In his recent blog post, Elliot Millner brought it to my attention that Attorney General Eric Holder is acting as if he's been spending time with Bill Cosby. During a speech at a black church in Queens, N.Y., Holder took a page out of the Barack Obama campaign catalog and chose to win favors with the black middle class by recklessly bashing absentee fathers and returning to the "y'all just need to grow up and be more responsible" argument that allows any politician to explain away a blatant disregard for meaningful public policy. Rather than talking about things that we can do as a society to take our collective foot off the necks of black men, he chose to point out that black men are largely responsible for their own disenfranchisement.
Millner, who is also in the legal profession, says things in a way that Eric Holder is unable, because, unlike Holder, Millner is not constrained by the political shackles that come with being an appointed leader in a country that makes a habit of oppressing, destroying and marginalizing black men.
In his speech, Holder said, "It should simply be unacceptable for a man to have a child and then not play an integral part in the raising and nurturing of the child."
That quote is a nice way of reflecting on the obvious. It's sort of like saying, "It should be unacceptable for a black man to become the attorney general of the United States and not play an integral part in helping other black men overcome the blatantly racist and destructive justice system over which you preside."
If I were in that church in Queens, that is the speech I would have given to Holder. As Millner correctly states in his article, "Beyond the lip service, both President Obama and A.G. Holder are in positions to exert influence in areas that play a significant role in why many black fathers are absent."
This is not to say that Eric Holder isn't working to help with the long list of reasons that the justice system has been one of the most destructive forces facing black men today. It's easy to attack African American men for their lack of presence in the households of their children. It makes no sense, however, to make these attacks without spending a second holding yourself accountable for addressing the systemic causes of their absence. That is like telling a starving child that he needs to stop losing weight but keeping a lock on the refrigerator.
Holder does not need an education, so I am not going to give him one. As Millner states very clearly, the list of thoughts that immediately run through the mind of any black man with a working brain cell are going to be the following:
1) One in three black men in their twenties is under some form of supervision by the justice system. It's tough to be a dad when you live in a nation that has adopted mass incarceration of black men as the way to get cheap labor. Then, for those men who try to reintegrate in to society, there are hurdles to employment and education that Holder and others have yet to remedy. A man can't take care of his family if he is in prison, and it's difficult for him to feed his family if no one will hire him. If you want to solve many of the parenting problems, you can start by not putting so many fathers in the penitentiary, especially those guilty of non-violent offenses or who've been convicted because they could not get adequate legal counsel. By the way, it may help to give them rehabilitation options while they are incarcerated, rather than simply punishing them.
2) Attorney Holder, did you also know that black male unemployment is as high as 40 percent to 50 percent in many urban areas? What do you think whites would do to you if they were facing 40 percent unemployment and had to hear you give them a speech about personal responsibility? If whites are screaming about 10 percent unemployment, how would they respond to the unemployment rates experienced by our community?
3) Mr. Holder, can you please take a visit to your buddy Barack Obama and let him know that the inner-city educational systems put black boys in special education at a rate that is five times higher than white kids? Please also explain to the president that many of these young men are not being taught to read and are being pushed out in to an economic system with few opportunities, leading them right to the penitentiaries. I am not sure how much time Columbia University (where Holder attended law school, like the rest of his Ivy League chums) spends teaching about the school-to-prison pipeline, but he might want to read up on it.
4) Oh yeah, Mr. Holder, with all due respect, there are quite a few white absentee fathers also. The divorce rate in white America is more than 50 percent, which means that, technically, half of all white dads are not in the homes with their kids. The next time you go speak to a group of white Americans, I dare you to give the same speech you're giving in African American churches. White folks aren't so quick to allow a black man to come in to their churches to tell them that they are screwed up and that the government (for which they pay taxes) has no responsibility in helping with their plight. For some reason, black people are very good at beating up on themselves.
5) Mr. Holder, just in case you and President Obama are unaware, there's usually a woman involved in most heterosexual relationships. Do you think it might be possible that some men are excluded from the lives of their children by the child's mother, or have we decided to simply follow the trend and blame the black male for every single one of society's ills? When specifically addressing the break down of the black family, we may want to move past the "black man musta done it" model of analysis. There are thousands of black men across America who've been estranged from their children by mothers who've become overbearing in the management of their children's lives. This is not to say that all mothers are in the wrong, but we all know that both women and men are not perfect.
I respect Attorney General Holder, but it is my hope that the black faces hanging out in the Oval Office can be a bit more creative when it comes to solving problems in our nation. When white America moans about 10 percent unemployment, they get stimulus packages. When black men speak up about 40 percent to 50 percent unemployment, we get speeches on personal responsibility. The double standard is as glaring as the shine on Rush Limbaugh's forehead. Eric Holder, I expect you to show a bit more personal responsibility. Do something productive with the power you've got. Don't just sit around and preserve it.
Dr. Boyce Watkins is a professor at Syracuse University and the founder of the Your Black World Coalition. To have Dr. Boyce's commentary delivered to your e-mail, please click here. 


