http://take10charles.blogspot.com/2014/08/mayor-young-would-ask-where-are-jobs-in.html

Labor Power

Monday, August 18, 2014

Mayor Young would ask where are the jobs in Ferguson, Missouri

The late , great Detroit Mayor Extraordinaire Coleman A. Young would
ask " What are the unemployment and poverty rates in Ferguson and St.
Louis, and where are the jobs ?"


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8.2% (Apr 2014)
St. Louis, Unemployment rate
•
St. Louis
8.2%
•
Kansas City
6.7%
•
Missouri
6.6%
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Sources include: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics


St. Louis, MO-IL - Bureau of Labor Statistics

www.bls.gov/eag/eag.mo_stlouis_msa.htm
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
Unemployment (1). Jump to page with historical data. 105.9, 115.8,
109.9, 89.6, 93.1, (P) 101.0. Unemployment Rate (2). Jump to page with
historical data.




The real motive for much theatrical  hate of Black people, the great
American charade of white supremacist thought,  is the love of money
as, WCHB talk show host Cliff Russell said today

Cliff Russell | WCHB-AM: NewsTalk 1200

wchbnewsdetroit.newsone.com/tag/cliff-russell/
Tag: Cliff Russell ... Sign up for WCHB-AM: NewsTalk 1200's email
newsletter! Close. Thank you for subscribing! Please be sure to open
and click your first ...

Ex-Mayoral Press Secretary Cliff Russell To Host WCHB ...

www.deadlinedetroit.com/.../ex-mayoral_press_secretary_cliff_russell_to...
May 8, 2014 - Cliff Russell, a former radio reporter and ex-press
secretary for Mayor Dennis Archer, will fill the radio slot that the
late Angelo Henderson held ...



. Unemployment Rate (2). Jump to page with historical data.

  That is the colemanayoung position on the issue . Black and white
unite and, fight the bourgeoisie. Labor in white skin will not be free
while labor in black is branded.
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“Our Nation Is Moving Toward Two Societies, One Black, One
White—Separate and Unequal”: Excerpts from the Kerner Report

