Showing posts with label Latrice Monique Walker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Latrice Monique Walker. Show all posts

7.25.2023

If it’s Wednesday, it’s time for WAKE UP & STAY WOKE: Accomplishments of the Sororities of the DIVINE NINE & VOFFEE JABATEH OF ACANA & AFRICA TOWN

 

By Gloria DULAN-Wilson

Hello All



You are invited! Tune in: WAKE UP & STAY WOKE - 
WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 2023 - 10 AM EST 
WPFW 89.3 FM
 

 


Please Share Widely!
If it’s Wednesday, it’s time for
 WAKE UP & STAY WOKE - 
WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 2023 - 10 AM EST
WPFW.FM 89.3


Special Invited Guests:

Voffee Jabateh
Founder/CEO ACANA 🇱🇷
Developer AFRICA TOWN - Philadelphia 

The Hon. Latrice M. Walker 
 New York State Assembly
Zeta Phi Beta Sorority 💙

Gloria DULAN-Wilson (co-host)
Blogger, Activist, Journalist 
Delta Sigma Sorority ❤️


 
 

WAKE UP & STAY WOKE 
PUBLIC AFFAIRS TALK SHOW
Great Guests and 
Informative Conversations!
Every Wednesday 10 AM EST -- WPFW / PACIFICA RADIO 89.3 FM -- 
LISTEN ONLINE http://wpfwfm.org --

Dr. E. Faye Williams, MPA, DPA, D.Min, D.Th, Esq.
President Emeritus, NCBW, Inc. and
President, The Dick Gregory Society, Inc .
www.thedickgregorysociety.org -- Cash App, use $EFAYEW

"It is through our struggles that we gain our victories." 
-- Dr. E. Faye Williams, Esq.

Until the lions tell their own story, 
tales of hunting will always glorify the hunter. 
-- African Proverb

NOW THAT YOU KNOW
WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT IT?
 
 Stay Blessed &
ECLECTICALLY BLACK
 
 
Gloria DULAN-Wilson

 

11.04.2014

IT'S A BEAUTIFUL DAY IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD TO GET OUT AND VOTE - TELL A FRIEND/TAKE A FRIEND/TAKE YOUR KIDS WITH YOU - SET THE EXAMPLE

By Gloria Dulan-Wilson

Hello All:

Okay, here we are - ground zero - the day of days - only a strange creature from another planet, or someone in a permanent coma does not know what day this is:  TODAY IS NOVEMBER 4, 2014, THE MIDTERM ELECTIONS ARE UPON US - People in New York started voting at 6:00AM, people in Philadelphia started voting at 7:00AM - GET UP, GET OUT AND VOTE - BEFORE WORK, AT LUNCH, AFTER WORK, ON YOUR BREAK - no matter what the time there is ABSOLUTELY NO EXCUSE - VOTE LIKE YOUR VERY LIFE DEPENDS ON IT, BECAUSE IT ABSOLUTELY DOES.

Now that I've gotten your attention, here are some updates you need to be aware of :  BLACK WOMEN FOR POSITIVE CHANGE  (BW4PC) just sent me an email voicing their selections for Maryland and DC - so those of you who are in that area might want to check in on this release:

Please remember the extreme importance of  voting  today.  Our ancestors gave their lives so that  we could have this remarkable opportunity after  being denied the right.

Lets do them PROUD!

Follow  Your Bliss,
Karen L. Carrington 
202.403.3260, Fax 


TO:        BW4PC NETWORKERS AND SUMMIT COUNCIL
FROM:   DELEGATE DAUN HESTER AND DR. STEPHANIE MYERS

BE SURE TO VOTE TOMORROW FOR YOUR LOCAL, STATE AND FEDERAL OFFICES!  THERE ARE MANY IMPORTANT ELECTIONS AROUND THE NATION AND THE FUTURE OF OUR COMMUNITIES LIES IN THE BALANCE. 

BW4PC HAS ENDORSED

MURIEL BOWSER FOR MAYOR OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

AND

LT. GOVERNOR ANTHONY BROWN FOR GOVERNOR OF MARYLAND!

View this great "Color of Change" ad below and share with younger voters. Thanks to Pat Duncan, BW4PC Denver, Colorado for sharing this ad.