Comments: (199)
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By: Mary on 12/31/2009 3:20PM
You say:
"It makes no sense, however, to make these attacks without spending a second holding yourself accountable for addressing the systemic causes of their absence. That is like telling a starving child that he needs to stop losing weight but keeping a lock on the refrigerator."
I like the analogy; except instead of a starving child; make it a starving grown a$$ man. Better yet, a starving grown a$$ man with a crowbar. No even better, several million starving grown a$$ men with 2 crowbars each, one for each hand. JeeBus Christmas! DIY
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By: Michael Lofton on 1/01/2010 2:40AM
President Obama and the Congressional Black Caucus are sellouts, treasonous, you name it! The Black middleclass are ignorant for supporting and promoting these disgraceful misfits.
Why so many U.S. born Black people have praise for President Barack Obama, and/or the Congressional Black Caucus, is beyond me. These individuals are betraying law abiding U.S. born Black men, women, and/or their siblings.
Florencia 13, the Mexican Mafia, the 18th Street Gang, Criminal Hispanic Gangs, illegal/Undocumented Immigrants, Have Flourished in South Central Los Angeles, Compton and/or other former predominately Black communities, at the Expense of U.S. Born Black People, Because of an Inept and Treasonous Elected Black Leadership!
Broken Government and the Inner-City!
http://deadwiler.blogtownhall.com/2009/12/21/broken_government_and_the_inner-city!.thtml
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0GVYksdXL6A
"Obama is Destroying Black Families"
http://vdare.com/guzzardi/look_the_other_way.htm
Why The Black Caucus Looks The Other Way On Immigration, by Joe Guzzardi
Of the dozens of mysteries that surround Congress’ adamant avoidance of the immigration issue, none is so bewildering as why the Congressional Black Caucus looks the other way. Mass unskilled immigration has a particularly dramatic impact on their constituents, the most vulnerable of Americans.
When I read a new report by the Children’s Defense Fund that found that more black children—about one million—are now living in extreme poverty than ever (a 40% increase since 2000), I was reminded once again of the Black Caucus’ extraordinary dereliction of duty.
The Black Caucus has sold out black Americans. Even though black families live in poverty throughout America, the Caucus is content—eager, in fact—to import more poor people who will compete head-to-head for jobs at the lower end of the economic scale.
Legal and illegal immigration has undercut blacks from the jobs they once held in meat plants, service industries, and on construction crews. In many cases those were union jobs that paid good wages with full benefits. Now those jobs go to illegal aliens who work for pennies above the minimum wage.
Yet from the Black Caucus nary a peep is heard.
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By: Kevin on 1/02/2010 4:09PM
While I do not have that much of a problem with what AG Holder stated, because let's be honest, there are some black men in our community who do not take care of their responsibility to their children. On the other hand, I do think that Dr. Watkins, do make some interesting points here that should take some serious thought on this particular issue.
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By: GScottr on 1/03/2010 6:47AM
Dear Lord, when.....when will the black community STOP blaming others and take responsibility for its own failures? It is nauseating to see the depth of delusional thinking posted within this column. It is only when the black community stands on its own two feet that racism will stop. I realize there are hard-working blacks in every community, but the message coming from the larger, aggregate black community is that it is entitled to handouts, public assistance, free programs, etc, etc. When will it stop? When will the black community cease to rely on others? Have you no pride?
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By: Michael Lofton on 1/04/2010 2:15PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QlKUZ5tgK1E&feature=related
Rush Limbaugh - "Obama Money" Detroit Ladies
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0GVYksdXL6A
"Obama is Destroying Black Families"
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By: Michael Lofton on 1/05/2010 11:58AM
http://againstallodds.blogtownhall.com/2010/01/04/the_people_of_sierra_leone_that_you_are_way_ahead_of_us_born_blacks!.thtml
Michael Lofton
P.O. Box 277
Inglewood, CA 90306-277
January 4, 2010
Standard Times Press News, Sierra Leone
Standard Times Press
2A Ascension Town Road
Kingtom Bridge
Freetown, Sierra Leone
Attention: Mr. David Mahdi Koroma, Ms. Unissa Bangur, Mr. Ishmael Kindama Dumbuya, Standard Times Press, Standard Times Team Journalists, etc.
http://www.latimes.com/news/nation-and-world/la-fg-africa-music3-2010jan03,0,1819038.story
"In Sierra Leone, pop music is a beat that drives politics, Political debate in the African nation often takes the form of protest songs; some have even toppled governments. Mostly illiterate, citizens rely heavily on singers for an independent take on events." by Scott Kraft, January 3, 2010
Within the U.S., in most any predominately Black Inner-City community and/or other Black communities, to where elected Black leaders hold policy making positions, it is Broken Government Too!
It is music to my ears, to know that the people of Sierra Leone are fed up with government corruption, so much so, that the Sierra Leone people are taking action against its corrupt elected officials.
