Let's see, 8 paragraphs before the real news.....which is good. Soooo predictable
Despite this apparent stability, Morial said, "No one should take that to mean black America has simply stood still in terms of the equality gap. To stand still in today's world is to fall further behind."
Moron.
With the anti-educational stance of modern popular black culture, are these results really surprising?
the black middle class has quadrupled in size, the African-American poverty rate has been cut in half and there are more black doctors, lawyers, business owners and elected officials than ever before.
Strides are being made. Is the change instant? Nope. Nothing worth having ever is. Celebrate the progress being made. Work to continue that progress. That's what needs to be done.
Morial hasn't figured that out yet.
Black conservative ping
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I'm sure living in areas where the tax structure is a hinderance to wealth building is going to be overlooked.
And for that matter Marc Morial presided over New Orleans. If you know anything about New Orleans then you'd know how funny it is to see Marc Morial lecturing people on progress.
Maybe they need to change their mindset. Less of "woe is me I'm a victim" and more of "what can I do to help myself". Education, employment and selfrespect seem to be anathema to many.
Where do Asians stand?
Why don't we see reports measuring Black literacy?
Aha! Because it would put the Blacks in a bad light.
Latest from SF Chronicle is Oakland, CA, has nearly a 50% high school drop out rate!
Is it any surprise there is economic disparity when Blacks do not compete in education?
"No Father" = Poorer Outcomes for Kids
Children in homes without fathers have worse outcomes than do children who live in homes with their married biological mother and father. The literature cited below documents the negative effects of fatherlessness in the areas of Education, Child Abuse and Crime.
Education
_ Fatherless Children are twice as likely to drop out of school. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Survey on Child Health. 1993
_ After taking into account race, socioeconomic status, sex, age, and ability, high school students from single parent households were 1.7 times to more likely to drop out than were their corresponding counterparts living with both biological parents. McNeal, Extracurricular Activities and High School Dropouts Sociology of Education. 1995
_ At least 1/3 of children experiencing parental separation demonstrate significant decline in academic performance persisting at least 3 years. Factors Associated with Academic Achievement in Children Following Parental Separation American Journal of Orthopsychiatry. 1990
_ A study on 1,700 seventh and ninth grade South Carolina students indicated that children whose parents were divorced had lower grades than their peers whose parents stayed together, even after controlling for parental occupation, education, race, and family size. Smith & Ewin A Journal of Marriage and Divorce 23 (1995): 151-164
_ Children who live with both biological parents are nearly 2-4 times less likely than other children to have been expelled or suspended from school. Remez, A Family Planning Perspectives (January/February 1992).
_ In general, the longer the time spent in a single parent family, the greater the reduction in educational attainment . Fitzgerald, Betlar. Educational Attainment of Children From Single Parent Families: Differences by Exposure, Gender and Race 1988
Child Abuse
_ Premarital pregnancy, out-of-wedlock childbearing, and absent fathers are among the most common predictors of Child abuse Selwyn, Hanson & Noble. Social Aspects of the Battered Baby Syndrome. Child Abuse: Commission and Omission. Eds. Cook& Bowles: Toronto: Butterworths, 1980. 217-220
_ The rate of child abuse in single parent households is 27.3 children per 1000, which is nearly twice the rate of child abuse in two parent households (15.5 children per 1,000) America's Children: Key National Indicators of Well-Being. Federal Interagency Forum on Child and Family Statistics. 1997
_ Compared to their peers living with both biological parents, children in single parent homes have:
a 77% greater risk of being physically abused
an 87% greater risk of being harmed by physical neglect
a 165% greater risk of experiencing notable physical neglect
a 74% greater risk of suffering from emotional neglect
an 80% greater risk of suffering serious injury as a result of abuse
overall, a 120% greater risk of being endangered by some type of child abuse
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The third National Incidence Study of Child Abuse and Neglect: Final Report. 1996
Crime
_ The prevalence of delinquency among children from broken homes is 10-15 % higher than among children from intact homes. School Delinquency and School Commitment. 1995