President Lyndon Johnson formed an 11-member National Advisory
Commission on Civil Disorders in July 1967 to explain the riots that
plagued cities each summer since 1964 and to provide recommendations
for the future. The Commission’s 1968 report, informally known as the
Kerner Report, concluded that the nation was “moving toward two
societies, one black, one white—separate and unequal.” Unless
conditions were remedied, the Commission warned, the country faced a
“system of ’apartheid’” in its major cities. The Kerner report
delivered an indictment of “white society” for isolating and
neglecting African Americans and urged legislation to promote racial
integration and to enrich slums—primarily through the creation of
jobs, job training programs, and decent housing. President Johnson,
however, rejected the recommendations. In April 1968, one month after
the release of the Kerner report, rioting broke out in more than 100
cities following the assassination of civil rights leader Martin
Luther King, Jr. In the following excerpts from the Kerner Report
summary, the Commission analyzed patterns in the riots and offered
explanations for the disturbances. In 1998, 30 years after the
issuance of the Report, former Senator and Commission member Fred R.
Harris co-authored a study that found the racial divide had grown in
the ensuing years with inner-city unemployment at crisis levels.
Opposing voices argued that the Commission’s prediction of separate
societies had failed to materialize due to a marked increase in the
number of African Americans living in suburbs.
________________________________
SUMMARY OF REPORT
INTRODUCTION
The summer of 1967 again brought racial disorders to American cities,
and with them shock, fear and bewilderment to the nation.
The worst came during a two-week period in July, first in Newark and
then in Detroit. Each set off a chain reaction in neighboring
communities.
On July 28, 1967, the President of the United States established this
Commission and directed us to answer three basic questions:
What happened? Why did it happen? What can be done to prevent it from
happening again?
To respond to these questions, we have undertaken a broad range of
studies and investigations. We have visited the riot cities; we have
heard many witnesses; we have sought the counsel of experts across the
country.
This is our basic conclusion: Our nation is moving toward two
societies, one black, one white—separate and unequal.
Reaction to last summer’s disorders has quickened the movement and
deepened the division. Discrimination and segregation have long
permeated much of American life; they now threaten the future of every
American.
This deepening racial division is not inevitable. The movement apart
can be reversed. Choice is still possible. Our principal task is to
define that choice and to press for a national resolution.
To pursue our present course will involve the continuing polarization
of the American community and, ultimately, the destruction of basic
democratic values.
The alternative is not blind repression or capitulation to
lawlessness. It is the realization of common opportunities for all
within a single society.
This alternative will require a commitment to national
action—compassionate, massive and sustained, backed by the resources
of the most powerful and the richest nation on this earth. From every
American it will require new attitudes, new understanding, and, above
all, new will.
The vital needs of the nation must be met; hard choices must be made,
and, if necessary, new taxes enacted.
Violence cannot build a better society. Disruption and disorder
nourish repression, not justice. They strike at the freedom of every
citizen. The community cannot—it will not—tolerate coercion and mob
rule.
Violence and destruction must be ended—in the streets of the ghetto1
and in the lives of people.
Segregation and poverty have created in the racial ghetto a
destructive environment totally unknown to most white Americans.
What white Americans have never fully understood—but what the Negro
can never forget—is that white society is deeply implicated in the
ghetto. White institutions created it, white institutions maintain,
and white society condones it.
It is time now to turn with all the purpose at our command to the
major unfinished business of this nation. It is time to adopt
strategies for action that will produce quick and visible progress. It
is time to make good the promises of American democracy to all
citizens—urban and rural, white and black, Spanish-surname, American
Indian, and every minority group.
Our recommendations embrace three basic principles:
To mount programs on a scale equal to the dimension of the problems;
To aim these programs for high impact in the immediate future in order
to close the gap between promise and performance;
To undertake new initiatives and experiments that can change the
system of failure and frustration that now dominates the ghetto and
weakens our society.
These programs will require unprecedented levels of funding and
performance, but they neither probe deeper nor demand more than the
problems which called them forth. There can be no higher priority for
national action and no higher claim on the nation’s conscience. . . .
PART I—WHAT HAPPENED?
Chapter 1—Profiles of Disorder
The report contains profiles of a selection of the disorders that took
place during the summer of 1967. These profiles are designed to
indicate how the disorders happened, who participated in them, and how
local officials, police forces, and the National Guard responded.
Illustrative excerpts follow:
NEWARK
. . . On Saturday, July 15, [Director of Police Dominick] Spina
received a report of snipers in a housing project. When he arrived he
saw approximately 100 National Guardsmen and police officers crouching
behind vehicles, hiding in corners and lying on the ground around the
edge of the courtyard.
Since everything appeared quiet and it was broad daylight, Spina
walked directly down the middle of the street. Nothing happened. As he
came to the last building of the complex, he heard a shot. All around
him the troopers jumped, believing themselves to be under sniper fire.
A moment later a young Guardsman ran from behind a building.
