Obama’s legacy in regards to black America

Kerkum

Superstar
Joined
May 13, 2015
Messages
4,495
Reputation
-545
Daps
18,227
I’m pretty sure most of everyone in intelligent black society saw Barack Obama for what he was. However, when it comes to blacks as a collective, when do you think we will start that honest discussion about his eight years in office. I notice when it comes to deconstructing and breaking down facts about his presidency, most black folks straight up don’t want to hear it. Will it take a few years or even decades for black folks to see the farce. Or will he always be seen as this diety (who can do no wrong) amongst us, similar to Oprah Winfrey. And people are just now starting to look at Oprah beyond the surface.
 

hostsamurai

Demon King Of Salvation
Supporter
Joined
Nov 18, 2016
Messages
4,960
Reputation
9,075
Daps
23,776
Reppin
Bloodline
Who knows.

There's a camp on the coli that'll say. What did you expect him to do? Which is tantamount to saying no black president can do anything substantive and explicit for black people.

Then there is a camp that thinks he didn't even try to do anything for black people but he helped most american's lives. Obviously it's probably somewhere in between.

Although under Obama the dems lost the house, senate, most governorship and state legislatures so I think it's fair to say blacks living in places where republicans are the law makers aren't likely to experience social mobility.
 

Kerkum

Superstar
Joined
May 13, 2015
Messages
4,495
Reputation
-545
Daps
18,227
Who knows.

There's a camp on the coli that'll say. What did you expect him to do? Which is tantamount to saying no black president can do anything substantive and explicit for black people.

Then there is a camp that thinks he didn't even try to do anything for black people but he helped most american's lives. Obviously it's probably somewhere in between.

Although under Obama the dems lost the house, senate, most governorship and state legislatures so I think it's fair to say blacks living in places where republicans are the law makers aren't likely to experience social mobility.
What do you expect the black community to take away from your last paragraph
 

Neuromancer

Live Wire Vodou
Supporter
Joined
Oct 16, 2015
Messages
83,180
Reputation
17,288
Daps
201,300
Reppin
Villa Straylight.
Never. And I don't even know if a discussion will help. We'll just be aware of more symbolism used to pacify us and then what? Work towards what progress we can. hate to sound like a pessimist but I also doubt those who don't want to address it are either Ill informed or in denial.
 

MR. SNIFLES

**** YOU THUNDAAAAAAAAAAH
Supporter
Joined
May 2, 2012
Messages
20,722
Reputation
6,580
Daps
83,491
Reppin
THUNDER BUDDIES
I THINK HE DID PRETTY GOOD FOR WHAT HE HAD TO WORK WITH. I DIDN'T AGREE WITH EVERYTHING HE DID BUT HE DID DO A LOT OF GOOD FOR US. OVERALL, I WOULD GIVE HIM A PASSING GRADE. HE OPENED A DOOR FOR A FUTURE BLACK PRESIDENT TO DO MORE.
 

Piff Perkins

Veteran
Joined
May 29, 2012
Messages
53,991
Reputation
20,644
Daps
295,745
I've never heard anyone explain what exactly Obama was supposed to do for black people as a singular group. Or give an example of what a recent president has done for one singular race that didn't benefit any other races.

The facts are that unemployment, including black unemployment, declined over Obama's 8 years. The economy improved. The uninsured rate went down significantly, including for black people (but not as low as it should have gone, thanks to the Supreme Court allowing states to decide whether they wanted to expand Medicaid or not). The Obama DOJ protected black voter rights, challenged countless attempts to supress the black vote. His DOJ was lax on marijuana and ended the crack cocaine sentencing disparity. His DOJ advised a reduction in mandatory minimum sentencing for drug offenses.

I'm not going to fault Obama for not fixing everything, nor am I going to fault him for having entire regions of the country actively attempting to obstruct his administration and literally punish black people for 8 years.
 

hostsamurai

Demon King Of Salvation
Supporter
Joined
Nov 18, 2016
Messages
4,960
Reputation
9,075
Daps
23,776
Reppin
Bloodline
What do you expect the black community to take away from your last paragraph
942.gif



Under the current post citizens united climate, you cannot expect ANYTHING from a black democrat president.
The presidency is important, McConnell literally stole a supreme court seat with no repercussions, but state elections directly impact black people.
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

The Original
WOAT
Supporter
Joined
Dec 9, 2012
Messages
328,055
Reputation
-34,087
Daps
634,417
Reppin
The Deep State
I've never heard anyone explain what exactly Obama was supposed to do for black people as a singular group. Or give an example of what a recent president has done for one singular race that didn't benefit any other races.

The facts are that unemployment, including black unemployment, declined over Obama's 8 years. The economy improved. The uninsured rate went down significantly, including for black people (but not as low as it should have gone, thanks to the Supreme Court allowing states to decide whether they wanted to expand Medicaid or not). The Obama DOJ protected black voter rights, challenged countless attempts to supress the black vote. His DOJ was lax on marijuana and ended the crack cocaine sentencing disparity. His DOJ advised a reduction in mandatory minimum sentencing for drug offenses.

