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Thread: A Local Event- "Such an adoring crowd"

  1. #1

    A Local Event- "Such an adoring crowd"

    Youth bureau bash draws 1,100 downtown to hear Cory Booker, Samite
    By Luke Z. Fenchel • Correspondent • January 30, 2009

    Despite chilly weather and icy roads that left schools empty, Mayor Cory Booker of Newark, N.J., and Ugandan musician Samite received a warm reception Wednesday at The State Theatre for the 60th Anniversary Celebration of The Ithaca Youth Bureau.

    An audience of about 1,100 packed the State, and Booker was enthusiastically introduced by Mayor Carolyn Peterson to a crowd that brought together public officials including Assemblywoman Barbara Lifton, D-125th Dist., Tompkins County Legislature Chair Michael Koplinka-Loehr and members of Ithaca Common Council.

    Though the theme for the anniversary was "Bridging Racial and Cultural Divide: The Role that Youth Play," Booker didn't spend as much time speaking about young people as he seemed to speak directly to them.

    "The vision, the moral imagination of our human family is so great," Booker said. "While campaigning for Barack Obama, I saw every room full of youth rallying for social change."

    Booker, 37, has spearheaded a revival in a city of 300,000 that for 40 years has suffered the blight that plagues so many urban centers across the United States. His speech elicited such enthusiasm from both the young and old in Ithaca that the fact that he is the leader of another city in another state seemed moot.

    "It's really refreshing to see a politician care about his constituency," Cornell University senior Tiffany Jones said after meeting Booker during the intermission between Samite's performance and the mayor's speech. "I'm really impressed with black politicians like Obama and Cory Booker, and the change in politics across the nation."

    "I had seen him on the Oprah Winfrey show a few years back," added Tia Hicks, a sophomore at Cornell. "But in person he's a really cool guy, a relatable guy that sets a standard for other politicians."

    Jones and Hicks were among the throngs who approached Booker during the intermission to thank him for his service and wish him well. The mayor had slipped into the packed theater after Samite began performing an hour-long set that featured some fiery breakdancing from an Ithaca High School trio called Greatest Common Factor.

    Ray Henniger, 16, of Trumansburg, got his ticket as a Christmas gift from his mother.

    "I had heard about (Booker) from the news. But seeing him in person was awesome," he said. "Besides his message, he was just a fantastic public speaker and seemed really grounded for a politician."

    "I feel like his message is very spiritual and resonates beyond politics and what we generally talk about in America," said Jhakeem Haltom, a Youth Bureau employee and the front man of the Ithaca band Thousands of One. "He draws at the heartstrings of an apathetic youth. Youth is inundated by consumerism, and what he's doing is speaking through all of that static, all of that noise."

    Though was difficult to find a single detractor in such an adoring crowd, the religious overtones did disappoint one attendee.

    "I think he is steeped in religiosity that is disappointing and detrimental from a social justice standpoint," Michael Bryant said.

    Most of the crowd was blown away by the mayor's ability to speak to people of all ages.

    "I was most impressed with his ability as a speaker to meet the needs of both our community's youth and adults," said Youth Bureau Advisory Board Chairperson Stell Whitehead. "So often when speakers are selected, they are much more adult-oriented. Mayor Booker was just so much fun!"

    http://www.theithacajournal.com/arti...901300326/1002

    Of course I said much more than that but that is all the paper of record in LiberalLand would place in their squishy pages.

    And what you may ask are Mr. Booker's (who bragged about how many various religious texts he kept at his night table and road into town on a corporate jet- seems the angels could've flown the bastard in) "25 ACCOMPLISHMENTS IN 25 MONTHS"?

    Here are numbers 1-2-3:

    1- Public Safety

    Since taking office, the City has graduated 4 classes of police officers, putting an additional 159 officers on the streets, with another class of 66 officers scheduled to graduate in December 2008.
    Most significantly, Mayor Booker and the Municipal Council have been committed to hiring more residents as police officers. In addition, since taking office on July 1, 2006, the Booker Administration has succeeded in redeploying over 140 more officers onto Newark streets. Originally assigned to administrative duties, these officers were moved into patrol duty to increase the number of officers in our communities, with civilians assuming clerical positions and some traffic enforcement responsibilities. The Booker Administration is also responsible for the formation of a Gang & Narcotics Bureau as well as the Fugitive Apprehension Team, which has led to the apprehension of over 2,700 fugitives (visit www.npdmostwanted.com to see Newark’s Most Wanted). In addition, a Quality of Life Enforcement Strategy has been implemented to address quality of life violations through the issuance of summonses in lieu of arrest.
    For more information on how to become a Newark Police Officer, please call (973)733-6030 or log onto www.newarkpd.org

    2- Using Technology To Fight Crime

    The Booker Administration and Municipal Council have also made significant investments in police technology. The City has dramatically increased the computing power of the Newark Police Department and incorporated a range of sophisticated equipment to combat narcotics, gangs and other types of criminality. Most recently, in a new public-private partnership, it launched New Jersey’s largest wireless network which is hosting 109 cameras to protect our City. The Newark Police Department is fast becoming among the most technologically-advanced police departments in the State.

    3- The Newark Police Foundation

    The City of Newark, together with committed members of the Newark philanthropic community, launched theNewark Police Foundation (NPF). Mayor Booker and theNPF raised private dollars which are used to purchase cutting edge technology for the Newark Police Department. More importantly, NPF is funding the new Newark tip lines, which allow residents to anonymously call two hotlines (1-877-NWK-TIPS and 1-877-NWK-GUNS) and report crime or information about a person carrying a gun. If a gun is recovered or an arrest is made, residents receive a cash reward of $1,000 for a gun recovery and arrest, and up to $2,000 for other types of arrests.
    For more information about the Newark Police Foundation or anonymous tip lines, please contact Lt. Adolph Perez at (973) 733-6008 or www.newarkpolicefoundation.org.

