All posts by The Houston Sun

Pushing up hill

Through Dorris’s Eyes

What amount of energy does it take to push the loaded wagon uphill? Massive amount I am sure based on the weight being carried in the loaded wagon. Americans are bogged down with loaded wagons. Some of the loads are real and some are perceived. Still it appears that we are having a difficult time getting to the top of the hill. At the top of the hill, there is a moment for release and rest. The laborers can catch his or her breath, get a drink of water, and reflect of the journey to get to the top, appreciate what it took to get to the top. Once at the top of the hill, there must be a strategy to remain on the hill or and to explore the use of the hill to reach different destinations. The view of what is beyond what the eyes can see is causing the American public to not trust themselves. We are fearful first that we cannot climb that hill which is filled with a plethora of negative things that are beyond our control. Among the items in the loaded wagon are 9.2 percent unemployment, an uncertain housing market, declining in education, teachers cuts, low wage jobs, unemployment, deficits, and a lagging economy.

I can make the loaded wagon theory more complicated by making the hill for which we Americans seek to climb is a muddy one on the east coast for example that has experience historic rains. Just imagine how difficult it would be to push a loaded wagon are 9.2 percent unemployment, an uncertain housing market, declining in education, teachers cuts, low wage jobs, unemployment, deficits us a slippery hill where progress is made and then the wagon slips back to the starting position or even lower than the original position. Imagine the use of the muscles, mental and physical energy required to move the loaded wagon.

Well, some may offer to remove items from the wagon and then maybe we can get it over the hill while others may argue that it is unfair to remove any of the items, as they are all needed to benefit our nation. Therefore, Americans, how do we lift this wagon of woes up the hill so that we can get over the crisis of neglect, unrealized opportunities, oppression, and destruction of ideas and people who could conceivable assist in pushing this wagon up the hill? What can we do?

Maybe we should find a way to come together to analyze and determine the best options to address each problem in a fair and reasonable manner. This can be accomplished. It is our choice to do it or not to do it. The consequences await all of us and the results are based on our action. We have careers with specificities in disciplines that could master each obstacle we face, yet we must find the will to make it happen.

May God bless, and I will see you next week.

Obama administration to narrow US deportation policy

“In an unstable economic environment, we must seek to retain our most vital assets of human capital, who strive to promote and contribute to our country’s improvement and success.
Immigrants are an important part of American human resources”
Washington, DC – “I commend President Obama for doing what is right for American immigrant families. It’s a step in the right direction and within the parameters of existing law. It’s the least we can do to recognize the hard working immigrants that contribute so much to our nation’s economy and culture, as Congress continues to debate ways to address immigration reform,” commented Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee.
Yesterday, the Obama Administration declared that it would “grant an indefinite reprieve to estimated thousands of immigrants facing deportation.” Federal officials from the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Justice, which both oversee the immigration courts, will examine each immigrant’s status on a case by case basis in determination of whether they will be deported. This decision will launch an approximate review of nearly 300,000 cases in the nation’s immigration courts – requiring judicial officials to assess the priorities to detain and deport criminals and threats to public safety. The policy shift will affect less than 3 percent of more than 11 million illegal immigrants in the United States, approximately 1.4 million which are located between the Dallas and Houston areas of Texas.
Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee, Ranking Member of the Transportation Security Subcommittee on the House Homeland Security Committee and a senior member on the Immigration Subcommittee on the House Judiciary Committee stated, “This sweeping legislation will provide unification of immigrant families, which would include uniting immigrants with spouses, children or other close family members who are citizens or lawful permanent residents of the United States who have proven employment records.” Out of the nearly 12 to 20 million illegal immigrants in the United States, several million are composed of blended families (including both legal and illegal immigrants and U.S. born citizens).
Past immigration policy has caused spouses to be separated and millions of children to be separated from their parents – leaving others to help care for the orphaned children. For example, in 2007, an immigrant couple was pulled over for having expired tags on their car and subsequently deported after the police discovered they were illegal immigrants – forcing the couple to leave their 11 year old child in the custody and care of an alternative family member. This new policy is one small victory for proponents of comprehensive immigration reform in the United States Congress.
Congresswoman Jackson Lee is the author of the “Save America Comprehensive Immigration Act of 2009,” a bill that falls directly in line with the goals of the DREAM Act. “This Act seeks to increase our national interest by retaining our young people who may be children of illegal immigrants, in order to become educated and “want only to contribute to this country’s success,” commented Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee.
“Yesterday’s decision to review each immigrant status on a case by case basis – deporting only those illegal immigrants who pose a threat to our National Security – aide in the retention of our country’s most valuable and scarce resources,” stated Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee.