The Director of Police went over and asked him if he had fired the
shot. The soldier said yes, he had fired to scare a man away from a
window; that his orders were to keep everyone away from windows.
Spina said he told the soldier: “Do you know what you just did? You
have now created a state of hysteria. Every Guardsman up and down this
street and every state policeman and every city policeman that is
present thinks that somebody just fired a shot and that it is probably
a sniper.”
A short time later more “gunshots” were heard. Investigating, Spina
came upon a Puerto Rican sitting on a wall. In reply to a question as
to whether he knew “where the firing is coming from?” the man said:
“That’s no firing. That’s fireworks. If you look up to the fourth
floor, you will see the people who are throwing down these cherry
bombs.”
By this time four truckloads of National Guardsmen had arrived and
troopers and policemen were again crouched everywhere looking for a
sniper. The Director of Police remained at the scene for three hours,
and the only shot fired was the one by the Guardsmen.
Nevertheless, at six o’clock that evening two columns of National
Guardsmen and state troopers were directing mass fire at the Hayes
Housing Project in response to what they believed were snipers. . . .
DETROIT
. . . A spirit of carefree nihilism was taking hold. To riot and
destroy appeared more and more to become ends in themselves. Late
Sunday afternoon it appeared to one observer that the young people
were “dancing amidst the flames.”
A Negro plainclothes officer was standing at an intersection when a
man threw a Molotov cocktail into a business establishment at the
corner. In the heat of the afternoon, fanned by the 20 to 25 m.p.h.
winds of both Sunday and Monday, the fire reached the home next door
within minutes. As residents uselessly sprayed the flames with garden
hoses, the fire jumped from roof to roof of adjacent two- and
three-story buildings. Within the hour the entire block was in flames.
The ninth house in the burning row belonged to the arsonist who had
thrown the Molotov cocktail. . . .
* * *
. . . Employed as a private guard, 55-year-old Julius L. Dorsey, a
Negro, was standing in front of a market when accosted by two Negro
men and a woman. They demanded he permit them to loot the market. He
ignored their demands. They began to berate him. He asked a neighbor
to call the police. As the argument grew more heated, Dorsey fired
three shots from his pistol into the air.
The police radio reported: “Looters, they have rifles.” A patrol car
driven by a police officer and carrying three National Guardsmen
arrived. As the looters fled, the law enforcement personnel opened
fire. When the firing ceased, one person lay dead.
He was Julius L. Dorsey . . .
* * *
. . . As the riot alternatively waxed and waned, one area of the
ghetto remained insulated. On the northeast side the residents of some
150 square blocks inhabited by 21,000 persons had, in 1966, banded
together in the Positive Neighborhood Action Committee (PNAC). With
professional help from the Institute of Urban Dynamics, they had
organized block clubs and made plans for the improvement of the
neighborhood. . . .
When the riot broke out, the residents, through the block clubs, were
able to organize quickly. Youngsters, agreeing to stay in the
neighborhood, participated in detouring traffic. While many persons
reportedly sympathized with the idea of a rebellion against the
“system,” only two small fires were set—one in an empty building.
* * *
. . . According to Lt. Gen. Throckmorton and Col. Bolling, the city,
at this time, was saturated with fear. The National Guardsmen were
afraid, the residents were afraid, and the police were afraid.
Numerous persons, the majority of them Negroes, were being injured by
gunshots of undetermined origin. The general and his staff felt that
the major task of the troops was to reduce the fear and restore an air
of normalcy.
In order to accomplish this, every effort was made to establish
contact and rapport between the troops and the residents. The
soldiers—20 percent of whom were Negro—began helping to clean up the
streets, collect garbage, and trace persons who had disappeared in the
confusion. Residents in the neighborhoods responded with soup and
sandwiches for the troops. In areas where the National Guard tried to
establish rapport with the citizens, there was a smaller response.
NEW BRUNSWICK
. . . A short time later, elements of the crowd—an older and rougher
one than the night before—appeared in front of the police station. The
participants wanted to see the mayor.
Mayor [Patricia] Sheehan went out onto the steps of the station. Using
a bullhorn, she talked to the people and asked that she be given an
opportunity to correct conditions. The crowd was boisterous. Some
persons challenged the mayor. But, finally, the opinion, “She’s new!
Give her a chance!” prevailed.
A demand was issued by people in the crowd that all persons arrested
the previous night be released. Told that this already had been done,
the people were suspicious. They asked to be allowed to inspect the
jail cells.
It was agreed to permit representatives of the people to look in the
cells to satisfy themselves that everyone had been released.
The crowd dispersed. The New Brunswick riot had failed to materialize.
Chapter 2—Patterns of Disorder
The “typical” riot did not take place. The disorders of 1967 were
unusual, irregular, complex and unpredictable social processes. Like
most human events, they did not unfold in an orderly sequence.
However, an analysis of our survey information leads to some
conclusions about the riot process.
In general:
The civil disorders of 1967 involved Negroes acting against local
symbols of white American society, authority and property in Negro
neighborhoods—rather than against white persons.
Of 164 disorders reported during the first nine months of 1967, eight
(5 percent) were major in terms of violence and damage; 33 (20
percent) were serious but not major; 123 (75 percent) were minor and
undoubtedly would not have received national attention as “riots” had
the nation not been sensitized by the more serous outbreaks.
In the 75 disorders studied by a Senate subcommittee, 83 deaths were
