Former NAACP President Ben Jealous running for Governor of Maryland; Larry Hogan WINS re-election

tru_m.a.c

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@New Jeruzalem Journalist here is an article that explains why he got kicked out of Columbia:

Columbia Torn by Disciplinary Hearing
Columbia Torn by Disciplinary Hearing

Tomorrow, seven students will be tried in a university disciplinary hearing on charges stemming from a protest in December over Columbia's plans to turn the Audubon Theater and Ballroom, where Malcolm X was assassinated on Feb. 21, 1965, into a biomedical-research complex.

....

The Barnard-Columbia Save the Audubon Coalition organized the demonstration on Dec. 14, a few days before the semester ended, at the center of the main campus. They hoped to persuade the university to protect the Audubon ballroom, at Broadway and 165th Street in Washington Heights, as a historical landmark. The ballroom is one of five buildings included in plans for a four-block, triangular complex to be developed jointly by Columbia, the New York City Economic Development Corporation and the New York State Urban Development Corporation.

Around noon, about 150 protesters decided to take their message to Jack Greenberg, the dean of Columbia's undergraduate college, whose office is on the first floor of Hamilton Hall.

Dean Greenberg said last week that he agreed to meet with a small number of students, but that some in the group insisted that he meet with all of them. Dean Greenberg refused, and a standoff began.


Just after 7 P.M., Dean Greenberg emerged from his office, told the protesters that he had nothing to do with the Audubon decision, and left the building, students said.

The students walked over to Broadway, the campus's western border, where they briefly blocked traffic, said a protester, Noah Potter. They then blocked traffic on Amsterdam Avenue, the campus's eastern border, for a short time, although security and police officers who followed them from Hamilton Hall did nothing stop them. After that, the group dispersed.

"There was no violence at any time," Mr. Potter said.

But the university is charging that the demonstrators kept students and faculty members from Hamilton Hall for much of the afternoon, during final exam week. Students are also being charged with violations of university rules of conduct, like refusing to identify themselves to campus security and failing to disperse.

A few days after the demonstration, several of the students were notified by mail that charges could be brought against them as a result of the demonstration. Students believe they were identified from videotapes made by security guards.

The students were told to appear before acting Provost Stephen Rittenberg to discuss possible charges, a step that could have allowed them to settle the matter. Postponement Requested

Mr. Potter and Benjamin Jealous, both among the seven who will be tried tomorrow, said that they all wrote letters to Mr. Rittenberg asking for a postponement of that meeting, because many of them were about to leave for the winter break. They also asked that they be allowed to meet with the provost together.

But instead of responding to their requests, the university notified them that a hearing had been scheduled before Judge Tyler, a step that allowed them no chance for further negotiation of the charges or their ultimate penalty if found guilty, the two students said.

Another 30 students have received notices that charges may be filed against them, but none of their cases has reached the stage of those to be tried tomorrow.

That the accused students are not being tried by a panel of their peers or faculty members, as students are at many other universities, has drawn many sympathizers.

But Dr. Tim Brooks, a former president of the Association of Student Judicial Affairs, a national group, said Columbia may be totally within its rights.

Dr. Brooks, who is now the dean of students at Delaware University, said private colleges do not have the same constitutional due-process requirements that public colleges must follow. He said they have more freedom to devise rules of discipline and penalties, including who will judge students, but they must apply the rules consistently, make them known to all students and allow for appeals. Pro Bono Lawyers

Many of those supporting the students also have complained that while the university will be represented by lawyers hired from an outside law firm, no such help was offered to the students, who attracted lawyers who would work for them pro bono.

"We have some major concerns that the process is not fair enough," said Norman Siegel, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, which has offered its support to the students.

Dr. Brooks said there was a trend among college officials across the country to toughen disciplinary measures against students, which he said was a reaction to widespread unrest at college campuses during the 1960's and 70's.

"Now what is happening," he said, "is that administrators have decided that the only way to create a better educational environment for all students is to become stricter in their sanctions."
 