_ Children born out-of-wedlock are 1.7 times more likely to become an offender and 2.1 times more likely to become a chronic offender if male, 10 times more likely to become a chronic juvenile offender if male and born to an unmarried teen mother. Paternal and Maternal Risk Factors for Later Delinquency. 1997
_ In a study of 1,600 juvenile sex offenders:
Only 27.8% were living with both biological parents
26.1% were living with a biological parent & a step-parent
23.1% were living with their mother only
3.2 % were living with their father only
6.3% were living with a parent & their parent's housemate
15.1% were living with neither parent
Trends in a National Sample of Sexually Abusive Youths. 1996
_ A 1988 study found that the proportion of single-parent households in a community predicts its rate of violent crime and burglary, but the community's poverty level does not. Smith & Jargoura Social Structure and Criminal Victimization. Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency (Feb 1988)
_ 60 % of men accused of rape and 72 % accused of murder grew up absent their biological father . Cornwell, Dewey et al. Characteristics of Adolescents charged with Homicide (1987); Davidson. Life without Father (Policy Review 1990)
Back to GCFCF Fatherhood Appreciation Welcome Page
http://www.co.greene.oh.us/fcf/pooreroutcomes.htm
The Effect of the Decline of Marriage.
As this Report shows, this analysis found that the decline of marriage since the 1960s has been a substantial factor behind the current high levels of child poverty. Specifically, if marriage were restored to 1960s levels:
The number of children living in single-parent homes would be cut by nearly 60 percent. The number of children living in married couple families would increase by almost 11.5 million, and the number residing in single-parent homes would be reduced by a corresponding amount. These 11.5 million children represent 16.2 percent of all children.
Among the 11.5 million added children residing in married-couple homes in this scenario, the poverty rate would fall by 80.4 percent. Some 34.2 percent of these children are now poor and live in single-parent homes. If their parents were married to spouses with matching demographic characteristics, only 6.7 percent of these children would remain poor.
Overall, restoring marriage to 1960 levels would remove more than 3 million children from poverty nationwide. The U.S. child poverty rate would fall by nearly a third, from 15.7 percent to 11.2 percent.
The decline in marriage since the inception of the War on Poverty in the 1960s has clearly contributed to child poverty. Overall, our analysis shows that child poverty would be nearly a third lower today if the traditional two-parent family had not deteriorated over the past three decades.
Background
Before the War on Poverty began in the mid-1960s, traditional husband-wife families comprised the vast majority of families with children. Indeed, over 88 percent of all children resided in a married-couple family, according to data from the 1960 decennial Census of Population and Housing.4 By 2000, this demographic statistic had changed significantly: Around 72 percent of all children lived in married-couple families. In four decades, American family structure changed, and more than a tenth of all children shifted from two-parent to single-parent families.
More at: http://www.heritage.org/Research/Family/CDA02-04.cfm
This just in:
"Poor people have less money than rich"....developing...
Not to mention that black home ownership rate is soaring ....
But nevemind the positive, let's focus on the negative shall we?
Blacks are 13% of the population. Of that less than 6% are adult black males.
That 6% accounts for 65% of all violent crime.
One out three black males are either in jail or on parol.
Black females are about 7% of the population as well...and account for 47% of all welfare and 37% of all abortions.
Blacks are involved in 75% of drug related crime.
80% of all black births are out of wedlock.
64% of all black 4th graders cannot read, even after $150 billion invested in "head start" early development programs.
Enough money has been spent since 1965 on black oriented programs and welfare to make EVERY BLACK person in the United States a millionaire several times over. The estimate is close to 5 trillion dollars.
The result of all that taxpayer investment...a race of perpetually disgruntled people who constantly demand more handouts, more programs, less attention to their shortcomings, and special reparations for being related to a slave 200 years ago.
50 bucks if you post this on DU. You wouldn't be able to refresh the page before they banned you. ;<>]
And I'm sure it is all whitey's fault. The 'culture' that is fostered among African Americans can't possibly have anything to do with it.