    Read the rest here:
    http://www.ci.newark.nj.us/userimage...plishments.pdf
    "It is not the consciousness of men that determines their existence, but their social existence that determines their consciousness."

    -Karl Marx's 1859 Preface to the Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy

  2. #2

    Re: A Local Event- "Such an adoring crowd"

    Cory Booker:

    The White Right's Man in Newark

    by BC Publishers Glen Ford and Peter Gamble

    Black Commentator

    4/27/06



    Cory Booker is back – like a recurring disease. The former one-term city councilman whose wholly unproductive career has been artificially sustained by Black America’s worst enemies has amassed bundles of rightwing cash for his second assault on Newark city hall. Booker’s stealth mission on behalf of the far-right Bradley and Walton Family (Wal-Mart) Foundations, under the tutelage of the hyper-racist Manhattan Institute, once again threatens to provide the Right with a long-coveted showcase for privatization and capitalism in-the-raw in urban America.

    Booker is a unique danger to African American interests, well beyond the boundaries of New Jersey’s largest city. As in the Verizon television commercial in which a vast “network” is arrayed behind the actor playing the cell phone service subscriber, Booker is tightly wired into the interlocking political networks of the Right. He is the darling and point man for the corporate campaign to create a cadre of “New Black Leaders” who will provide “authenticity” to reactionary social policies hatched by the think tank servants of the super-rich.

    May 9 is no ordinary Election Day – and it is anything but a local affair.

    Indeed, the upscale suburb-bred, Yale and Stanford educated lawyer may be the purest specimen of the Black Trojan Horse Democrat yet foisted on the African American public by the likes of the Manhattan Institute – the outfit that nurtured Charles Murray, author of The Bell Curve, the infamous blood-libel book that attempted to prove Blacks are intellectually inferior to whites – and at whose “power luncheon” Booker made his national debut, in 2000.

    The 36-year-old Booker is the Right’s Young Black Frankenstein, powered, as in his first mayoral run in 2002, by constant infusions of corporate cash and free media. Or, as his current opponent State Senator and Newark Deputy Mayor Ron Rice puts it, Booker is the “Six Million Dollar Man” – a reference to his campaign war chest, a fantastic sum for a mayor’s race in a city of just 275,000, and far exceeding the corporate largess showered on the upstart candidate four years ago. The $6 million figure is also by now out of date.

    Sen. Rice’s underfunded organization finds it difficult to even keep track of Booker’s capital accumulation. Rice’s last campaign ad put Booker’s contributions at $4.1 million – still far exceeding declared contributions in the 2002 race, when Booker significantly outspent but still lost to incumbent Sharpe James. In both campaigns, Booker’s large contributors’ hailed from across the nation, and their names looked nothing like a Newark telephone book. That’s the rightwing network’s fine-tuned money machine in motion.

    Sen. Rice – and the city of Newark, itself – is like an Indian surrounded by cowboys summoned from all points of the map, eager to plant their alien flag. Rice is further disadvantaged by the inexplicable behavior of Mayor Sharpe James, who waited until March 27 to announce that he would not seek a sixth term, leaving Rice just a little over six weeks to stop Booker’s Right-financed juggernaut.

    A Pact With the Devil

    The Black Commentator is proud of the role we played in exposing Cory Booker’s true political and financial backers, in 2002. The Cover Story of our inaugural issue, “Fruit of the Poisoned Tree,” April 5, 2002, was the first published revelation anywhere of Booker's political genesis in the bowels of Milwaukee’s Bradley Foundation – George Bush’s favorite foundation, the outfit that birthed a fully financed Black school voucher “movement” out of thin air and hard cash. As an original board member of the Bradley-created (and now Bush-financed) Black Alliance for Educational Options, and a co-founder of the Newark voucher outfit Excellent Education for Everyone (E-3), Booker worked his way ever deeper into the Right labyrinth of mega-money, media manipulation, and raw corporate power.

    So enthused with Booker was the Right in 2002, one of their most esteemed members let the cat out of the bag. Syndicated columnist George F. Will, whose politics would correctly be called fascist in any part of Europe, traveled to Newark to observe the campaign up close and gushed like a schoolgirl at Booker’s rightwing credentials:


    "Booker's plans for Newark's renaissance," Will's March 17 [2002] column informs us, "are drawn from thinkers at the Democratic Leadership Council and the Manhattan Institute think tank, and from the experiences of others such as Stephen Goldsmith, former Republican mayor of Indianapolis, a pioneer of privatization and faith-based delivery of some government services, and John Norquist, current Democratic mayor of Milwaukee, which has one of the nation's most successful school-choice programs."

    – from BC “Fruit of the Poisoned Tree,” April 5, 2002.

    Despite his narrow loss to Mayor James, Booker’s rich rightwing patrons were pleased; they had come within reach of their goal to capture a large, majority Black city in the shadow of New York, the nation’s media and financial capital. Through their sophisticated propaganda network – euphemistically called public relations or public information offices – the Right network kept Booker’s name in the media during the four years in which he held no public office. With eerie uniformity of content and style, articles and personality profiles regularly appeared in various media grouping Booker with luminaries like Barack Obama and Rep. Harold Ford, Jr., the “New Black Leaders.” Yet the totality of Booker’s public life experience amounted to only four years as a city councilman who produced no meaningful legislation.

