Milsap. The irony in his song (somebody here that I can’t see) is off the chain. I remember hear this song on the bowling alley jukebox back in the day.

Just as ironic, in it’s own way, is Tamia’s version. The crazy thing is that this song came on while my wife and I were in the car and I told her there was country version. What do you know. Happy OSF!!!

Illinois lawmakers send Gov. Rod Blagojevich packing

It comes as no surprise that the Illinois State Senate voted unanimously to remove Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich from office.  The deposed governor had begged the Senate to give him a chance to prove his innocence.  He’s plea went unmet.

Illinois Senators also voted in a measure to prevent Blagojevich from ever holding office in Illinois again.  After watching the former Governor on his media tour this week, I think the dude is in serious need of some psychological help.  Maybe he can get some help while he’s doing time.

Sarah Palin Watch: Alaska governor headed to D.C. for Alfalfa club dinner

Politico is reporting that former Repbulican Vice-Presidential nominee Sarah Palin is heading to Washington to attend this Saturday’s Alfalfa Club Dinner.  Palin and President Barack Obama will share a stage together at the gathering of D.C. movers and shakers.

According to the Politico story by Johnathan Martin, the press is barred from the event, so there are very few details about what goes on inside. The President is scheduled address the group and  Palin will speak as well.

Check out the video below where Politco’s Ken Vogel talks about Palin’s Political Action Committee and why she may have decided to hit up the Alfalfa party.

Getting in Line-In 2009 Affordable Insurance Project Outreach

Join

Honorable Tennell Atkins & Honorable Vonciel Hill

& Dallas Quick Response

In

Affordable Auto Insurance Project

It’s 2009 Dallas Law-

All vehicles on the road must have auto insurance proof!!

*Do you need Automobile Insurance?

*Do you need to change your auto insurance plan?

*Please don’t drive without auto insurance and get car towed!

Date: Saturday, January 31, 2009-9am-12n

Location: Southwest Center Mall

(Center Court)

For more information contact: Edna Pemberton 214-574-9432

Tiffinni Young and Tiffany Cherry join “Shawn P. Williams Now” Thursday Night at 9PM

Join Kristin and I tonight at 9 PM on Shawn P. Williams Now on Blog Talk Radio.  Our guests will be Tiffinni Young who is running for Dallas City Council District 5 seat, and Tiffany Cherry, author of “For Anyone Who Will Listen”

Also tune in for the big announcement that I have blown way out of proportion.

Mark Davis right but mostly wrong about why we celebrate President Obama

True to form last week, Mark Davis gave backhanded praise for America’s warm welcome of President Barack Obama before laying the smack down for most of his Dallas Morning News Column. Click here to read Davis’ “Historic, yes -but also political.”

Here are a few passages from Mark’s column written from D.C. to give you a little flavor of his premise.

  • On the occasion of this most joyous of inaugurations, my emotions are mixed, yet not contradictory.
  • Witnessing the elation of real Americans celebrating the history of the moment was uplifting. I met a Missouri church group that had traveled overnight to arrive in the bracing cold of Washington, only to face the prospect of standing for hours to watch the swearing-in from a mile away. Only the darkest of hearts would be unmoved by their smiles and tears.
  • While the obliteration of a racial barrier is always good, the inauguration love-fest was first about politics. If you doubt this, imagine how the crowd, and the coverage, would have differed starkly if our first black president had been a Republican.A President Michael Steele or President J.C. Watts would have been pilloried in black America and viewed as some kind of space alien by the media.

  • Barack Obama’s blackness makes his ascendancy historic. But it is his politics that ignite the celebrations. Gather a mixture of jubilant inauguration attendees and worshipful TV talking heads; ask them about the most historic black achievements before Jan. 20, 2009, namely the service of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. Instructive silence will follow.
  • But let us dispense with this silly notion that we need to be “post-partisan.” While his dinner with conservative pundits was very nice and the Rick Warren inaugural invocation magnificent, Barack Obama has ideas about how to handle the war, the economy and every other problem America faces. Each of those ideas has an alternative that should be forwarded energetically and civilly.