                                     ****************
ColorOfChange has launched a powerful national voting campaign #IfTheySpeakForMe focused on the inclusion of Black voices, specifically the voices of Black women. Using hidden cameras, Color of Change staged scenarios where people would have to come to terms with how it feels to not have a voice. Click below to see how Black women at a salon respond to a stranger making decisions about their hair.
Black women at a salon respond to a man in a suit that tells the hair stylist to straighten their hair?
COMMENTS FROM COLOR OF CHANGE
Isn't this absurd? How dare some strange man invade your personal space and then determine what is going to happen to you and your body. Our fictional scenario may have been about hair but in the real world, the stakes are much higher. Political leaders are passing legislation about your right to reproductive healthcare, equal pay, the even the freedom to vote. As we prepare for mid-term elections, we cannot allow political leaders who do not have our best interests at heart to make decisions on issues that impact our daily lives. It's simple — either you speak up or someone will speak for you.
Recently, Black women have emerged as the voting demographic to watch out for, achieving record-breaking turnout in the last few elections. Through the use of social media and powerful video content, #IfTheySpeakForMe gives Black women the opportunity to discuss key election issues and ensure that their voices are heard.
With so much on the line for our communities, voting in this year’s election has become more important than ever. On November 4, let’s get out to vote and speak up for our concerns.
The entire ColorOfChange.org team.

After you vote, don't stop there, go to one of the campaign headquarters and man the phones - 

In Philadelphia,  gubernatorial candidate Tom Wolf has a phone bank at 5537 Germantown Avenue - they could definitely use your assistance.  Ask for Brian Taylor.

Do what you can do to help a neighbor who may  have mobility issues,  or be visually impaired to get to the polls and back home.  
Take some coffee, tea or doughnuts to those who are working on the polls because they will be there all day long.  
Put a prayer out that we will defeat the repuglycons (republicans to those who want to be pc) in this midterm in a manner that sends a clear signal that Americans will no longer be bullied by big business and incompetent, uncaring political bureaucrats who are only in the position for their own pockets and self-aggrandizement.
Email everybody you know regardless of whether you like them or not and remind them that it is their responsibility to vote.
Be prepared to provide back up for those who are being hassled about bogus ID issues - make sure you and they know your rights -and that those rights are respected.  Stand up for yourself and your people - do not allow yourself to be disenfranchised or 'jim crowed' - you are AN AMERICAN CITIZEN and you have a constitutional right to vote.
If you see someone unjustly treated at the polls pull out your cell phone and record it - then call the Civil Rights organizations and the legal system - do not tolerate discrimination.

Above all - VOTE - VOTE - VOTE!!!
 **************************
One last note:  shout out to my sister/friend LATRICE MONIQUE WALKER who will be going to Albany, NY as the newly elected Assemblymember representing  Brooklyn's 55th AD.  Blessings, congratulations, and God Speed to you.  So proud of you and all that you are and stand for!!

Stay Blessed & 
ECLECTICALLY BLACK 
Gloria Dulan-Wilson
www.gloriadulanwilson.blogspot.com/ECLECTICALLY BLACK NEWS


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9.14.2010

PRIMARY DAY IN NYC VOTE OR SHUT UP

by Gloria Dulan-Wilson

SO it’s finally here. Primary day in New York City. And all the candidates are lined up for battle. The winners take all - whatever that means. It’s now or never for many of them.

And, while I can’t tell you who to vote for, I can tell you you had better vote as though you are voting for President Barack Obama all over again. Because this is just what this means.

Each and every vote counts. If you don’t vote, the good the President is trying to accomplish will be diminished exponentially.

Think about it. The Republicans are already trying to make this a self-fulfilling prophesy by saying that during the midterm the opposition part gets the majority. This is a psych! A mind game they play and many of us fall into the trap as though it’s the gospel. Nothing could be further from the truth, but they’re counting on the gullibility of the American public, who have become contented with mimicking what they hear on TV rather than standing for themselves, and getting their information first hand.

So now here we are. And there are some pretty important issues coming up that may or may not hamper our ability to emerge victorious from this primary:

1): The new electronic scan voting machines are being introduced in New York City. Many are concerned that it may either cut down on the number of people voting, or it may cause a great number of inaccuracies. (shades of Florida 2000). However, if we use our intelligence, instead of falling prey to negative suggestions, we can learn to use this nuance the way we have other innovations. In other words, don’t let learning something new be the deterrent to getting out to vote.