    In November 2004, the out-of-office Booker remained a corporate media star. An article in the influential Washington Monthly spent almost as much time on Booker as its purported subject, Barack Obama. Titled “The Great Black Hope,” the piece began with Cory Booker’s name (“Cory Booker was feeling good… .”) and catalogued the media’s central role in the 2002 campaign:

    A fever was building. Time profiled Booker; “CBS Evening News” did, too. Though Booker was still only a councilman in America's 63rd largest city, Democratic fundraisers and operatives were also talking about a future White House bid; The New York Times said he was “regularly referred to as someone who will end up the first black President of the United States.”

    Of course, the Washington Monthly was itself contributing to the media “fever” over Booker.

    Booker was defeated because, in the last weeks of the race, Mayor James finally found ways to express what BC had been saying all along: that Booker is a wholly-owned property of the Right, a walking, breathing political lie who masquerades as an urban reformer while serving masters in corporate suites; a total cynic who relies on his youth to promise a fresh breeze in African American politics, but is in reality in league with Black folks’ oldest and most implacable foes.

    The corporate media were alerted to Booker’s connections. Just two-and-half weeks after BC began operations, the New York Times quoted Co-Publisher Glen Ford’s indictment of the candidate in a front page profile of Booker, April 24, 2002:

    [Ford] says Mr. Booker is allied with conservatives seeking to dismantle public education, destroy affirmative action and gain an urban foothold for their views. He points to a speech Mr. Booker gave to the conservative Manhattan Institute two years ago and a recent column by conservative writer George F. Will that ridiculed Mr. James an

    d lionized Mr. Booker. “He’s totally cynical, careerist and mercenary,” Mr. Ford said. “They’re backing him so they can claim a black elected official from a black city.”

    It’s the same game, this time around, with only the slightest alterations. Although the New York Times quoted Glen Ford in 2002, the paper never brought its reportorial powers to bear on the specific connections revealed in BC’s investigative work. The rest of the corporate media – print, TV and radio – pretended that BC’s and the Mayor’s charges were silly or, in most instances, ignored them altogether.

    But the people of Newark got the word, despite most of the media’s performance as extensions of Booker’s campaign. Sen. Ron Rice is fighting furiously to resist Booker’s anointment, on May 9 – to ward off a tragedy of enormous national as well as local proportions for the Black polity. Rice has smoked Booker out on his support for private school vouchers – the Right’s main wedge issue to woo Black America – finally catching the attention of the New York Times, April 27:

    In a recent interview, Mr. Rice called Mr. Booker a proxy for "ultra-white, ultra-conservative" outsiders seeking to privatize the schools in a Democratic city that is more than 80 percent African-American and Hispanic. He charged that Mr. Booker was seeking to turn Newark into another Milwaukee, where a voucher program has been in place since 1990, with mixed results in terms of student achievement…

    Booker tried to wiggle, as usual, but he was caught. “My determination is to reform the public school system, but I will never oppose programs that help children," Mr. Booker said in a recent interview in his 21st-story law office downtown. "And if it doesn't hurt my main goal, my principal goal of empowering public schools, I support that."

    Booker’s benefactors, the Walton Family and Bradley Foundations and the rest of the rightwing constellation in which he travels, are unalterably committed to wholesale privatization of education and everything else in the public sector they can lay their hands on. That’s what Booker doesn’t want the Black public to know.

    It’s hard to fight the white ruling class, even on ghetto turf – especially when it puts on blackface. But we have entered a new and perilous era. Cory Booker personifies the danger: the Black Trojan Horse, more likely a nominal Democrat than a Republican, to better subvert from within the Historical Black Consensus that has made African Americans the soul and backbone of progressivism in the United States.

    It is true that Booker is part of a new breed – a crop of stealthy Black political assassins in the service of rich gangsters. The hit on Black Newark is scheduled for May 9. Everyplace else, is next.

    http://civillibertarian.blogspot.com...ry-booker.html
    "It is not the consciousness of men that determines their existence, but their social existence that determines their consciousness."

    -Karl Marx's 1859 Preface to the Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy

  3. #3

    Who is Cory Booker?



    Issue Number 1 - April 5, 2002

    FRUIT OF THE POISONED TREE

    The Hard Right's Plan to Capture Newark NJ

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    "Vouchers are a pernicious, steal-from-the-poor-and-give-to-the-rich scheme. They take money from our public school students, give it instead to private schools, and abandon many of our children in the process" - NAACP executive director Kweisi Mfume

    "The privatization of schooling would produce a new, highly active and profitable industry." - Milton Friedman

    The billionaires who fund the American Hard Right are salivating over the prospect of seizing control of City Hall in Newark,New Jersey, May 14. They have found their champion: Cory Booker, Black mayoral candidate from the city's Central Ward, a cynical pretender who attempts to position himself as the common people's defender while locked in the deep embrace of institutes and foundations that bankroll virtually every assault on social and economic justice in America. His benefactors sponsor anti-affirmative action referendums, press for near-total disinvestment in the public sector, savage what's left of the social safety net, and are attempting to turn public education over to private suppliers. Along the way, Booker's soul mates are busy ravaging the environment and trampling civil liberties everywhere they find them.