AZBeauty

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Brehs............
:why:

My best friend lives in Maryland. Educated, high political acumen, my main homie for the past 20 plus years. Progressive minded, veteran, black man, father of 3, grew up in the hood in Jersey.

He's not even registered to vote in Maryland (might not be too late to register in person from what I'm reading).


But that's not even the worst part. We've been arguing on the phone for the past 35 minutes and he's basically hitting with me with a near equivalent of "both sides" and can't put wholesale trust in every Dem and we need to be pragmatic about our choices and he doesn't know if he wouldn't vote Hogan cuz he's done a good job in office.


I'm selling him a little short on the convo, but it was still dire enough to have me :dwillhuh:

:snoop:for the duration of it.

Send me his phone number. It takes a village lol
 
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Ok, I texted him both links. Good looks.

But what does he need to register in Maryland?The info I keep reading isn't exactly clear.

He still has a New Jersey drivers license. He's been a Maryland resident for 3 years but never changed his driving and insurance info because of financial costs, so he doesn't have a MD drivers license. But he has utility bills, W-2s, etc with his Maryland address and can prove current address. Also has SSC and passport (expired) and I believe birth certificate.

But like I said, he's far from a fool and is well read from a variety of news sources and worldly topics. He's also a literal 6 figure 6 cert cat, so the fact that he's been so nonchalant about his voting availability and power, in 2018 of all times has me :mindblown:.

I expect this type of malaise and apathy from some of my older homies I grew up in the hood with who aren't as politically astute, but not him.
 

tru_m.a.c

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AFTER THE NAACP

The first full day of autumn felt like midsummer in West Baltimore, and Ben Jealous was sweating with his blazer off. Jealous is running for governor, and he had stopped in for a quick campaign hit at a block party just outside the McCulloh Homes housing project. (Aficionados of The Wire will recognize this location as the site of D’Angelo Barksdale’s drug business.) A large, cheerfully intense man in his mid-forties, Jealous seemed happy to be doing a little grassroots gripping and greeting. Volunteers from Communities United, the local social justice group that had organized the event, had set up a table. A name and address for their mailing list got you a bright purple T-shirt emblazoned with the group’s slogan: ENGAGE EDUCATE EMPOWER. In the shade of a few trees, someone had a barbecue going, smoke spiraling up through the branches, and everyone crowded around for some food and to keep a polite distance from Jealous, who has the kind of charisma that can draw people to him even while he’s perched awkwardly in a folding chair and mopping his brow. A young mother, seated with her child in the stroller next to her, had Jealous cornered, speaking quietly to him about the lack of recreation centers for children in the neighborhood. Jealous listened intently, displaying the politician’s gift for conveying his total attention to anyone with whom he speaks.

Jealous spends a lot of time in this part of Baltimore. In May, he declared his candidacy at Baltimore Blossoms Studio, a nearby flower shop owned by a woman named Rachelle Bland. The location was purposeful—Bland is Jealous’s second cousin—but not just because of the family connection. Baltimore Blossoms is located on an economically depressed commercial corridor that hosts a string of unassuming businesses that most anyone who grew up in a black neighborhood in America would recognize: There’s a deli serving every wonderful fried thing, a barbershop, a hair salon. But beneath the comforting community landmarks lies a palpable sense that justice needs to be done and soon. The shop is a short drive from Mondawmin Mall, the place where the 2015 Baltimore uprising, sparked by the police killing of Freddie Gray, began. Jealous looks here for his constituency. These are the people he wants to connect with and to represent, not just those in the whiter, wealthier suburbs that typically get to choose our leaders.

“My grandmother was a social worker in Baltimore for 30 years. My grandfather was a probation officer at city courts for almost 30 years,” Jealous told me. “They raised me with the understanding that the only way that communities in Maryland get stronger, and problems are solved, is if the governor wants it to happen.” He smiled. “In our state, who the governor is matters.”