reported. Eighty-two percent of the deaths and more than half the
injuries occurred in Newark and Detroit. About 10 percent of the dead
and 38 percent of the injured were public employees, primarily law
officers and firemen. The overwhelming majority of the persons killed
or injured in all the disorders were Negro civilians.
Initial damage estimates were greatly exaggerated. In Detroit,
newspaper damage estimates at first ranged from $200 million to $500
million; the highest recent estimate is $45 million. In Newark, early
estimates ranged from $15 to $25 million. A month later damage was
estimated at $10.2 million, over 80 percent in inventory losses.
In the 24 disorders in 23 cities which we surveyed:
The final incident before the outbreak of disorder, and the initial
violence itself, generally took place in the evening or at night at a
place in which it was normal for many people to be on the streets.
Violence usually occurred almost immediately following the occurrence
of the final precipitating incident, and then escalated rapidly. With
but few exceptions, violence subsided during the day, and flared
rapidly again at night. The night-day cycles continued through the
early period of the major disorders.
Disorder generally began with rock and bottle throwing and window
breaking. Once store windows were broken, looting usually followed.
Disorder did not erupt as a result of a single “triggering” or
“precipitating” incident. Instead, it was generated out of an
increasingly disturbed social atmosphere, in which typically a series
of tension-heightening incidents over a period of weeks or months
became linked in the minds of many in the Negro community with a
reservoir of underlying grievances. At some point in the mounting
tension, a further incident—in itself often routine or trivial—became
the breaking point and the tension spilled over into violence.
“Prior” incidents, which increased tensions and ultimately led to
violence, were police actions in almost half the cases; police actions
were “final” incidents before the outbreak of violence in 12 of the 24
surveyed disorders.
No particular control tactic was successful in every situation. The
varied effectiveness of control techniques emphasizes the need for
advance training, planning, adequate intelligence systems, and
knowledge of the ghetto community.
Negotiations between Negroes—including your militants as well as older
Negro leaders—and white officials concerning “terms of peace” occurred
during virtually all the disorders surveyed. In many cases, these
negotiations involved discussion of underlying grievances as well as
the handling of the disorder by control authorities.
The typical rioter was a teenager or young adult, a lifelong resident
of the city in which he rioted, a high school dropout; he was,
nevertheless, somewhat better educated than his nonrioting Negro
neighbor, and was usually underemployed or employed in a menial job.
He was proud of his race, extremely hostile to both whites and
middle-class Negroes and, although informed about politics, highly
distrustful of the political system.
A Detroit survey revealed that approximately 11 percent of the total
residents of two riot areas admitted participation in the rioting, 20
to 25 percent identified themselves as “bystanders,” over 16 percent
identified themselves as “counter-rioters” who urged rioters to “cool
it,” and the remaining 48 to 53 percent said they were at home or
elsewhere and did not participate. In a survey of Negro males between
the ages of 15 and 35 residing in the disturbance area in Newark,
about 45 percent identified themselves as rioters, and about 55
percent as “noninvolved.”
Most rioters were young Negro males. Nearly 53 percent of arrestees
were between 15 and 24 years of age; nearly 81 percent between 15 and
35.
In Detroit and Newark about 74 percent of the rioters were brought up
in the North. In contrast, of the noninvolved, 36 percent in Detroit
and 52 percent in Newark were brought up in the North.
What the rioters appeared to be seeking was fuller participation in
the social order and the material benefits enjoyed by the majority of
American citizens. Rather than rejecting the American system, they
were anxious to obtain a place for themselves in it.
Numerous Negro counter-rioters walked the streets urging rioters to
“cool it.” The typical counter-rioter was better educated and had
higher income than either the rioter or the noninvolved.
The proportion of Negroes in local government was substantially
smaller than the Negro proportion of population. Only three of the 20
cities studied had more than one Negro legislator; none had ever had a
Negro mayor or city manager. In only four cities did Negroes hold
other important policy-making positions or serve as heads of municipal
departments.
Although almost all cities had some sort of formal grievance mechanism
for handling citizen complaints, this typically was regarded by
Negroes as ineffective and was generally ignored.
Although specific grievances varied from city to city, at least 12
deeply held grievances can be identified and ranked into three levels
of relative intensity:
First Level of Intensity
1. Police practices
2. Unemployment and underemployment
3. Inadequate housing
Second Level of Intensity
4. Inadequate education
5. Poor recreation facilities and programs
6. Ineffectiveness of the political structure and grievance mechanisms.
Third Level of Intensity
7. Disrespectful white attitudes
8. Discriminatory administration of justice
9. Inadequacy of federal programs
10. Inadequacy of municipal services
11. Discriminatory consumer and credit practices
12. Inadequate welfare programs
The results of a three-city survey of various federal
programs—manpower, education, housing, welfare and community
action—indicate that, despite substantial expenditures, the number of
persons assisted constituted only a fraction of those in need.
The background of disorder is often as complex and difficult to
analyze as the disorder itself. But we find that certain general
conclusions can be drawn:
Social and economic conditions in the riot cities constituted a clear
pattern of severe disadvantage for Negroes compared with whites,
whether the Negroes lived in the area where the riot took place or
