Sunday, April 6, 2014

Detroit: Race equity summit to address widening wealth gap between races (And of course who else in the world better personifies colorblind egalitarianism than Reverend Jeremiah Wright?)


Race equity summit to address widening wealth gap between races


With studies showing widening economic gaps between whites and African Americans, civil rights leaders in metro Detroit are concerned.
“We’re going in the wrong direction,” said Freda Sampson, a leader with the nonprofit group Michigan Roundtable for Diversity and Inclusion. “We’re getting further and further divided.”
To help close that racial and class divide, her group is holding an all-day conference, called the Equity Action Summit, on Saturday at Cobo Center in Detroit.
A study released last year by Brandeis University said the median wealth gap between whites and African Americans tripled from 1984 to 2009, increasing from $85,000 to $236,500. And experts have noted widening gaps in metro Detroit.
Saturday’s conference, supported by the NAACP and Fair Housing Center of Metro Detroit, is to feature talks by President Barack Obama’s former pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright of Chicago, as well as Detroit activists Ron Scott and Grace Lee Boggs. The conference is part of an ongoing effort by the Race2Equity Project, which is part of the Michigan Roundtable.
In recent months, the project has held three public hearings about the racial divide in transit, criminal justice and housing, featuring the stories of metro Detroiters who face discrimination. At the hearing on housing, held earlier this month at Marygrove College in Detroit, an African-American woman talked about the racism she faced while trying to rent an apartment in the suburbs, Sampson recalled.
“We’re hearing people’s powerful, palpable stories of injustices they have experienced in these three areas,” said Sampson, manager of the Race2Equity Project.
Saturday’s forum comes after a report released two weeks ago by a separate civil rights group, New Detroit, that showed significant racial and economic gaps in metro Detroit, with Latinos and African Americans trailing whites and Asian Americans in income and education levels.
Started in 1941, the Michigan Roundtable is a nonprofit civil rights group that tries to overcome discrimination and racism in metro Detroit. . . .
And during that time Detroit has gone from being a hardworking shining booming first-world city to today's dank crumbling corrupt violent dangerous third-world cesspool--Congratulations Roundtable on a job well done! Take a victory lap!
Have a feeling there will be no fascinating workshops on exporting manufacturing jobs while importing the third-world uneducated unemployed, or how everyone wants to flee 'inner cities' because they are dangerous ugly angry anti-White bottomless pits of dysfunction and death.