Jealous grew up in northern California, the son of a white man from Maine and a black woman who grew up in the McCulloh Homes. Bland and Jealous go way back: He spent his summers in Baltimore with his grandparents. He got an early start in politics, at age 14, working as a precinct captain for Jesse Jackson’s 1988 presidential campaign. He was a standout student, going to college at Columbia, where he was suspended for a semester for his part in a December 1992 protest over the university’s plan to tear down Harlem’s Audubon Ballroom, the site of Malcolm X’s assassination. The suspension brought Jealous his first taste of national attention. “When you’re the first students suspended from Columbia University in two decades, people take notice,” he said in a 2009 interview with Columbia College Today. “Even when they’re sure all you really know how to do is organize campus protests and get kicked out, they offer you jobs.”


7e9ed4680dd8dbf1854971914482b9e7ef26d631.jpeg

Jealous rose to national attention in his twenties, leading a student protest at Columbia University .Ian Martin
He stayed away from Columbia for two years, working in Mississippi as an investigative journalist for the Jackson Advocate, finally graduating in 1996 and then moving on to Oxford after winning a Rhodes scholarship. When he returned home, Jealous served as the executive director of the National Newspaper Publishers Association, a group of more than 150 African American community publications. At age 29, he became the founding director of Amnesty International’s U.S. Human Rights Program, with a focus on incarceration and racial profilinsg. The same month he turned 32, he moved to the Rosenberg Foundation, a San Francisco group financing social justice projects.

In 2009, thanks largely to the advocacy of the late NAACP chairman Julian Bond, the 35-year-old Jealous was elected the youngest leader in the history of the venerable civil rights organization. It was a close vote. As Ta-Nehisi Coates noted in a 2009 article in The Nation, Jealous’s résumé was considered “peculiar and lacking” by the NAACP board. “He had not pastored a church, he had held no elected office, and he had no direct ties to the civil rights movement.” And yet he prospered. After a string of underwhelming leaders, and some scandalous ones—see Benjamin Chavis—Jealous’s youth, energy, and technological savvy helped reinvigorate the group’s approach to civil rights and community work.

The NAACP’s donor base increased tenfold under Jealous, its annual revenue nearly doubled, and the group’s online engagement went from 200,000 to more than two million. He also got the group back out in the streets, matching the Tea Party rally for rally during Barack Obama’s first term, and marching down New York’s Fifth Avenue in 2012 to protest the city’s ineffective and racially biased “stop-and-frisk” policy. He even urged the NAACP to fight for issues that expanded the group’s traditional mandate. In 2012, ten days after Obama famously reversed himself and endorsed marriage equality for LBGTQ Americans, the NAACP did the same. In 2012, Time named Jealous to its 40 Under 40 list, calling him a “rising star” of American politics. “Where do you see yourself professionally in five years?” the magazine asked. “Exactly where I am right now.”

After the NAACP
 
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Send me his phone number. It takes a village lol


I appreciate the concern, lol. Wish I could, but I'm sure he wouldn't take kindly to me giving out his personal info to receive a verbal tongue lashing from a complete stranger. Funny shyt though, in that Tariq thread with you sonning Swagnificent, my friend hit me with the same nonsense about Dems having control over house and Senate under Obama, so why didn't they enact this, that, and the third.

He made it clear that he never said voting for specific Dems is bad and that there are clearly Dems worth supporting, but wholesale support of Democratic party is a no go. Which just devolved into tangents of arguments and straw men and frustration on my part.