2): The assumption that because the candidate has been in office a long time, it’s time to bring in someone new. How insipid! Politics is a career like any other position. Politicians are public servants who apply for their positions via the public arena called voting, and they maintain their position via the same way. If they are doing their job correctly, they are returned to their position at the end of the term. It has nothing to do with age, per se, it has more to do with doing the job we sent them there to do. It also has to do with seasoning and seniority. I.e. paying your dues. In doing so you learn the lay of the land, and are able to exercise influence over situations more effectively than the relative new comer.
When I hear someone talking of “new blood”, as though a younger person automatically comes with a set of new concepts that will benefit us all, I cringe. I am not putting down our younger generation, but I am saying that they haven’t necessarily demonstrated their understanding of their role and responsibility in the current society given the amount of work, blood, sweat and tears their predecessors have already sacrificed to provide them with better lives. So, please don’t make age the issue. Look at where they stand when they stand with their people (I.e. us), and whether or not they know they’re Black (yes, I said Black -- remember the name of this blog is ECLECTICALLY BLACK).

3): On the flip side of this statement, however, there are some of our youth I wholeheartedly endorse, including Ms. Latrice Monique Walker, who is running for District Leader in Brooklyn, NY. I’m lifting her name because she has demonstrated her wisdom and involvement far beyond her age. She is one who can be called a continuity between veteran experience and the new breed.

Another area that materially affects our lives has to do with the court system. With Judge Sylvia Ash stepping up from the Court of Appeals tothe Supreme Court, there is evidence that supporting her will not only be a vote for our own self interests, but for fairness and parity for a change. Judge Ash, who has been a constant figure in the community, whether it's about raising funds to help Haitians effected by the earthquake or other nefarious conditions, or at the myriad of community based functions throughout Brooklyn, has ably and effectively served to community; and no doubt will be able to do more if we do the right thing and elevate her to Supreme Court Justice.

I would also like to lift the name of New York City Councilman Al Vann, who passed the baton as District Leader to Robert Cornegy, a young brother who had actually run against him in a bid for his seat on the City Council last year. Rather than deeming him an enemy, Councilman Vann looked at his strengths, sincerity, and experience, and passed the baton on to Mr. Cornegy, who now serves as the district leader, saving a considerable amount of expense and rancor.

Which also addresses another issue about age and length of service. Former Congressman the Rev. Floyd Flake, upon stepping down from Congress to head Allen AME Church in Queens, passed the baton to Gregory Meeks, to serve the balance of his unexpired term. Meeks did so admirably, and upon running for re-election, made it clear that his policies may or may not be the same as Flakes -- I.e., he was no carbon copy -- but that he had the well being of Queens at heart. He has done well in his leadership, thus proving Flake’s choice was a good one.

4): Don’t believe mainstream media’s hostile headline hype. It’s sad that, in this day and age, racism, yellow journalism and character assassination are alive and well and living in Fox News and other racist publications. We are being bombarded with garbage news about Congressman Rangel and others that would have us think that he has suddenly grown two heads and a tail. I’m not saying the Congressman is perfect, but I am saying that the vilification he has suffered is racist and extreme. As you go in to vote, remember that. Remember that the concept is to divide the Black community with innuendo, trickery, lies and deceit. It is to defame the Congressman so that we become confused about who he is in juxtaposition to who we are.

Also remember that the same vilification he is suffering after having taken the helm of the House Ways and Means Committee, the most powerful committee in Congress, is the same thing that happened to Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., his predecessor. The whites know that this is the most powerful position, and they went after him with a vengeance. Also make sure if he is re-elected, that he is reinstated with full honors, roles and responsibility. It appears that the so-called ethics committee only comes into effect when we are in positions of power -- very seldom when Caucasians have “strayed” from the line.

Likewise, when it comes to effectiveness, anyone who doubts the effectiveness of Congressman Edolphus Towns, has not been paying attention to the housing issues, and the greedy attempts to deprive Brooklyn - all of New York for that matter -- of affordable housing. It was Congressman Towns that saved Starett City from being sold to private developers who wanted to turn it into overpriced condominium developments. Because of Towns, Mitchell - Lama legislations have been extended an additional 25 years. Under his watch, legislation to preserve homes that were going under water due to overpriced mortgages have been passed. You need to be very cognizant of who is doing what for you. Fancy words and dog and pony shows don’t ge the job done.