Well I must inform the people of Sierra Leone that you are way ahead of U.S. born Blacks. Corruption is alive and well in inner-cities across Black America, while the elected Black leaders, and/or the so-called university educated Black middleclass remain silent, and/or conspire to further oppress truly law abiding U.S. born Black men, women, and/or their siblings egregiously violated by government.
http://ceyseau.net/Specifics.html
Enclosed are documents, documented court cases, hypertext that link to further proof of all the above. Mind you, U.S. born educated Black people have a superior education, higher living standards, and/or have received greater opportunity than anyone from Sierra Leone, yet Sierra Leone have a better understanding and appreciation for the future posterity of its citizens, than the sellout university educated Black middleclass within the U.S.
Sincerely,
Michael Lofton
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By: Omari on 1/01/2011 9:41PM
I agree with the columnist. Black Americans make up roughly 12 percent of the U.S. population, but more than 60 percent of the jail population. Black Americans are more than likely to go jail and are more likely to get harsher, longer sentences than theuir white counterparts.
And yet with a black president of the United States and a black U.S. attorney general, who have not heard one word from them in two years on how to address an institutionally racist criminal justice system.
And moreover, has anyone noticed that a lot of black Americans from the local to national levels have not said ANYTHING about this? The same ones that bemoan every white POTUS that has been in office about being indifferent to black America, but yet you have two BLACK MEN doing the same thing? Seriously, you need to put out an APB to find Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton now.
The Scott sisters' case -- a pair of black women who were given double life sentences for a robbery where they did not commit the crime (it was done by three teen-age boys) nor were arguably involved (according to two of the attackers) but were given life sentences, while the attackers served two years -- is yet another long example of black people getting excessively ridiculous prison sentences. These two recently were freed after 16 years of service, largely by the efforts of civil rights groups and individuals.
The frightening part is that the Scott sisters' story is not really that unusual. Periodically, I've seen stories where black people (mostly men, largely involving rape or alleged rape cases against white women) were freed after years of prison because it was found out they didn't do it. Be it poor legal representation, DNA evidence that conflicted, discredited testimony, corrupt legal authorities or even outright lying, these people lost significant years of their lives lost FOR NOTHING. And generally, it's always a black person who was wrongly jailed.
But yet, Obama and Holder are nowhere to be heard or found on this long-standing systemic issue that has adversely affected the black community. It's not that black males go to jail at much higher rates than white males, but in some cases they're purposely jailed and given harsher sentences than white people -- and in some cases, WRONGLY JAILED INTENTIONALLY.
But you can't find Holder, Obama, Sharpton, Jackson or a lot of these same lip-service people on this issue. Instead, they still are selling "Yes, We Can" T-shirts and acting like getting elected was pretty much it. You actually have to do some work in the White House, for goodness sakes.
I just can't defend Obama and Holder on this issue. Or the "talking loud and saying nothing" crew. I never thought I would live to see a black president and a black attorney general in the White House at the same time, but what good is it when they seem as unconscious to issues affecting black Americans as their white predecessors?
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By: Omari on 1/01/2011 10:26PM
As for the issue, part of the problem is that it is a multi-layered situation that is so complex that every case needs to be evaluated individually. There are people who deservedly should go to jail -- no one is making an excuse for those people who commit crimes and are proven beyond a doubt guilty.
But I'm evidently not talking about those cases. I'm talking about the system overall and one that does adversely give black people longer and harsher sentences than white people for similar crimes.
Also, I find it interesting some black people on this thread think that their education level somehow makes them immune from being stopped by the police or ever accused of a crime. As a professional, college-educated black male, I have been stopped numerous times by the police for no reason and nothing that merited it.
I've been jogging near my house and stopped by a police officer for no reason, and the officer (a black female, mind) asked me questions and asked for my license. I go two blocks down the road, and the same officer had four other police cars surround me because she thought it was "odd to see a black man jogging." Forget the fact I was in the neighborhood where I lived -- I was "a black man jogging."
There was even the time I had a neighbor -- an elderly, mentally troubled white woman -- file trespassing and breaking-and-entering charges against me. I was arrested, charged and had to hire a lawyer to defend me. There was only problem with that, though -- I was at work at the time of the incident (at the newspaper where I was one of the editors!). The case went to trail, she strangely did not show up and it was dismiss (but not before I sued her and won the judgement - which forced her to sell her house).
Or the numerous times I was stopped in college by police officers, for little more than walking back to my dorm room -- including one time where my roommate (another black male) were surrounded by 10 police officers, with the same two officers always stopping me!
Keep in mind, I don't have any hairstyle, clothing or anything that would fit some "profile" that warrants getting interrogated by the police. It's arguable that it was because of who I was that kept me from going to jail for something I didn't do.
But it definitely has struck a chord with me that with some bad luck and meeting with the wrong circumstances at the wrong time, I could have been one of those black people who went to jail for a very long time for stuff I didn't do. And if I didn't have the resources or the credibility to defend myself, my life could have been drastically different -- and worse.
It's not always some clean, black-and-white situation. As a black male, you live in a society where you're far more likely to go to jail than a white male. Who you are may not necessarily be enough to save you, so keep that in mind. There but the grace of God, there are some people who simply are not in a position to save themselves.
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