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Rev. Al Sharpton

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Diminishing Black Wealth

Posted: 11/30/11 10:17 AM ET

In June of 2009, the economic recession was officially declared over. Despite the fact that millions remained unemployed, families were still foreclosed upon in record numbers and more children went hungry than most of us could have ever imagined, many had us buy into the notion that the worst was behind us and things were on an upward trajectory. Well, for the African American community, nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, Black layoffs have only skyrocketed since that time as the public sector - heavily comprised of a Black workforce - continues to slash jobs. And as a result, not only has Black wealth diminished, but so too has the existence of much of this nation's Black middle class itself. Black, White or Brown - that is a startling reality that should have all of us deeply concerned.

According to a study released earlier this year by the Center for Labor Research and Education at the University of California, Blacks were 30% more likely than other workers to be employed in the public sector. And while the private sector has added 1.6 million jobs as reported in a recent New York Times piece, public employment has seen massive layoffs across the board. Whether it's teachers, firefighters, police officers, or any other form of municipal work, the public sector has been under attack from Wisconsin to NJ and everywhere in between. From losing their bargaining rights to bearing the brunt of city and state budget cuts, public service employees are watching their entire life savings disappear. And because about 1 in 5 Blacks work in civil service, we are disproportionately suffering yet again during these tough times.

In the U.S. postal service alone, about 25% of employees are Black. It is precisely because of work in this industry and in other government entities that we were finally able to climb the economic and societal ladder, and eventually begin to achieve the proverbial American dream of home ownership. An entire Black middle class emerged via civil service jobs, and we are now tragically close to witnessing the greatest stumbling block to progress that will literally set us back decades. But we can - and we must - do something to halt this injustice that so clearly threatens our immediate future.

On December 9th, my organization, National Action Network, will do its part to address this issue and more as we mobilize a 25-city simultaneous day-of-action around Jobs and Justice. A follow-up to our October 15th rally in Washington, D.C., the December 9th march will continue to focus on growing economic disparity, lack of employment, and equality issues surrounding our current economic state. We will call attention to disproportionate layoffs of Blacks, Latinos and other oppressed groups, attacks on the public sector and the ever-growing wealth gap. We will push for economic growth, job creation and concrete, substantive ideas that truly begin to get people back to work. And we will call out all those who stand in the way.

While doing nothing but obstructing every proposal put forth by the President and Democrats, Republicans have made it their mission to paint public workers - the ones that clean our streets, educate our children, deliver our mail, protect our streets and more - as the enemy. They continue to find ways to eliminate their organizing abilities, and blame them for all of our ills, while trying to protect the corporate cronies that got us all into this mess. And of course, they have openly stated that they are willing to let all of our lives hang in the balance while they play dirty politics. But we, the American people, will not remain silent and watch the very things we worked so hard to create fall apart before our eyes. It isn't fair to the Black community that broke through impossible blockades to create a middle class; it isn't fair to civil service employees who make life as we know it possible; and it isn't fair to you and I.

Join us on December 9th as we raise our voices in unison across the country for Jobs and Justice.

 

Follow Rev. Al Sharpton on Twitter: www.twitter.com/TheRevAl

 
 
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10:19 AM on 12/19/2011
How can Al Sharpton say, WE need to do something about the 1% because THEY are leaving US behind when it comes to $$$$....... this coming from someone that has a net worth of AT LEAST FIVE MILLION Dollars, and earns $700,000.00 PLUS a year in just talk show radio wages. FU-AL
08:18 PM on 12/02/2011
"the December 9th march will continue to focus on growing economic disparity, lack of employment, and equality issues surrounding our current economic state. We will call attention to disproportionate layoffs of Blacks, Latinos and other oppressed groups, attacks on the public sector and the ever-growing wealth gap. We will push for economic growth, job creation and concrete, substantive ideas that truly begin to get people back to work. And we will call out all those who stand in the way."