I'm not going to fault Obama for not fixing everything, nor am I going to fault him for having entire regions of the country actively attempting to obstruct his administration and literally punish black people for 8 years.
they can't suggest anything that would not:

1. Be immediately striked down by the supreme court
2. Prevent there ever being another non-white male being president
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

The Original
WOAT
Supporter
Joined
Dec 9, 2012
Messages
328,055
Reputation
-34,087
Daps
634,417
Reppin
The Deep State
OBAMA ACCOMPLISHMENTS (Up To Late 2016)

◦ The unemployment rate for African Americans peaked at 16.8 percent in March 2010, after experiencing a larger percentage-point increase from its pre-recession average to its peak than the overall unemployment rate did. Since then, the African-American unemployment rate has seen a larger percentage-point decline in the recovery, falling much faster than the overall unemployment rate over the last year.
◦ The real median income of black households increased by 4.1 percent between 2014 and 2015.

◦ The President enacted permanent expansions of the Earned Income Tax Credit and Child Tax Credit, which together now provide about 2 million African-American working families with an average tax cut of about $1,000 each.
◦ A recent report from the Census Bureau shows the remarkable progress that American families have made as the recovery continues to strengthen. Real median household income grew 5.2 percent from 2014 to 2015, the fastest annual growth on record. Income grew for households across the income distribution, with the fastest growth among lower- and middle-income households. The number of people in poverty fell by 3.5 million, leading the poverty rate to fall from 14.8 percent to 13.5 percent, the largest one-year drop since 1968, with even larger improvements including for African Americans, Hispanic Americans, and children.
◦ The poverty rate for African Americans fell faster in 2015 than in any year since 1999. While the poverty rate fell for across all racial and ethnic groups this year, it fell 2.1 percentage points (p.p.) for African Americans, resulting in 700,000 fewer African Americans in poverty.
◦ African American children also made large gains in 2015, with the poverty rate falling 4.2 percentage points and 400,000 fewer children in poverty.
Health
◦ Since the start of Affordable Care Act's first open enrollment period at the end of 2013, the uninsured rate among non-elderly African Americans has declined by more than half. Over that period, about 3 million uninsured nonelderly, African-American adults gained health coverage.
◦ Teen pregnancy among African-American women is at an historic low. The birth rate per 1,000 African-American teen females has fallen from 60.4 in 2008, before President Obama entered office, to 34.9 in 2014.

◦ Life expectancy at birth is the highest it’s ever been for African Americans. In 2014, life expectancy at birth was 72.5 years for African-American males and 78.4 for African-American females, the highest point in the historical series for both genders.
Education
◦ The high school graduation rate for African-American students is at its highest point in history. In the 2013-2014 academic year, 72.5 percent of African-American public high school students graduated within four years.
◦ Since the President took office, over one million more black and Hispanic students enrolled in college.
◦ Among African-Americans and Hispanic students 25 and older, high school completion is higher than ever before. Among African Americans, Hispanics, and Asian students 25 and older, Bachelor’s degree attainment is higher than ever before. As of 2015, 88 percent of the African-American population 25 and older had at least a high school degree and 23percent had at least a Bachelor’s degree.
Support for HBCUs
◦ The U.S. Department of Education (ED) is responsible for funding more than $4 billion for HBCUs each year.
◦ Pell Grant funding for HBCU students increased significantly between 2007 and 2014, growing from $523 million to $824 million.
◦ The President’s FY 2017 budget request proposes a new, $30 million competitive grant program, called the HBCU and Minority Serving Institutions (MSIs) Innovation for Completion Fund, designed to support innovative and evidence-based, student-centered strategies and interventions to increase the number of low-income students completing degree programs at HBCUs and MSIs.
◦ The First in the World (FITW) program provided unique opportunities for HBCUs to compete for grants focused on innovation to drive student success.
◦ In 2014, Hampton University received a grant award of $3.5 million.
◦ In FY 2015, three FITW awards were made to HBCUs, including Jackson State University ($2.9 million), Delaware State University ($2.6 million) and Spelman College ($2.7 million).