I always get a chuckle out of Mark Davis, whether I’m listening to his show or reading him in the paper. Where does he get a hypothetical suggesting “A President Michael Steele or President J.C. Watts?” Wouldn’t Steele or Watts have to get the support of their own party before that could even happen?

J.C. Watts left Congress -in part- because his party was more willing to prop him up as their token that give him leadership posts that his seniority deserved. And poor Michael Steele, he gets very little love from the GOP.

Davis is right, if Clarence Thomas, J.C. Watts, or Michael Steele were the first black president, then I doubt that African-Americans would have descended upon Washington at the same levels.  Pride yes, elation, not so much.  Even a stopped watch is right twice a day.

But that has more to do with the racist tradition of the Republican party than pure politics.  Really, the Republicans’ politics of the 1960′s and 70′s was all about race, and they haven’t gotten past it in much of the South.  So to think that African-Americans would celebrate a party that tried to ensure we wouldn’t have the right to vote or access to an equal education is ridiculous.

Yeah the Democratic Party started a lot of those racist policies.  But they decided to take a different path, and the Democrats who did not embrace civil rights jumped to the Republican Party (aka Trent Lott, Strom Thurmond).  Black folks give the Democrats credit for at least reaching out a helping hand, even if that hand has sometimes cost us.  But an open hand of assistance beats a closed fist of opposition any day.

Not sure why Mark wanted to use a fairy tale scenario to poo poo on our parade, but it’s not unexpected.  I probably would have watched The Price Is Right over a Clarence Thomas inauguration, but Condi Rice…..that’s a different story.

Alcohol-related Business on South Lamar Street has Sharon Grigsby stirred up

In the year and a half that I’ve known Sharon Grigsby I’ve learned that when she gets behind an issue there’s no stopping her.  Fortunately for us her issue is Southern Dallas.

On the Dallas Morning News Opinion Blog, Sharon is raising a red flag on a vote at the Dallas City Council on Thursday to approve a special use permit for an alcohol-related business on South Lamar Street.  She’s also posted an article written by Rev. Gerald Britt that takes up the same issue.  First, part of Sharon’s post:

  • I want to get word out ASAP regarding an issue coming before the City Council tomorrow. Gerald Britt is writing for our Viewpoints page about a scheduled vote to approve a special use permit for yet another alcohol-related business on South Lamar Street, where a community group has been working successfully for the good of this area.

    I believe this is similar, if not the exact issue, to a development noted in this very good post by Michael Davis on Dallas Progress late last year. If you look at the second map on his post, you’ll find a “proposed night club” in the midst of all the existing alcohol-related businesses already in operation.

Then she posts part of Rev. Britt’s (www.changethewind.com) article on the site.  Here are some of his thoughts.

  • Homeowners, community leaders and clergy in South Dallas are working with technical advisers, an urban planner and city staff to develop a model for revitalizing the South Lamar Street corridor. The goal is a big one: To dramatically reverse the persistent economic decline and social distress in this neighborhood.
  • The plan commission’s recommendation is incompatible with the community’s desire to rid itself of the pervasive presence of nightclubs, liquor stores and scrap metal yards. For too long, zoning has allowed industrial and commercial sites to crowd churches and homes in this area. Too many of the businesses breed heavy traffic — and worse. Crime, urban nuisances, near hopelessness and despair pockmark the neighborhood.
  • South Lamar Street cuts along the western edge of South Dallas proper. As it runs under Interstate 45, the street is home to about 215 acres of metal recycling, transportation and liquor businesses mixed with abandoned, substandard structures and residences.
  • Homeowners, community and church leaders are not saying that South Dallas has to be “dry,” they are saying they don’t want a future that has them drowning in alcohol. They deserve the City Council’s support.

It’s time for the Dallas City Council to step up and show that their talk of a better Southern Dallas is more than just talk.  There’s no need for another special use permit in South Dallas, there are plenty.  I’m not saying shut down all the liquor stores, but there are more than enough and I agree with the assertion of a moratorium on liquor licenses in South Dallas.