Rev. Sharpton, thank you for leading this effort. Might I add that not only do we need to call attention to these issues, but we also need to offer up plans to correct these injustices. This country doesn't just need to go back to a pre-financial crash state. We need to do better. We need improved labor laws that promotes unionization, provides for better pay & a liveable minimum wage, mandatory paid leave, etc. We're so behind as a leading nation when it comes to appreciating the worker and taking care of our middle class. I think a good start is the Rebuild the Dream Movement's "Contract for the American Dream".
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Ann Cornell
12:13 AM on 12/02/2011
Rev Sharpton, I hate to rain on your parade but most blacks fight to win their cases without the aid of voices such as yours. We blacks have been fighting since day 1 for fair justice an example is I for one have tried to gain the help of you and your camp in helping me provide for myself . As I once did before my on the job injury but again no attention was provided from you. I hope you are aware of the many black females who fight for what we believe in. But like usual if we have no support who's going to listen to our life stories? for 6+yrs I have fought for my benefits from workers comp which has left me handicap due to 3 disc that presses on my S1-L5 twenty-four/seven. therefore if we had support with certain issues we blacks wouldn't be as your headline states so stop preaching and reach out to more of your sisters and brothers of the rainbow then you can see how Our Wealth would grow.
11:01 AM on 12/01/2011
Idiotic Sharpton & friend's reasoning lacks:"the problem is Barack Obama himself".They wont put blame where blame really lies today.Obama never had intentions of being part of the solution in prospering the United States.Otherwise he would have cut Foreign Aid immediately, closing the borders, adjusting pay of government workers, never hiring more Govt workers; then diminishing over grown Departments of Education Interior Energy & several other useless Depts & programs.CUT the Fat off the Pig called Government http://www.wlbt.com/story/15885287/republican-candidate-for-president-announces-bid-in-jackson Obama would not have spent MILLIONS of dollars on Libya & now Uganda WITHOUT going through Congress' dollar approval. He would have seen that more regulations would hamper growth for small companies; the backbone of America. He would not have allowed Americans to be crippled with extended Unemployment benefits.But it is not in Mr. Obama's basic make up & philosophy to work.Let's not get his intention wrong,for he will work at his Campaigning on Taxpayer money, to stay in the office he feels & gets self aggrandizement from. When the most prosperous Nation, the USA awakens to realize that the only logical 2012 Candidate, Samm Tittle a successful Businesswoman, truly it's "Humble Servant" stands on the road to prosperity & posterity, hand in hand with all American citizens; by the Grace of God we the USA have a fighting chance to regain our self worth. "If you are looking for a hand; look to the end of your arm".(Samm Tittle)
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Count of Anjou
Fiscal Conservative & Taoist
07:42 AM on 12/01/2011
Herman Cain was right when he said that you have no one to blame but yourself for your financial status.
05:00 PM on 11/30/2011
The two things that hurt us are government and immigration. 1) government needs to put caps on taxes, housing, also caps on usery laws in every state and corperate payouts. Government use to be for the people, now we have career liers who only care for votes and making money not for the people anymore. 2) immigration legal and illegal needs to stop we have been out sourced black and white through cheap labor which degernerated the middle class and in return only rich and poor were created.
03:22 PM on 11/30/2011
First of all, there are no "oppressed groups" as you mention. The government pays far more than it should in wages and benefits. We were told that in the new global economy, the dirty, polluting, low-skill jobs would be performed by the emerging third world countries and we would shift to clean, white-collar highly-skilled jobs. Not as many of those good jobs were created and we lost all those manufacturing jobs that provided a lot jobs and were not all low-skill jobs. The big problem with this shift is that our money goes overseas to buy consumer goods. (This only preserves jobs for retailers, warehouse workers and sales clerks) Then we have to borrow our money back from China with interest instead of our money staying at home with US companies. We need to cut back on consumption of foreign goods, and find ways to get manufacturing back such as outlawing unions and/or giving special tax incentives. As for public employees, we can't continue to have a protected class of workers that are being overpaid with tax payer dollars. For capitalism to work wages must be able to rise and fall. In a market economy, abundant labor drives labor costs down because it's easy to find employees. To increase demand for workers, we need 1) for the boomers to retire, 2) stop illegal immigration, and 3)suspend legal immigration.
01:40 PM on 11/30/2011
Those civil jobs for the cities, school districts and counties are now being set aside and reserved. Especially here in Texas the obstacle that most run into is the claim that you might be qualified but not bilingual, "must be bilingual," is posted through out jobs. Postal jobs were being sought out do to the salary, union and the benefits. The obstacle in this day is being underpaid...would you rather be under paid or be unemployed? So, we as a people go back to the day and time when I was a kid and remember my grandfather having 2 and 3 jobs to take care of a family and keep a roof over the head. Creating jobs is one element but giving the equal opportunity and fair wages is a whole other battle.
12:34 PM on 11/30/2011
Why are Blacks, who make up 12.5% of our population, holding 25% of postal jobs?
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Robert SF
03:25 PM on 11/30/2011
Why do they hold 0.03% of the executive level jobs?
09:13 PM on 11/30/2011
Lack of education?
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FLECKENSTEIN44
Pointing out the hypocrisy of the Left and Right
06:14 PM on 12/03/2011
go to a public school and see why. their usualy in the back of the class goofing off.
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ifolkinrock
Passive Aggressive Progressive Activist
05:43 PM on 11/30/2011
Because they have a much more rigid system to combat discrimination than your local construction company. Another question: why does a majority of wealthy white males report that their first job was with a company owned by or employing their father?
09:16 PM on 11/30/2011
So hiring them in disproportionate numbers is "Combating discrimination?" I call it a quota system and would suspect that this is one reason why the Post Office is losing money and customers while FexEx and UPS is doing fine. Hiring by quota instead of qualifications is always a guarenteed way towards failure.
BTW, you made up the statement about wealthy white males and their first job.
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rysagr
whip me beat me just don't bore me to death
12:27 PM on 11/30/2011
how great is this lol
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12:18 PM on 11/30/2011
The middle class is shrinking. Many of these jobs are being exported. And the existence of foreign competition is being used to downgrade many other jobs, which were once sufficient to place people & families in the middle class. We're turning this country into a third world society of the wealthy; a much smaller group of artisans, small biz ownere (previously called tradesmen), and technicians; and the mass of poor. This is the major trend of our domestic existence. Very good catch, Al.

You're right on the money. Our society doesn't need to let this occur. Societies can choose ti dstribute wealth more evenly and be more egalitarian. Instead, America is choosing to become a police state for the wealthy. Very sad situation.
11:44 AM on 11/30/2011
Not sure Al is seeing the big picture...American as a whole has nothing to do with civil service layoff's...its their government [elected officials] that decided their fate. If a city can't pay it's bills/salaries what are they to do...ask the government for a bailout?