    Booker owes his growing national prominence to this crowd, whose influence has provided the 32 year-old with a campaign war chest rivaling that of four-term incumbent Sharpe James. Never has a Newark election been more closely watched by the super-rich and their political network. Booker is their Black Hope for electoral legitimacy. Although only a first-term councilman from a medium-sized city, the former Rhodes scholar is already at the top of the Right's list of New Black Leaders.

    Republicans have a lot riding on Booker, a nominal Democrat. Despite over two decades of financing inept and unattractive Black hired guns, most of them hustlers from academia, ultra-conservatives have failed to place an African American of their own at the controls of a mostly non-white city. The practical and propaganda effects of such a coup would be dramatic - and possibly devastating to the Democratic Party, nationally.

    Booker's anointment as a prince in the Hard Right pantheon is based on his support of public vouchers for private schools. This "movement," the creation of right-wing paymasters like the Bradley Foundation, of Milwaukee, and the Walton Family Foundation, Bentonville, Arkansas, hopes to drive a wedge between urban Blacks and the teachers unions. Without amicable relations between these two Democratic pillars, the Party, as we know it, is finished.

    Booker is the Right's eager ally. He is adored in the corridors of the Heritage, Hoover, Manhattan and American Enterprise Institutes, think tanks that handle publicity and publication for the Bradley and Walton moneybags.

    This opportunistic young man is comfortable in the company of people whose political ancestors hosed down and blew up Black children in Birmingham, but now express deep compassion for these same children.

    The Stealth Candidate

    Booker announced his candidacy for mayor under a bright winter sky, his podium framed by the twin towers of Brick House, a troubled, low and moderate income development where he once used his Yale Law School skills in defense of tenants rights. A local minister with impeccable progressive credentials asked God to "bless Cory and Team Booker.... This city needs a renewal, for our people are perishing."

    Booker's headquarters sits on a hill overlooking downtown. Pointing toward the revitalized business district, the fashionably bald, former Stanford football player called for "a Renaissance for the rest of us." It was great grassroots, populist rhetoric, perfectly pitched for an insurgent campaign in an overwhelmingly Black and Hispanic city. Booker made a show of running against downtown business interests, attempting to paint his 65 year-old opponent as a tool of the rich. Few in the crowd were aware that Booker's own allegiances are far more dangerous - and vastly richer.

    The word "vouchers" failed to form on Booker's lips; that might have set off alarms. People of color tend to get nervous when they hear cheering from the box seats of the Right. Newark is the largest urban center in a state where even much of the GOP was repelled by Republican former Jersey City Mayor Bret Schundler's 2001 gubernatorial campaign, built largely around the issue of school vouchers.

    But Schundler and Booker are tight, traveling in the same far-right direction - where the money is. Together with wealthy Republican businessman Peter Denton, the trio founded Excellent Education for Everyone, a local non-profit pocket with which to stuff foundation and corporate contributions.

    Booker's pal Schundler knows his way around that kind of money. He used a big chunk of a $500,000 Walton Foundation gift to his Scholarships for Jersey City Children non-profit to pay for advertisements featuring himself, during an election campaign. Walton's executives didn't object. Apparently, what's good for their candidate is good for the kids.

    After establishing their non-profit, the two Republicans and Booker went on a pilgrimage to Milwaukee, Mecca for school "choice" money, where the Bradley Foundation was concocting its newest invention: the Black Alliance for Educational Options (BAEO).

    Naturally, Schundler couldn't join. But Booker became a member of the board.

    The Friends of Cory

    It is the BAEO and its patrons that have propelled a one-term councilman into places of honor at the tables of the right-wing rich.

    The Free Congress Foundation proclaimed Booker among the nation's top four "New Black Leaders," along with J.C. Watts, the Republican congressman from Oklahoma; Deborah Walden-Ford, a professional Right operative who also sits on the BAEO board; and Star Parker, a Republican former welfare mother turned ultra-conservative speaking circuit maven. The Free Congress Foundation gets a fat check every year from Bradley - $425,000 in 2000.

    Parker sits on the board of Black America's Political Action Committee (BAMPAC), the political toy of the ridiculous Alan Keyes, 1996 GOP presidential candidate and MSNBC talk-show host. White Republicans get most of BAMPAC's campaign contributions, but Cory Booker certainly qualifies for access to some of Keyes' more than $2 million treasury. Last year, Booker won the first BAMPAC Leader of Tomorrow Award, bestowed on those "under 40 who promote the BAMPAC mission and are seen as rising stars on the political landscape."



    (Another BAMPAC board member, Phyllis Meyers Berry, is president of the Center for New Black Leadership, created out of nothingness with $215,000 from the Olin, Scaife and VCJ Foundations - and Bradley. The reader will discover that following this kind of money is like tracing the vector of a disease; sooner or later, it all leads back to Bradley.)

    Booker's stock soared in the circles of selfish wealth. The Manhattan Institute, home of a repulsive roster of right-wing writers and speakers, and recipient of $250,000 in Bradley money in 2000, invited Booker to one of its power lunches, where he effortlessly dropped Right-speak code words.

    "The old paradigm," he told the troglodytes, "was an entitlement program, in which large big city mayors controlled race-based machines.

    "What that was really about was capturing big entitlements from the state and federal government and divvying them up among their cronies or among the people within their organizations to protect and preserve their organizations. It was about distributing wealth."

    In just two sentences, Booker managed to stimulate the Right's erogenous zones by mentioning three of the phrases they most love to hate: "race-based," "entitlements," and "distributing wealth." This guy is good, very good. He speaks two distinct languages - one to the people he wants to elect him mayor of Newark, the other to the financially endowed, whose mission in life is to resist redistribution of wealth to race-based groups that think the poor could use some entitlements.

