Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Black Pastors Gone With The Wind

The Black pastors NEED to spend that money to feed their people as Black American children comprise forty percent of the number of children who are food deprived and food challenged.  

The Black pastors NEED to spend that money to try to turn the infernal tide of illegitimacy which has overwhelmed the birth numbers of Black American children to the rate of 73 percent being born WITHOUT looking into the eyes of a married mother and father.  

The Black pastors NEED to spend that money on initiatives of literacy.  Among the pool of 4th grade Black boys, only 12 percent read at grade level or higher.  

And finally the Black pastors NEED to spend that money to try to free the innocent from death row and stop letting our Jewish brother Barry Scheck of the Innocence Project and our Protestant and Catholic brothers of Centurion ministries do all the work for them.  

Over and over, our Black men leave us, the women and children, to starve and die.  Intellectually as well as physically while they jump on one of Madison's aversions:  fads.  From our Igbo brothers in Lagos and Abuja who adopt Mormonism to our Black American clerics who are fixated on two verses of Leviticus rather than the red words, we who wait seem doomed by the spineless to gain no relief.  

La Vonda R. Staples

On Wed, Oct 10, 2012 at 8:49 AM, Abdul Bangura <theai@earthlink.net> wrote:

Black Faith Leaders Plan $1M anti-Obama Effort Over Same-Sex Marriage

Tuesday, 09 Oct 2012 08:04 PM

By Todd Beamon

 
 
 
 
A group of African-American faith leaders plan to spend $1 million on an effort to strip President Barack Obama of 25 percent of the black vote that he garnered in 2008.

The new nonprofit group, God Said, announced the campaign on Tuesday, saying it was upset with Obama's support of same-sex marriage, The Daily Caller reports. The president won 95 percent of the black vote in 2008.

"The black community is among the most religious in America, and we are offended that President Obama has announced his support of same-sex marriage, that the NAACP has blindly supported the secular views of the Democratic Party, and that their national platform plainly supports same-sex marriage," Apostle Claver Kamau-Imani, a God Said founder, said in a statement published by The Daily Caller. "I am confident that this message will be well received and acted upon on Election Day."

The group, with 22 advisory board members, plans radio and television ads in Ohio, Virginia, North Carolina, Wisconsin and Florida. It also has a grass-roots component.

"During the 2008 elections, 70 percent of African-Americans voted to ban same-sex marriage in California while they also voted for Barack Obama for president," Dr. Alveda King, niece of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., told The Daily Caller.

King also is black outreach director of the pro-life Priests for Life and is a Newsmax contributor.

"We fully intend to shift 25 percent of the black vote from the 2008 election by charging every voter to examine each candidate and vote for the one that supports their core belief in natural marriage."

God Said has 22 advisory board members, including some affiliated with the Coalition of African-American Pastors, which has announced its own efforts to encourage blacks to not support Obama because of his stance on same-sex marriage.

© 2012 Newsmax. All rights

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--
La Vonda R. Staples, Writer
BA Psychology 2005 and MA European History 2009

"If your dreams do not scare you, they are not big enough."
 
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, This Child Will Be Great; Memoir of a Remarkable Life by Africa's First Woman President.

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