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Black American Political Calculus: New forumla for an economic recovery of Black Farmers
President Obama Black History Month theme, "The Quest for Black Citizenship in the Americas," is a chance to examine the evolution of our country and how Black Americans helped draw us ever closer to becoming a more perfect union.
Black History Month 2010 will forever be a historic milestone of American political climate change.
President Obama's and First Sista Michelle, have shared our Black History Month agenda while climate change shut down our nation's capitol while Black Farmers throughout the nation prepare President's Day 2010.
We must begin to isolate and clearly identify the skeptics within our 111th U.S. Congress who do not consider the volatile change in global weather patterns just as troublesome as the unregulated financial markets, an opaque trillion plus dollar daily derivative market, the reason many priorities remain unfunded.
Some may find the personal benefit of reelection a balance to special interest financial consideration and begin to focus help to stablize some of the most impacted communities in America.
Corporate industrial agriculture commodity producers and small family farmers both need stable financial markets for investment in the necessary agricultural inputs to prepare, plant, nurture, harvest and market the economic foundation of our economy and national security, U.S. Agriculture.
During the 2008 Food, Conservation and Energy Act debate an unprecedented diverse group of over 500 organizations came together to impact U.S. Farm Policy, inclusive of positive structural change within the USDA .
Today, we begin to leverage our ethnic cultural identification and economic strength to achieve our political goals as we prepare for election 2010, to stabilze Black Agriculture in the 21st Century.
Nationwide Black Americans are calling for equity and equal opportunity while celebrating 40 years of the Congressional Black Caucus, our voice in the U.S. Congress. We must utilize census 2010 and the 2010 election cycle to identify all congresional districts where we can make an impact, Let's Move.
For centuries Black Americans represented free labor facilitated by church sanctioned unregulated global terrorism that enabled our robust U.S. Agriculture industry to gain global dominance of financial markets.
Enslaved Africans and Indigenous human beings were the security that backed stocks and bonds traded openly in the futures market on Wall Street providing a lifetime of uncompensated insured productive utility throughout America's agriculture industry and related industrial markets.
The U.S. Congress has officially apologized for this "peculiar institution and jim crow laws" however quantifiable evidence of sincerity remains the ongoing challenge as we prepare to celebrate President's Day 2010.
President George Washington and President Abraham Lincoln are bookends to legal American chattel slavery, a salient reason Black History Month is in February. During both our U.S. War of Independence and U.S. Civil War many great men and women throughout America paid the ultimate price in our ongoing march toward "Forming a More Perfect Union."
That great legacy and historic challenge is best viewed from the Executive Office of United States of America, and the ongoing work of President Barack Obama and First Sista Michelle.
President's Day 2010 will start a new conversation toward establishing a new equation of Black American Political Calculus.
Nationwide we must engage a broad alliance of family farmers, anti-hunger, faith-based, public health, nutrition, civil rights, in rural and urban communities to come together to support a nationwide coalition to finally resolve a 20th century Class Action court case and establish financial paths to support Black Agriculture in the 21st century globally.
Together, we must find a way to bridge centuries of legal systemic institutional racism against Black Farm producers that culminated with President Reagan ordering the closure of the Civil Rights Office within the United States Department of Agriculture.
That powerful sign in 1981 provided a spark for some to move toward a massive push to extinguish all Black Farmers and Agriculturalists in America.
We must match that spark in 2011 with a sign to close the chapter on the landmark Pigford Civil Rights Class Action Case.
Today's volatile financial and derivative markets destabilize our nation's economy and place a hold developing writing the final chapter of the Civil Rights Movement, equity and economic opportunity for all of Black America.
President Barack Obama and First Sista Michelle, brought the Music of the Civil Rights Movement into the White House and shared it with the world, it is a historic milestone.
President Obama ongoing proposal to resolve "a final chapter" of systemic institutional discrimination within the "Last Plantation in America" is firmly in the hands of our U.S. Congress.