Even took a swipe at Ocasio-Cortez to support his arguments because of her endorsing Andrew Cuomo.
 

tru_m.a.c

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The Trials of Benjamin Jealous
Can the NAACP's new president reform the 100-year-old civil rights organization? Does he want to?
By Ta-Nehisi Coates


Jealous is stocky and over six feet tall. His high-pitched voice is at odds with his stone-serious face. When he laughs, it almost comes as a surprise. His skin is light enough that in the early ’90s, when he worked as a reporter and managing editor for the Jackson Advocate, Mississippi’s oldest black newspaper, he occasionally passed for white, digging for information beyond the reach of his colleagues. His father is the scion of a prominent white New England family whose ancestors fought at Bunker Hill. Archibald Willard, who painted The Spirit of ’76, is a distant cousin. His mother’s family traces its ties back to a plantation, and the men in her family were dignitaries during Reconstruction. Despite his lineage, Jealous is tenaciously black and takes unkindly to being called biracial.

“In my family, race and heritage are two different things,” says Jealous. “My dad was clear that if he married a black woman, he’d have a black child. That was the law. But there was also a sense, on both sides of the family, that we are American.”

Jealous grew up in Monterey, California, but spent a lot of time in Baltimore, where his mother was raised. His household was a bubbling caldron of politics, debate and history. Jealous’s maternal grandmother would recount for him oral histories of his family’s struggles under slavery and Jim Crow. Robert Watts, Baltimore’s pioneering civil rights jurist, was a family friend. From the time Jealous was 4, Watts would greet him by asking, “Son, what are you prepared to argue about?”

Well, as it turned out, plenty.

Jealous lodged his first protests in first grade, over the lack of books about black history in the school library. “I never liked fairy tales. I always liked history,” he recalls. “I read a lot of books themed around the bicentennial. I read all the books on my dad’s family. And then I asked, ‘Do you have any on my mom’s family? Not the railroad slave or the peanut butter guy.’ The librarian was stumped.”

When Jealous was 13, he attended the birthday party of the son of McGeorge Bundy, former national security adviser to John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson. “My first phrase was ‘What were you thinking when you planned the Bay of Pigs invasion?'” recalls Jealous. “He said, ‘You know, son, I’d rather not talk about that right now…'”

By the time Jealous was 16, he was registering voters for the NAACP. At Columbia, where Jealous went to college, he continued in the family tradition but with a kind of privileged bent that’s rarely seen in black activists. When Jealous was 18, he was stopped on Columbia’s campus by an FBI officer who mistook him for an Iraqi student. (Jealous had spent the previous week protesting the Gulf War.)

“I went off on him about why I looked the way I looked,” says Jealous, referring to his ancestry. “That was the moment where I really realized I had ownership in this country. And for him to suggest that I didn’t belong here… I went off.”

This sense of ownership in America reflects the New England origins of his family, but just as important it reflects the willingness of his grandmother to discuss slavery and other aspects of the black past that older generations of African-Americans tried to forget.

The Trials of Benjamin Jealous
 

tru_m.a.c

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@mastermind @FAH1223 the article below is from 2017...methinks something fishy has been going on with the polls man :patrice:...how has this dynamic changed to the point that Jealous or any Dem for that matter is behind in the polls by 20points

Hogan’s deep popularity in Md. weakens when voters consider 2018, Post poll finds

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan’s stratospheric approval rating has slipped in a Washington Post-University of Maryland poll for the first time since the Republican took office, while voter skepticism of President Trump and his party threatens to complicate the governor’s bid for reelection next year.

Hogan holds a 65 percent job-approval rating, down from a high of 71 percent last September, but still above the highest mark in Post polls for each of the state’s three previous governors.

Yet Hogan’s support for reelection lags far behind his approval rating, with 41 percent of registered voters saying they would support him for a second term and 37 percent preferring a Democrat.

The margin has narrowed since September, when Hogan held a 46 to 30 percent edge over a generic Democrat. No Democratic candidate has entered the 2018 race so far, though several have said they are considering it.

2300-mdpollB0322.jpg


Immigration provides a window into how perceptions of state and national politics can become intertwined.

By a 65 to 33 percent margin, the poll finds more Marylanders oppose than support Trump’s revised executive order to temporarily block travel from six Muslim-majority countries, exempting U.S. citizens and those who received visas before late January.