    Of course, Black collaborators are entitled to all the money necessary to create an alternative political movement out of whole cloth.

    The Money Machine

    Bradley Foundation president Michael Joyce is the Wizard behind the curtain in Milwaukee. Joyce's racial and educational views can be gauged by his praise for the author of "The Bell Curve," the infamous, American Enterprise Institute-backed book disparaging Black intelligence. "Charles Murray, in my opinion," said Joyce, "is one of the foremost social thinkers in this country." Bradley gave the AEI, one of its favorite think tanks, $825,000 in 2000. Charles Murray personally amassed about $1 million dollars from Bradley during his tenure with AEI.

    The Black Alliance for Educational Options has no life independent of Bradley and its wicked sister, the Walton Foundation (Bret Schundler's benefactor). In a December 2001, report, the liberal People for the American Way (PFAW) asked, rhetorically, is the BAEO a "Community Voice or Captive of the Right?" Transparency in Media, which keeps track of right-wing foundations, describes the BAEO as "a project" of the Bradley Foundation.

    We at The Black Commentator have concluded that Cory Booker's organization is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Bradley and Walton, who play tag team coughing up the dollars that keep its board members on the hustle.

    The BAEO board is a motley crew, brought together by Dr. Howard Fuller, the Black former Milwaukee Superintendent of Schools who resigned the post in 1995, crushed when teachers union-backed candidates captured four of five seats on the school board, frustrating his privatization plans. He's been seeking revenge, ever since, armed with Bradley's checks.

    By PFAW's estimate, Fuller's BAEO has received $1.7 million from Bradley since June of 2001, on top of the expense of birthing the phony group. The Walton Foundation came up with $900,000 in seed money.

    Booker and his New Jersey GOP buddies, Schundler and Denton, journeyed to Milwaukee to attend a BAEO "symposium" subsidized by $125,000 from Bradley and hosted by Fuller's Bradley-funded Institute for the Transformation of Learning.

    The Institute is headquartered at Marquette University, a much-favored campus of both Bradley and Walton. Fuller's staff provides training and indoctrination for private and charter school administrators. Its syllabus is blatantly political. Workshops, run by BAEO board member Zakiya Courtney, teach "the purposes and recent development in charter schools, choice schools and the reform movement." Classes are designed for school choice activists, who are taught how to "network with one another and various supporters of school reform."

    Remember, the word "reform" means "privatization" in Right-speak.

    "Choice schools," in Fuller's lexicon, are private schools.

    Ronald Reagan's favorite economist, Milton Friedman, instructed his small but very loud foundation to contribute $30,000 to the symposium. Then, Friedman's media folks got busy shaping the BAEO's public face, spending an additional $230,000 fine-tuning pro-voucher ads for a campaign that the Christian Science Monitor valued at $3 million.

    The TV, radio and print blitz in selected markets around the country featured Black and brown children, and included ads in 12 minority publications. BAEO board members fanned out across the country, attempting to make good on chairman Fuller's vow to "change the face" of the school voucher "movement."

    But the sheer size and cost of the propaganda frenzy belied its origins. This was no Black, grassroots movement, but an extravagantly funded, right-wing orchestration.

    Bradley's Black Minions

    Bradley president Michael Joyce, fervent fan of "The Bell Curve" and paymaster for Howard Fuller, thoroughly controls the 29-member BAEO board, through direct employment, generous grantsmanship, or the promise of entrepreneurial opportunity. Here are some of Cory Booker's colleagues:

    * Ms. Virginia Walden-Ford, of Washington, DC., is, as previously mentioned, a darling of the Right. She shared top billing, along with Booker, among the Free Congress Foundation's nominees for New Black Leadership. Walden-Ford is executive director of D.C. Parents for School Choice, which received $75,000 from Bradley in 1999 - 2000.

    She is also an operative of the National Center for Neighborhood Enterprise (NCNE), the notorious Black GOP invention headed by Robert Woodson. The NCNE has been funded to the tune of $6 million by far-right foundations since 1995, including $450,000 in "ongoing," yearly support from Bradley and more than $100,000 from Bradley's Milwaukee neighbor, the ultra-conservative Helen Bader Foundation. Woodson spent much of his career as a Bradley Fellow with the American Enterprise Institute, a colleague of Charles "Bell Curve" Murray.
    * Former Queens congressman Floyd Flake, the only member of the Congressional Black Caucus to support school vouchers while in office, is the BAEO's most successful practitioner of the art of turning public issues to private gain. He appears to have retired from electoral politics in order to further his financial fortunes among the money men of the Right. Flake is president of Edison Schools, a for-profit corporation that hovers like a vulture over all of the nation's troubled schools, hoping that systems are declared failures so that Edison might pluck out a

    public fee to "save" them.

    Flake employs Howard Fuller's wife, Edison Teachers College president and BAEO board member Deborah McGriff, who is also a former Milwaukee Schools Superintendent. (Milwaukee seems to have become a Bradley Roach Motel for corruptible African Americans; once you go near the foundation's lair, you don't come out.)

    As befits his senior status, Flake wears many right-wing hats, among them, "commissioner" on the Citizens Initiative on Race and Ethnicity, a joint venture of the Manhattan and Hoover Institutes, recipients of $250,000 and $200,000 from Bradley, respectively, in 2000.

    Flake's fellow commissioners share the same benefactor. They include Hoover's Shelby Steele, one of the first members of the Bradley-funded Center for New Black Leadership; previously mentioned Bradley apparatchik Robert Woodson; and Ward Connerly, whose American Civil Rights Institute got $150,000 from Bradley, in 2000, part of Connerly's ongoing reward for successfully destroying affirmative action in California state government and higher education.