outside it. Negroes had completed fewer years of education and fewer
had attended high school. Negroes were twice as likely to be
unemployed and three times as likely to be in unskilled and service
jobs. Negroes averaged 70 percent of the income earned by whites and
were more than twice as likely to be living in poverty. Although
housing cost Negroes relatively more, they had worse housing—three
times as likely to be overcrowded and substandard. When compared to
white suburbs, the relative disadvantage is even more pronounced.
A study of the aftermath of disorder leads to disturbing conclusions.
We find that, despite the institution of some post-riot programs:
Little basic change in the conditions underlying the outbreak of
disorder has taken place. Actions to ameliorate Negro grievances have
been limited and sporadic; with but few exceptions, they have not
significantly reduced tensions.
In several cities, the principal official response has been to train
and equip the police with more sophisticated weapons.
In several cities, increasing polarization is evident, with continuing
breakdown of inter-racial communication, and growth of white
segregationist or black separatist groups. . . .
PART II—WHY DID IT HAPPEN?
Chapter 4—The Basic Causes
In addressing the question “Why did it happen?” we shift our focus
from the local to the national scene, from the particular events of
the summer of 1967 to the factors within the society at large that
created a mood of violence among many urban Negroes.
These factors are complex and interacting; they vary significantly in
their effect from city to city and from year to year; and the
consequences of one disorder, generating new grievances and new
demands, become the causes of the next. Thus was created the “thicket
of tension, conflicting evidence and extreme opinions” cited by the
President.
Despite these complexities, certain fundamental matters are clear. Of
these, the most fundamental is the racial attitude and behavior of
white Americans toward black Americans.
Race prejudice has shaped our history decisively; it now threatens to
affect our future.
White racism is essentially responsible for the explosive mixture
which has been accumulating in our cities since the end of World War
II. Among the ingredients of this mixture are:
Pervasive discrimination and segregation in employment, education and
housing, which have resulted in the continuing exclusion of great
numbers of Negroes from the benefits of economic progress.
Black in-migration and white exodus, which have produced the massive
and growing concentrations of impoverished Negroes in our major
cities, creating a growing crisis of deteriorating facilities and
services and unmet human needs.
The black ghettos where segregation and poverty converge on the young
to destroy opportunity and enforce failure. Crime, drug addiction,
dependency on welfare, and bitterness and resentment against society
in general and white society in particular are the result.
At the same time, most whites and some Negroes outside the ghetto have
prospered to a degree unparalleled in the history of civilization.
Through television and other media, this affluence has been flaunted
before the eyes of the Negro poor and the jobless ghetto youth.
Yet these facts alone cannot be said to have caused the disorders.
Recently, other powerful ingredients have begun to catalyze the
mixture:
Frustrated hopes are the residue of the unfulfilled expectations
aroused by the great judicial and legislative victories of the Civil
Rights Movement and the dramatic struggle for equal rights in the
South.
A climate that tends toward approval and encouragement of violence as
a form of protest has been created by white terrorism directed against
nonviolent protest; by the open defiance of law and federal authority
by state and local officials resisting desegregation; and by some
protest groups engaging in civil disobedience who turn their backs on
nonviolence, go beyond the constitutionally protected rights of
petition and free assembly, and resort to violence to attempt to
compel alteration of laws and policies with which they disagree.
The frustrations of powerlessness have led some Negroes to the
conviction that there is no effective alternative to violence as a
means of achieving redress of grievances, and of “moving the system.”
These frustrations are reflected in alienation and hostility toward
the institutions of law and government and the white society which
controls them, and in the reach toward racial consciousness and
solidarity reflected in the slogan “Black Power.”
A new mood has sprung up among Negroes, particularly among the young,
in which self-esteem and enhanced racial pride are replacing apathy
and submission to “the system.”
The police are not merely a “spark” factor. To some Negroes police
have come to symbolize white power, white racism and white repression.
And the fact is that many police do reflect and express these white
attitudes. The atmosphere of hostility and cynicism is reinforced by a
widespread belief among Negroes in the existence of police brutality
and in a “double standard” of justice and protection—one for Negroes
and one for whites.
To this point, we have attempted to identify the prime components of
the “explosive mixture.” In the chapters that follow we seek to
analyze them in the perspective of history. Their meaning, however, is
clear:
In the summer of 1967, we have seen in our cities a chain reaction of
racial violence. If we are heedless, none of us shall escape the
consequences.
[1] The term “ghetto” as used in this report refers to an area within
a city characterized by poverty and acute social disorganization, and
inhabited by members of a racial or ethnic group under conditions of
involuntary segregation. Back to text.

Source: United States. Kerner Commission, Report of the National
Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Washington: U.S. Government
Printing Office, 1968)
See Also:"The Primary Goal Must Be a Single Society": The Kerner
Report's "Recommendations for National Action"
"The Communications Media, Ironically, Have Failed to Communicate":
The Kerner Report Assesses Media Coverage of Riots and Race Relations
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