Hogan has resisted pressure to weigh in against the order, saying his focus is on Maryland issues. Nearly half of Maryland residents both oppose Trump’s executive order and say it is “absolutely necessary” that Hogan speak out against it.

The poll finds that Marylanders are cool to local agencies cooperating with federal immigration authorities. A 56 percent majority doubts that increased local involvement in deportations would improve compliance with immigration laws, while three-quarters say it would make undocumented immigrants reluctant to inform police of crime.

But Hogan has vowed to veto what he called an “outrageously irresponsible” bill passed by the House of Delegates that would limit the ability of state and local officials to cooperate with federal immigration enforcement. The bill is awaiting action in the Senate.

Another challenge for Hogan heading into 2018 is solidifying support in suburbs that tilted Democrat in the presidential election, including Anne Arundel, Howard and Baltimore counties.

Together, voters in those jurisdictions favored Hogan by 22 points in 2014 but supported Clinton by 16 points over Trump last year. And his support among them for a second term is eroding: Voters in Anne Arundel, Howard and Baltimore counties said they would back Hogan over a generic Democrat by a margin of 34 points — 59 to 25 percent — last fall but by 14 points in the new survey.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/loca...ory.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.4a05baf9bb39
 

AZBeauty

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I appreciate the concern, lol. Wish I could, but I'm sure he wouldn't take kindly to me giving out his personal info to receive a verbal tongue lashing from a complete stranger. Funny shyt though, in that Tariq thread with you sonning Swagnificent, my friend hit me with the same nonsense about Dems having control over house and Senate under Obama, so why didn't they enact this, that, and the third.

He made it clear that he never said voting for specific Dems is bad and that there are clearly Dems worth supporting, but wholesale support of Democratic party is a no go. Which just devolved into tangents of arguments and straw men and frustration on my part.

Even took a swipe at Ocasio-Cortez to support his arguments because of her endorsing Andrew Cuomo.

Don't worry, I was kidding lol. If he wont listen to his best friend of course he wont listen to me. I wish people who chose not to vote took direct action in some other sort of way. Just hopeless and useless, shyts sad.
 

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Ok, I texted him both links. Good looks.

But what does he need to register in Maryland?The info I keep reading isn't exactly clear.

He still has a New Jersey drivers license. He's been a Maryland resident for 3 years but never changed his driving and insurance info because of financial costs, so he doesn't have a MD drivers license. But he has utility bills, W-2s, etc with his Maryland address and can prove current address. Also has SSC and passport (expired) and I believe birth certificate.

But like I said, he's far from a fool and is well read from a variety of news sources and worldly topics. He's also a literal 6 figure 6 cert cat, so the fact that he's been so nonchalant about his voting availability and power, in 2018 of all times has me :mindblown:.

I expect this type of malaise and apathy from some of my older homies I grew up in the hood with who aren't as politically astute, but not him.

He can register to vote at early voting until this Thursday which is November 1. Polls are open from 10 AM until 8 PM.

Here's a list of early voting locations: https://elections.maryland.gov/voting/documents/2018_Early_Voting_Centers_web.pdf

He just needs to have proof of residency.
 

THE MACHINE

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2018 Early voting in MD doubles the 2014 pace so far :whew:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/loca...ory.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.d5142035fd87

By Associated Press
October 27
BALTIMORE — So far more than double the number of people has voted early in Maryland compared to the midterms four years ago.

State election officials told The Baltimore Sun nearly 170,000 people have voted through the first two days of early voting through Friday night. The newspaper says the number of voters each day was more than twice the numbers for the first two days in 2014.

High early-voting levels are occurring elsewhere, as voters are energized in the current political environment. The top race this fall is for governor between Republican incumbent Larry Hogan and Democratic challenger Ben Jealous.

Early voting in Maryland lasts through Nov. 1, with 79 polling stations open 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Same-day voter registration is available during early voting but not on Election Day.

Copyright 2018 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Time to set the record straight :ufdup:
 
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