    A white commissioner on Flake's panel, Clint Bolick, is chief litigator for the Justice Institute, the nation's most aggressive anti-affirmative action law firm. The Institute racked up $180,000 in Bradley grants in 2000. Bolick's legal wrecking crew effectively eliminated affirmative action in the Texas state university system, and is handling Bradley-affiliated school voucher cases in Michigan, Wisconsin, and Florida.
    * Armstrong Williams, Washington, DC. The radio and TV commentator, who is among the most obnoxious public personalities alive, is the nation's premier Black Republican right-winger for hire. His Renaissance Network television show is even titled, "The Right Side." Williams worked for Clarence Thomas at the EEOC, and for South Carolina Senator Strom Thurmond. His public relations company, the Graham Williams Group, features links to the entire galaxy of right-wing "public policy organizations," including the American Enterprise Institute, the Hoover Institute, the Hudson Institute ($250,000 from Bradley in 2000), and the Free Congress Foundation. And, of course, Bradley.
    * Kenneth Blackwell, Republican Secretary of State, Ohio. He's on the boards of every Right-funded "school choice," "youth," or "pro-family" group imaginable. Blackwell acted as the front-line African American TV mouth for Bush during the Florida fiasco.
    * Dr. Rufus Ellis, Tallahassee, Florida. He's one of Governor Jeb Bush's Black operatives, a salaried official of the state's weirdly hybrid Office of Public School Choice and Charter Schools, essentially a patronage unit for political propaganda.
    * Mr. T. Willard Fair, Miami. A buddy of Governor Jeb Bush, Fair co-founded the Liberty Charter School with the younger brother. As executive director, Fair placed his Greater Miami Urban League chapter in the uniquely shameful position of being represented by the above-mentioned, Bradley-funded Institute for Justice.
    * Jacqueline Cissell's salary as community relations director at the Greater Educational Opportunities Foundation is largely paid for with Bradley and Friedman Foundation money.

    There are many more examples of the slavish and mercenary nature of Cory Booker's school voucher associations. Much of the rest of the BAEO board is in the business of education, eager to expand the private school market in hope of selling more of their products. All are hopelessly entangled in an interlocking network of Right-funded organizations, with the Bradley and Walton Foundations at the center of the web.

    Clearly, Booker is wallowing in the funkiest corner of the political barnyard.

    According to People for the American Way, the Bradley Foundation distributed $365 million to various right-wing organizations between 1985 and 1999. In the process, the foundation and its collaborating institutions created the appearance of popular movements where none had previously existed, distorting the American political dialogue beyond measure.

    Love-Struck Racists

    Ironically, the reflexive racism that inhibited The Right from cultivating Black proxies in the past, has been replaced by a kind of born-again enthusiasm to recruit non-whites. Ultra-conservatives have discovered that the depth of African American need, when combined with opportunism in Black political ranks, can bear strange fruit. Cory Booker's candidacy for mayor of Newark is just such fruit of a poisoned tree.

    Teachers organizations point out that primary and secondary public education in the U.S. generates billions in annual expenditures, plenty of public wealth for the Milton Friedmans of the world to covet. But that doesn't tell the whole story.

    It doesn't explain why the Hard Right is courting Cory Booker, an otherwise minor African American politician, so breathlessly that it risks unmasking and embarrassing their own candidate, their Black Hope.

    Perhaps it is because they have no other choice. The nation's big cities are largely Black and brown and, without legitimacy among African American voters, The Right will get nowhere in its bid to break what's left of the Democratic Party's urban coalition. It took a long time, and the racists were forced to swallow hard, but they are now prepared to seriously bankroll Blacks who are willing to dance to their tune. It's Open Admissions at the Billionaires Club!

    If Booker succeeds in becoming mayor of New Jersey's largest city, the historic enemies of African American dignity will have won a major test of the power of money to confuse and exploit a proud people. Blacks are the backbone of progressive electoral politics in the U.S. Unlike other ethnic groups, we have never wavered in our defense of the principles of human equality, ideals that are incompatible with the raw rule of wealth.

    The Hard Right, so adept at deploying its almost bottomless finances to create "instant" organizations, thinks that it can taste a dark victory, in Newark and beyond. But it's a simple matter to expose and derail them.

    Just follow the money. Cory Booker does. His impressive education served only to teach him the quickest route to the houses of the wealthy. Once inside the gate, Booker promptly offered his services. The Young Frankenstein is now plugged in to power, lacking only the national profile that Newark's City Hall would provide - to both the grotesquely wired candidate and the men who pay his utility bills.

    The latest benediction of the Booker campaign comes from columnist George F. Will, the high priest of privatization. Will has been busy for over three decades planting land mines along every step of Black people's march toward equality. His endorsement should represent the kiss of death to Booker's candidacy. Indeed, Will, whose prescription for urban unemployment is that the jobless move somewhere else, came close to giving away the entire Booker game.

    "Booker's plans for Newark's renaissance," Will's March 17 column informs

    us, "are drawn from thinkers at the Democratic Leadership Council and the Manhattan Institute think tank, and from the experiences of others such as Stephen Goldsmith, former Republican mayor of Indianapolis, a pioneer of privatization and faith-based delivery of some government services, and John Norquist, current Democratic mayor of Milwaukee, which has one of the nation's most successful school-choice programs."

