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TEXAS’ Widest Circulated and Read Newspaper with a Black Perspective

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R.  D. Malonson -
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istribution Chief
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Founded
African-American News&Issues, established in 1996 and targeting African-American, readers is one of the fastest growing and largest African-American owned newspapers in the United States.
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African-American News&Issues is the widest weekly circulated Black newspaper in Texas with a controlled circulation distributed every Wednesday.
The paper is delivered to more than 100,000 homes and is available at more than 5,000 locations, including chambers of commerce, churches, organizations, barber & beauty shops, schools, funeral homes, restaurants, public schools and libraries, college/university campuses, select businesses-retailers-grocery stores, transit centers and various downtown locations.
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• The views and opinions of guest writers and columnists do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of the publisher, staff or board of African-American News&Issues.
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What to Black People is the Fourth of July?
 



 On July 5th, 1852 in a meeting sponsored by the anti-lynching society Frederick Douglass gave the speech "What to the slave is the Fourth of July?" In his speech he illustrated the terrible conditions that Black people face living in America. He showed the contradiction of white America celebrating freedom, but at the same time denying it to Black people.
During the time of Frederick Douglass, white America was enjoying the "good life", and Black people were working from can't see to can't see in order to make white people rich. Black people were victims of lynching, bad health care and lack of education. White supremacist gangs would terrorize Black people and take their land. Black people were not allowed to engage in politics or own businesses, which would have helped Blacks gain control of their communities and become self sufficient. Also, according to the supreme court of the United States, in what became known as the "Dred Scott Decision", Black people did not have any rights that a white person was bound to respect.

Now over 150 years later we must ask the question, "What to Black People is the Fourth of July?" Do Black people have a reason to celebrate the freedom
and independence of America?
In 2004, Blacks may no longer face "Jim Crow"; however Blacks
are confronted with "James Crow II." Overt acts of white supremacy have been replaced (in some cases) with INSTITUTIONAL WHITE SUPREMACY.
For example, Black people are disproportionately denied home
loans which are essential to building wealth. Gentrification is a tool that is used to lower the property value in Black neighborhoods. The land is then purchased by white owned corporations who raise the cost so high, Blacks can no longer buy property or live in the area, because the price and or the taxes are too high.
In the area of politics, 150 years ago Black people were not allowed to vote. Today Blacks are allowed to vote, however based on the last presidential election, the votes of Black women and men are not even counted. Many Black communities have been gerrymandered, to reduce the voting power of the Black community.

In the arena of law enforcement Blacks still have no rights that
white people are bound to respect. An example of this can bee seen in the case of Amadou Diallo. An unarmed, innocent Black man, shot at 41 times by four white cops who where found not guilty of any crime. Law enforcement officials in the state of New Jersey have admitted to racial profiling, which is a violation of ones civil and human rights. Police officers are caught on video beating Black men, in some cases to death with sticks, flashlights and plungers.
Black people in America have no reason to celebrate the Fourth of July. Black people are less than twenty percent of the U.S. population but over 40 percent of the prison population. Black people still have yet to receive full and complete reparations for slavery and the vestiges of it. Blacks

cannot even go into restaurants such as Denny's and Cracker Barrel and expect to get service. Black are still people suffering political oppression, economic exploitation and social degradation because of the white supremacist polices of the United States Government and its' economic institutions. The only difference between then and now is Black people knew who their enemy was.