State Senator Velmanette Montgomery, along with Assemblymember Hakeem Jeffries, has been instrumental, likewise, in getting legislation passed to transform overpriced, abandoned condominiums in Brooklyn, into affordable homes. No easy feat when greedy developers were trying to get undeserved breaks from the banks, Washington and other entities. Condominiums built on the foundations of Black neighborhoods that were once thriving in Brooklyn, will once again be returned to the hardworking people who deserve them most. So consider those issues when you go to the polls.

5): Finally, if you don’t get out and vote, you have absolutely no right to complain about anything. They are nickering and diming us to death in New York City, thanks to Bloomberg and his miscreants. We have witnessed rising costs and lower quality in transportation; bogus criteria in school and educational programs; the lack of will when it comes to dealing with the Wall Streeters who have been part and parcel of the recession New York currently faces. I urge you to carefully consider your choices as you vote. Remember, those who sat home in Brooklyn and did not vote for Bill Thompson for mayor - 20% turn out - who are now bearing the brunt of their negligence -- slow to no buses, more and more services closed or reduced in our communities.

Every time you vote, you have to vote as though your lives depend on it. Because it does. Vote as though you’re voting for Obama, because you are. As constituents you are not only participating in the electoral process, but you are signaling that you expect results from them. And then, make sure you get them. Politics is not a spectator sport, it is a participatory, hands on event.

So today, September 14, 2010 is primary day in New York State. It's in your hands, NYC. See you at the polls.

Stay blessed &
ECLECTICALLY BLACK
Gloria Dulan-Wilson

6.29.2010

Latrice M. Walker Launches Candidacy for Brownsville Female District Leader

by Gloria Dulan-Wilson

Latrice Monique Walker, affectionately known as The Beautiful Brown Barrister from Brownsville, made history in Brownsville Saturday, June 26, by announcing her candidacy for District Female Leader in Brownsville’s 55th Assembly District.

Latrice Monique Walker, Esq., right hand to Congresswoman Yvette Clarke, of the 11th CD, serving as her Community Development Policy Analyst, proudly threw her hat in the ring, pledging to address the ills that have assailed her community for decades.

True, this is Ms. Walker’s first foray into the political realm as a candidate. But if her passion and enthusiasm for her community and her constituents-to-be -- she’s Brownsville born and bred -- are any indicators, she is definitely the best person for the job!

Using the slogan “WALK WITH WALKER!!” she detailed many of the problems that have assailed her neighborhood, including being the last to be considered for programs, while at the same time the first to suffer cuts; being the community most likely to be targeted and profiled by police for criminal activities; being the community most likely to have underperforming educators and underperforming schools.

Starting out in a relatively soft tone by saying “To God Be The Glory, for Who am I?” she briefly reminisced about her childhood in Brownsville with her father, who succumbed to cancer when she was a child, she stated: “As a young girl my dad used to sit on this very bench right there. One day I was out here, I fell off this very little block; there was a doctor’s office across the street and my dad carried me right across the street to the doctor’s office right there.“

But her voice amped up a couple of decibels as she launched into the body of her speech, and the crowd found themselves totally mesmerized: “Your roots got to be thick in Brownsville if you want to get out here and work in the community! And every one who knows me knows that Brownsville is always on my heart; it’s always on my mind. The other day I said to Assemblyman Boyland, I’m tired of people looking at Brownsville as a hot dog and a hamburger vote! We said we need to put new leadership in Brownsville -- and we are the new leadership! We’ve got homeless issues out here! We’ve got drug abuse out here! We’ve got people who are dying on the street everyday in this community and it’s time to take it back! And it’s starting here with me! We’re out here in this heat. We’re taking it to the street. We are empowering these young people. We’re giving them jobs; we’re going to tell them about the importance of education; we’re going to talk to them about the importance about giving back to their community. Jobs not jails! We have more Black men in Brownsville who are going to jail who would have been in these facilities, but who is trying to keep them from going to jail? I AM! I am out here on the battle field with these people. That’s one thing that I always talk about with people is that you have to be hands on. Politics is a contact sport. When you’re out here and people are saying to you, what are you doing for the community? What can you say you were doing for the community, out here teaching children how to write grants. We need to be a self-sustaining community. We have been dependent on too many outside forces for far too long. You have to be hands on. You got to be out there in the street on a daily basis! So we‘re going to walk with Walker!”