    Well, Lordy! George F. Will spoke the truth, for once - kind of. All of Booker's ideas are scripted in the Republican Party and its affiliated think tanks. They also circulate among the right-leaning members of the Democratic Leadership Council, whose roots are in the southern branch of the party.

    We already know who fertilizes these brilliant ideas, designed for the sole purpose of producing a bounteous harvest for the rich.

    George F. Will's beloved Mayor of Milwaukee, John Norquist, sits in the shadow of - could it be? - the Milwaukee-based Bradley Foundation, which has pledged $20 million to create new private schools in Milwaukee over the next ten years, but tossed only $60,000 to the public school system in year 2000. (That's how some of the super-rich show their contempt. For them, it's a cheap, but satisfying, insult.)

    As for Milwaukee running "one of the nation's most successful school-choice programs," there is no evidence that this is the case, other than the fact that Will and other ultra-Rightists keep saying so. Successive studies have shown the program to be ineffective by any rational testing criteria. Moreover, Milwaukee gives ever-escalating payments to religious schools, with little discernable effect than to prop up the private systems at the expense of public education. In 2000, a Milwaukee NAACP and People for the American Way investigation found that "schools are tilting their admissions process to favor selected students such as their parishioners…charging illegal fees to voucher students…and violating students' right to religious freedom by actively discouraging parents from opting their children out of religious activities."

    Most of the schools involved in the Milwaukee program are Catholic.

    Although the overwhelming majority of the students participating in Milwaukee's voucher -"choice" program are minorities, as are 75% of the public students, critics universally view it as a stalking horse to eventually subsidize all private schools, everywhere. In Milwaukee and the country at-large, the vast bulk of private school students are white, from above-average income families. If these schools were subsidized, thus making them more attractive and accessible to the entire universe of voting families, the fate of public education would be sealed. (Teachers unions would also become an endangered species, in the process - the immediate political goal of the Right.)

    Former Congressman Floyd Flake, BAEO Chairman Howard Fuller's wife, Deborah, and the rest of the executives at predatory Edison Schools, Inc., will feast over the ruins, scavenging from coast to coast to "save" systems mortally wounded by - Flake and Fuller and the entire Bradley-Walton pirate crew.

    Cory Booker doesn't share many of these bright ideas with the public while on the stump in Newark. He's busy running against the influence "downtown" business exerts over Mayor Sharpe James - which is, no doubt, considerable. Booker's deals with mega-devils remain largely unknown to the man and woman in the neighborhoods.

    The Prize

    George F. Will gloats that the Booker campaign "has raised $1.5 million, partly through reform-minded supporters in New York financial circles." The venerable word "reform" is among the many progressive terms that have been stolen by the Hard Right. The people Will is really referring to are the same ultra-conservatives who fund the Manhattan, Heritage, Hoover and American Enterprise Institutes, as has been vastly documented. Cory Booker is just another of their projects, albeit an important one.

    The Bradley Foundation rules Milwaukee, but that city's Mayor is white. With Cory Booker in the Mayor's seat in Newark, Bradley's urban model would acquire racial legitimacy, the prize that has so long eluded the wealthy men who can, usually, buy just about anything. Booker is selling them a seat at the Black table, and an opportunity for them to tell the rest of African America, YOU are unrepresentative, out of touch with the Black masses. Look at Cory! He's down with us! Shut up, and watch the private sector work its miracles. Enjoy our largess, as it trickles down.

    Much more than a trickle is flowing to Booker's campaign. "He has enough to finance cable television ads, direct mail and political infantry going door to door telling people that Booker is an African American linked to neither the Klan nor the Elders of Zion," proclaims George F. Will. As one of the Hard Right's most faithful and well-paid propagandists, Will is certainly in a position to know such things.

    Now that you know who is financing Cory Booker's career - something that his neighborhood troops are surely unaware of - shun him. He doesn't really need or want your company, anyway. There's lots of good fixin's at the Big House. The price of admission is as expensive, or cheap, as the value one places on one's people.

    Booker may win in Newark, May 14. But even if he is exposed and defeated, his career is already made. The millionaires of the Hard Right love this guy, their Chosen African American Under Forty. At his age, Cory will be a blight on the political scene even longer than the rest of the Four Cs (colored conservatives counting cash): Condoleezza, Clarence, and Colin.

    Sources that contributed to this commentary:

    Media Transparency, news, research on conservative foundations. Search for BAEO funding. Also, for contributions to Robert Woodson's NCNE, and Center for New Black Leadership.
    http://www.mediatransparency.org

    People for the American Way. Progressive think-tank. Report on Black Alliance for Educational Options.
    http://www.pfaw.org/news/press/2001-12-04.349.html

    Free Congress online, Right-wing think-tank. Search for Cory Booker.
    http://www.freecongress.org

    Cory Booker Speech to Manhattan Institute, Right-wing think-tank. Also, search for Floyd Flake, Ward Connerly, Clint Bolick.
    http://www.manhattan-institute.org/html/cb_25.htm

    Black America's PAC. Award to Cory Booker.
    http://www.bampac.org/

    Black Alliance for Educational Options
    http://www.baeo.org/index.jsp

    http://www.blackcommentator.com/poisoned_tree_pr.html
    "It is not the consciousness of men that determines their existence, but their social existence that determines their consciousness."

    -Karl Marx's 1859 Preface to the Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy

  4. #4

    Re: A Local Event- "Such an adoring crowd"


    From the BAR archives:

    Stop Supporting Every Black Face:
    End the Jim Crow Mentality
    by BAR Executive Editor Glen Ford

    We must finally emerge from the Jim Crow mentality that celebrated every Black grasp for the golden ring, no matter how loathsome the grasper.