President's Day 2010, we will begin to share a new paradigm toward utilizing political calculus to identify and support Congress members willing to regulate financial markets and provide the financial capital necessary to stabilize an economic recovery throughout Black America.
President Obama's and First Sista Michelle, have shared our Black History Month agenda while climate change shut down our nation's capitol while Black Farmers throughout the nation prepare President's Day 2010.
We must begin to isolate and clearly identify the skeptics within our 111th U.S. Congress who do not consider the volatile change in global weather patterns just as troublesome as the unregulated financial markets, an opaque trillion plus dollar daily derivative market, the reason many priorities remain unfunded.
Some may find the personal benefit of reelection a balance to special interest financial consideration and begin to focus help to stablize some of the most impacted communities in America.
Corporate industrial agriculture commodity producers and small family farmers both need stable financial markets for investment in the necessary agricultural inputs to prepare, plant, nurture, harvest and market the economic foundation of our economy and national security, U.S. Agriculture.
During the 2008 Food, Conservation and Energy Act debate an unprecedented diverse group of over 500 organizations came together to impact U.S. Farm Policy, inclusive of positive structural change within the USDA .
Today, we begin to leverage our ethnic cultural identification and economic strength to achieve our political goals as we prepare for election 2010, to stabilze Black Agriculture in the 21st Century.
Nationwide Black Americans are calling for equity and equal opportunity while celebrating 40 years of the Congressional Black Caucus, our voice in the U.S. Congress. We must utilize census 2010 and the 2010 election cycle to identify all congresional districts where we can make an impact, Let's Move.
For centuries Black Americans represented free labor facilitated by church sanctioned unregulated global terrorism that enabled our robust U.S. Agriculture industry to gain global dominance of financial markets.
Enslaved Africans and Indigenous human beings were the security that backed stocks and bonds traded openly in the futures market on Wall Street providing a lifetime of uncompensated insured productive utility throughout America's agriculture industry and related industrial markets.
The U.S. Congress has officially apologized for this "peculiar institution and jim crow laws" however quantifiable evidence of sincerity remains the ongoing challenge as we prepare to celebrate President's Day 2010.
President George Washington and President Abraham Lincoln are bookends to legal American chattel slavery, a salient reason Black History Month is in February. During both our U.S. War of Independence and U.S. Civil War many great men and women throughout America paid the ultimate price in our ongoing march toward "Forming a More Perfect Union."
That great legacy and historic challenge is best viewed from the Executive Office of United States of America, and the ongoing work of President Barack Obama and First Sista Michelle.
President's Day 2010 will start a new conversation toward establishing a new equation of Black American Political Calculus.
Nationwide we must engage a broad alliance of family farmers, anti-hunger, faith-based, public health, nutrition, civil rights, in rural and urban communities to come together to support a nationwide coalition to finally resolve a 20th century Class Action court case and establish financial paths to support Black Agriculture in the 21st century globally.
Together, we must find a way to bridge centuries of legal systemic institutional racism against Black Farm producers that culminated with President Reagan ordering the closure of the Civil Rights Office within the United States Department of Agriculture.
That powerful sign in 1981 provided a spark for some to move toward a massive push to extinguish all Black Farmers and Agriculturalists in America.
We must match that spark in 2011 with a sign to close the chapter on the landmark Pigford Civil Rights Class Action Case.
Today's volatile financial and derivative markets destabilize our nation's economy and place a hold developing writing the final chapter of the Civil Rights Movement, equity and economic opportunity for all of Black America.
President Barack Obama and First Sista Michelle, brought the Music of the Civil Rights Movement into the White House and shared it with the world, it is a historic milestone.
President Obama ongoing proposal to resolve "a final chapter" of systemic institutional discrimination within the "Last Plantation in America" is firmly in the hands of our U.S. Congress.
President's Day 2010, we will begin to share a new paradigm toward utilizing political calculus to identify and support Congress members willing to regulate financial markets and provide the financial capital necessary to stabilize an economic recovery throughout Black America.
For more information:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office...
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