She ended on a crescendo that got even those on walkers up on their feet, applauding her, and smiling at this young woman who might just be able to galvanize the energy and the apathy and forge it into the action that has so long been needed.

Latrice Walker has first hand knowledge of these challenges she spoke of, having grown up in the Glenmore Housing Projects, and received her early childhood education in the New York City Public Schools of Ocean-Hill Brownsville, P.S. 178 and I.S. 55. She obviously had parents and motivators in her life that instilled in her a life long love of learning and achievement. She received the Martin Safran Assistant Principal’s Award on behalf of her school fo having surpassed all other schools in the city. This came as a total surprise, since her school was considered as one of the City’s poorest performers. She attended Brooklyn Technical High School (one of the top high schools in the city) ; and was attended Cornell University in her junior year. She attended SUNY Purchase, and received her Juris Doctorate of Law from Pace University.

Latrice Walker acknowledges there were constant challenges in growing up in a community targeted by economic and sociological racism, but also states that these challenges are not insurmountable. “I’m living proof that you can do anything you put your mind, spirit, will and discipline to. There is nothing you can’t imagine or become, as long as you are not allowing the circumstances to dictate your destiny.”

Dressed in a chic white two piece suit, in a style that is both hip and business, Ms. Walker enthusiastically urged the crowd gathered in the sweltering heat to “WALK WITH WALKER!”

Brownsville will never be the same Latrice Walker at the helm, they’re looking at a hands on, tireless worker, advocate and supporter for the autonomy of a community long suffering under the weight of prejudice and neglect.

Assemblymember William Boyland Jr., who is making a bid for re-election, is supporting Walker’s candidacy, stating, “We have been able to bring new jobs and affordable homes to the community. But with Latrice on board, our arsenal will be complete. We have the will, the strength and the ability to make this a banner decade.”

City Councilmember Letitia James, who served as MC came out in strong support of Latrice‘s candidacy.

Congresswoman Yvette Clarke, who wholeheartedly endorsed the re-election of William Boyland, enthusiastically stated that “Latrice is not new to the community of Brownsville, she’s true to it!” The Congresswoman further stated Brownsville could have no better representation than Latrice to ensure the issues and concerns of the community are rectified.

Speaking of unity in the community, Congresswoman Clarke indicated broad bases interaction between her office, Assemblymember Boyland’s office as well as that of City Councilmember Letitia James. “When things assail our communities, we pledge to get it done together, so that each of us in our capacity works to provide a solution to the problem! So we have joined together in unity to build this community and to provide services that our people have been denied for so long.”

Further commenting on Walker’s candidacy, Congresswoman Clarke stated, “she has not failed Brownsville, and never will, because where Brownsville goes, she goes. We are taking this mission very seriously. We got a lot of challenges. We’re working right now to stop the NYPD on their stop and frisk practices. The New York State legislature just passed a bill to get rid of the stop and frisk data base. And I am in touch with Attorney General Holder’s office to make sure that our civil rights are protected. Our children do not need to be harassed just for walking down the street!”

Despite the heat of the day, Ms. Walker’s campaign kickoff was well attended by community members of all stripes and ages, who came to lend their support to the young woman who has been present at so many events held in their behalves. She’s assisted in legal matters when they had no means to pay or acquire legal assistance; she’s advocated for quality homes and education in a community that has been relegated to the “hot dog and hamburger vote”, working to ensure their inclusion in opportunities that were accorded other, more affluent communities.

I think it’s clear by the tone and tenor of this article that I am totally in support of Latrice Walker’s candidacy. Having had several opportunities to work closely with her in a variety of programs and events, I have been greatly impressed by her knowledge, enthusiasm, dedication, discipline and creativity. While many of us pay lip service to having the “youth” more involved in current issues, rarely has there been a person in this category (I.e. youth) who actually has a grasp on, and respect for the accomplishments of her predecessors (I.e. Civil Rights Activists), and the responsibility incumbent on her and her peers going forward, who is actually making a significant contribution to the community. She’s blazing new paths, while simultaneously learning from the lessons of history.

If you are interested in supporting this dynamic woman in her fight to bring a better quality of life to Brownsville, and hence, to the rest of Brooklyn as well, contact her campaign headquarters at 1747 Pitkin Ave. or call (718) 940-2018. Time to get out there and be a part of the process to progress. Time for Brownsville to WALK WITH WALKER

Stay Blessed &
ECLECTICALLY BLACK
Gloria Dulan-Wilson