    Despite the defeat of the GOPs three Black candidates for statewide office in last weeks elections, Republicans succeeded in achieving their overall goal of garnering a significant share of Black votes in Maryland and Ohio. The Right has learned well an historical lesson: the Black polity can be split by displaying Black faces in political races. Were it not for this years general Democratic electoral wave the GOP would now be celebrating its newfound rainbow coalition and the death of African American political solidarity. By now, the corporate media equally eager to erase Blacks as a distinct political entity would have already written the obituary: Race Is No Longer An Issue.

    In Maryland, Black Lt. Governor Michael Steele took 25 percent of the African American vote in his losing racing for the Senate exceeding the 20 percent Black crossover goals set by Republicans at the beginning of the Bush administration. The infamous Black Ohio Secretary of State, Kenneth Blackwell, whose wholesale disenfranchisement of African American voters gave George Bush a second term in 2004, nevertheless got 20 percent of the Black vote. Only in Pennsylvania, where the former football star Lynn Swann ran for governor under the GOP banner, was the Black Republican vote held to a more historically normal 13 percent.

    The political Right has found the formula to split the Black vote just enough to nullify its unique impact. They have begun to navigate a deep current in historical Black political behavior, having discovered a near-Pavlovian response among some African Americans to the prospect of Black faces in high places, no matter what the content of the candidates character, associations, or policies. It is a response rooted in the long experience of Jim Crow segregation and near-absolute exclusion of Blacks from general civil society, which created an aching hunger for representation of any kind in the halls of power. Our enemys have found the Black Achilles heel.

    The GOP has no intention of recruiting Blacks en mass. It is the White Mans Party, a vehicle to mobilize whites against others mainly Blacks and, more recently, Latino immigrants in the service of a corporate agenda. Mass Black involvement in the Republican Party would defeat the purpose of the mechanism, and drive many whites to some other political formation. However, if historical Black political solidarity around progressive issues and candidates can be fractured, then the GOPs purpose will have been achieved.

    http://www.blackagendareport.com/004...blackface.html

    ==============================================================================================

    African American Michael Steele Takes Over Floundering GOP

    It took six ballots, but former Maryland Lt. Gov. Michael Steele edged out South Carolina GOP Chairman Katon Dawson, 91 votes to 77, to become the new chairman of the Republican National Committee. Steele is the first African American to hold the post.

    Steele's victory also marks a decision by some GOP leaders that to elect a man associated with an all-white country club -- when America just elected a black president, and the GOP itself runs a risk of being branded an all-white club -- was too big a risk to run.

    Steele ran in large part on his ability to rebrand the party and to do battle on cable news. Though he is, in fact, quite conservative for the spectrum of American politics, he wasn't the conservative choice, and his win marks a real defeat for elements of the party's conservative wing.

    For younger Republicans and those seeking a dramatic break from the past, he was the choice, and his win suggests that the party is emerging from the phase of denying that, in the wake of its 2008 rout, it has a problem.

    This was Steele's second attempt at the RNC gig, after a failed campaign in 2006, scuttled in part by Karl Rove, who was rumored to have questioned Steele's competence.

    I suspect most Democrats didn't necessarily have a "favorite" among the RNC contenders, but Steele probably won't strike fear in the hearts of DNC members. We are, after all, talking about a man who got caught hiring homeless people to lie to voters, and nevertheless lost in a landslide.

    Indeed, whenever I see Steele, I immediately think of the editorial the Washington Post ran on his U.S. Senate candidacy in 2006, which described Steele as a man of "no achievement, no record, no evidence and certainly no command of the issues." Noting his four-year tenure as Maryland's lieutenant governor, the Post added, "Steele had at best a marginal impact, even on his handpicked projects."

    While Dems may be pleased with Steele's new position, the Religious Right movement is no doubt frustrated, again. After the James Dobson crowd exerted no influence at all over the Republican presidential nominating fight a year ago, the Religious Right took a stand against Steele, noting his one-time association with the centrist Republican Leadership Council. Their opposition was meaningless.

    As for the racial aspect of this, Florida Republican Chairman Jim Greer noted a few weeks ago, "There certainly is an advantage of a credible message of inclusion if you have a minority as chairman."

    That may be true, but I'm skeptical. The modern Republican Party's problems with race are systemic, and won't be resolved by the race of its national party chairman.

    For that matter, the GOP's structural problems -- its ideas are unpopular, its policies have failed and its agenda is out of sync with the nation's needs -- are so deep, "historical resonance" is largely inconsequential.

    And perhaps most importantly, no one should exaggerate the significance of the RNC chair. A couple of years ago, Bush tapped Florida Sen. Mel Martinez, a Cuban American, as chairman of the RNC. Refresh my memory: did that have any impact whatsoever on outreach to Latino voters? Did it make the party seem more inclusive and diverse?

    I don't think so.

    http://www.alternet.org/blogs/peek/1...oundering_gop/
    Social relationships have their inherent logic; as long as people live in given mutual relationships they will feel, think and act in a given way, and no other. Attempts on the part of public men to combat this logic also would be fruitless; the natural course of things (this logic of social relationships) would reduce all his effort to nought. But if I know in what direction social relations are changing owing to given changes in the social-economic process of production, I also know in what direction social mentality is changing; consequently, I am able to influence it. Influencing social mentality means influencing historical events. Hence, in a certain sense, I can make history, and there is no need for me to wait while "it is being made."

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