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A Vision for Black America


Article # : 17418 

Section : MODERN THOUGHT
Issue Date : 1 / 1990  5,656 Words
Author : Robert L. Woodson
Robert L. Woodson is president of the National Center for Neighborhood Enterpriseand chairman of the Council for a Back Economic Agenda. His most recent publication is On the Road to Economic Freedom : An Agenda for Black Progress.

       The true character of a nation can be judged in part by the way it treats its weakest or most vulnerable members. Nowhere has this test been more relevant than in the quest for civil rights by black Americans.
       
        With the passage of civil rights law, one-third of black Americans - those prepared by family status, education, or economic circumstances - walked through the doors of opportunity once they were opened. For unprepared blacks, however, removing racial barriers did not enable them to join the mainstream of the American economy. Their problems were and remain economic; continued attempts to apply race-specific solutions to their problems do nothing to advance economic progress for poor blacks.
       
        The real questions for black leaders, then, is the one they are rarely compelled to answer. Why have the civil rights gains of the past twenty years bypassed poor blacks, even in those cities politically controlled by blacks? Traditionalist black leaders rarely challenge themselves with that question. Instead, they continue to appeal to white America for fairness. Fairness toward blacks, defense cuts, and increased government spending on social programs, affirmative action, and job training are all summed up in the call for more "jobs, peace, and freedom."
       
        Despite their lack of involvement in the design of its structure, the black leadership embraced the war on poverty as an extension of the civil rights movement. The basic dichotomy, however, between promise and practice surfaced early. In the 1960s, many of the programs of the Office of Economic Opportunity, inspired by the President's Commission on the Prevention of Juvenile Delinquency, ... (1996 of 36962 Characters)
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