SF neighborhood gets new grocery store

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) _ San Francisco’s Bayview-Hunters Point neighborhood has a new grocery store.

On Wednesday, Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market became the first grocery store to open in the neighborhood in more than two decades.

Supporters tell the San Francisco Chronicle (http://bit.ly/nXoMoV) more residents will now have the option of buying fresh food. The historically African American neighborhood has previously been considered a food desert _ an area with limited access to affordable produce and other nutritious foods.

Community leaders say some residents would have to drive for miles for those items, making it easier to turn to fast food.

Fresh & Easy is a unit of United Kingdom-based retailing giant Tesco.

Morris Brown pays off debt to US government

ATLANTA (AP) _ Morris Brown College has settled a nearly $10 million debt with the U.S. Education Department.

The college announced Tuesday that it had transferred money to the federal government to pay off the long-standing debt. The historically black college in Atlanta reached a settlement with the Education Department in April that $9.4 million in debt would be forgiven if Morris Brown paid off the remaining $500,000.

Education Department spokesman Justin Hamilton confirmed the department had received the payment but declined further comment.

The debt represents years’ worth of unused federal aid that the school was supposed to return to the government, financial abuse uncovered in a federal audit of the college’s finances between 1999 and 2004.

Morris Brown lost accreditation in 2003 over the financial problems and other issues.

King on the Mall

Martin Luther King Memorial
Martin Luther King Memorial

WASHINGTON, DC – The National Park Service formally welcomed the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial as America ’s 395th national park on August 28 – the 48th anniversary of Dr. King’s “I Have a Dream” speech, delivered in 1963 on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. The National Park Service also emphasized its commitment to working closely with the Martin Luther King, Jr., Memorial Foundation to reschedule the ceremonial dedication planned for Sunday that was unfortunately postponed due to Hurricane Irene.

“Welcoming this memorial to the National Mall honors a heroic man and a critical chapter in our nation’s march toward a more perfect union,” said Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar. “Martin Luther King, Jr., mobilized the power of faith and morality to break the chains of oppression that held our nation back. I commend the MLK Foundation and Harry Johnson for their tireless work in making this memorial a reality, so that we may always be reminded of the work that is yet to be done to achieve Dr. King’s dream and a more perfect union.”

“Forty-eight years ago, Dr. King took to the steps of the Lincoln Memorial and challenged our nation to fulfill his dream of equality for all Americans,” said National Park Service Director Jonathan B. Jarvis. “On the anniversary of that speech, we are proud to add the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial to the National Park System as a lasting tribute to this American hero. We look forward to working with the MLK Foundation to reschedule the formal dedication and hope that many of the tens of thousands of people who had planned to attend will be able to participate.”

In 1996, Congress authorized Dr. King’s fraternity, Alpha Phi Alpha, to establish a memorial to the civil rights leader in Washington , DC . The group formed the Martin Luther King, Jr. National Memorial Project Foundation and held a competition for the design. A site along the Tidal Basin of the National Mall was chosen for the memorial.

After 15 years of effort, a granite likeness of Dr. King emerges from the memorial’s Stone of Hope and stands resolutely between iconic monuments to Thomas Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln.

“From World War II to Vietnam Veterans, from Lincoln to Jefferson and now to King, the memorials and monuments along the National Mall are where millions of visitors every year learn about our history,” said Bob Vogel, superintendent of the National Mall and Memorial Parks. “The National Park Service is honored to serve as the keeper of America ’s story, and with this new memorial, to have this incredible venue from which to share the courage of one man and the struggle for civil rights that he led.”

The memorial to Dr. King is part of the National Mall and Memorial Parks and is open to the public. National Park Service rangers provide programs for visitors and answer questions.