◦ While Congress did not fund the program in fiscal year 2016, the President’s 2017 budget request includes $100 million for the First in the World program, with up to $30 million set aside for HBCUs and MSIs.
Criminal Justice
◦ The incarceration rates for African-American men and women fell during each year of the Obama Administration and are at their lowest points in over two decades. The imprisonment rates for African-American men and women were at their lowest points since the early 1990s and late 1980s, respectively, of 2014, the latest year for which Bureau of Justice Statistics data are available.
◦ The number of juveniles in secure detention has been reduced dramatically over the last decade. The number of juveniles committed or detained, a disproportionate number of whom are African American, fell more than 30% between 2007 and 2013.
◦ The President has ordered the Justice Department to ban the use of solitary confinement for juveniles held in federal custody. There are presently no more juveniles being held in restrictive housing federally.
My Brother’s Keeper
◦ President Obama launched the My Brother’s Keeper initiative on February 27, 2014 to address persistent opportunity gaps faced by boys and young men of color and ensure that all young people can reach their full potential.
◦ Nearly 250 communities in all 50 states, 19 Tribal Nations, Washington, DC and Puerto Rico have accepted the President’s My Brother’s Keeper Community Challenge to dedicate resources and execute their own strategic plans to ensure all young people can reach their full potential.
◦ Inspired by the President’s call to action, philanthropic and other private organizations have committed to provide more than $600 million in grants and in-kind resources and $1 billion in low-interest financing to expand opportunity for young people – more than tripling the initial private sector investment since 2014.
◦ In May 2014, the MBK Task Force gave President Obama nearly 80 recommendations to address persistent opportunity gaps faced by young people, including boys and young men of color. Agencies have been working individually and collectively since to respond to recommendations with federal policy initiatives, grant programs, and guidance. Today, more than 80% of MBK Task Force Recommendations are complete or on track.
Advancing Equity for Women and Girls of Color
◦ In 2014, the Council on Women and Girls (CWG) launched a specific work stream called “Advancing Equity for Women and Girls of Color” to ensure that policies and programs across the federal government appropriately take into account the unique obstacles that women and girls of color can face. In fall 2015, CWG released a report that identified five data-driven issue areas where interventions can promote opportunities for success at school, work, and in the community.
◦ This work has also inspired independent commitments to advance equity, including a $100 million, 5-year-funding initiative by Prosperity Together—a coalition of women’s foundations—to improve economic prosperity for low-income women and women and girls of color and a $75 million funding commitment by the Collaborative to Advance Equity through Research—an affiliation of American colleges, universities, research organizations, publishers and public interest institutions led by Wake Forest University—to support existing and new research efforts about women and girls of color.
◦ At the United State of Women Summit in June 2016, eight organizations launched “Young Women’s Initiatives,” place-based, data-driven programs that will focus in on the local needs of young women of color. Those organizations include the Women’s Foundation of Minnesota, the Women’s Foundation of California, the Women's Foundation for a Greater Memphis, the Washington Area Women’s Foundation, the Dallas Women’s Foundation, the Women’s Fund of Greater Birmingham, the Women’s Fund of Western Massachusetts, and the New York Women’s Foundation.
Small Business
◦ There are 8 million minority-owned firms in the U.S.—a 38% increase since 2007.
◦ In early 2015, the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) launched the MBK Millennial Entrepreneurs Initiative, which seeks to address the challenges faced by underserved millennials, including boys and young men of color, through self-employment and entrepreneurship. A major component of this effort included the six-part video series, titled “Biz My Way,” which encourages millennials to follow their passion in business.
◦ In fiscal year 2015, underserved markets received 32,563 loans totaling $13 billion, compared with 25,799 loans and $10.47 billion in fiscal year 2014, an increase of 26 percent in number of loans and 24 percent in dollar amount.
◦ Last year, the SBA issued a new rule that makes most individuals currently on probation or parole eligible for a SBA microloan—a loan of up to $50,000 that helps small businesses start up. And in August 2016, SBA together with the W.K. Kellogg Foundation and Justine Petersen, launched the Aspire Entrepreneurship Initiative, a $2.1 Million pilot initiative to provide entrepreneurship education and microloans to returning citizens in Detroit, Chicago, Louisville and St. Louis.
Civil Rights Division
◦ The Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division continued to enforce federal law. Over the last eight years, the Division has vigorously protected the civil rights of individuals in housing, lending, employment, voting, education, and disability rights and through hate crimes and law enforcement misconduct prosecutions and law enforcement pattern and practice cases.
African-American Judicial Appointees
◦ President Obama has made 62 lifetime appointments of African Americans to serve on the federal bench.
◦ This includes 9 African-American circuit court judges.
◦ It also includes the appointment of 53 African American district court judges—including 26 African-American women appointed to the federal court, which is more African-American women appointed by any President in history.
◦ In total, 19% of the President’s confirmed judges have been African American, compared to 16% under President Bill Clinton and 7% under President George W. Bush.
◦ Five states now have their first African-American circuit judge; 10 states now have their first African-American female lifetime-appointed federal judge; and 3 districts now have their first African-American district judge.
◦ Also, the President appointed the first Haitian-American lifetime-appointed federal judge, the first Afro-Caribbean-born district judge, the first African-American female circuit judge in the Sixth Circuit, and the first African-American circuit judge on the First Circuit (who was also the first African-American female lifetime-appointed federal judge to serve anywhere in the First Circuit).
◦ The President is committed to continuing to ensure diversity on the federal bench. This year, the President nominated Myra Selby of Indiana to the Seventh Circuit, Abdul Kallon of Alabama to the Eleventh Circuit, and Rebecca Haywood of Pennsylvania to the Third Circuit. If confirmed, each of these would be a judicial first—Myra Selby would be the first African-American circuit judge from Indiana, Abdul Kallon would be the first African-American circuit judge from Alabama, and Rebecca Haywood would be the first African-American woman on the Third Circuit.In addition, two of the President’s district court nominees—Stephanie Finely and Patricia Timmons-Goodson—would be the first African-American lifetime-appointed federal judges in each of their respective districts, if confirmed.
 

TL15

Veteran
Joined
Mar 4, 2015
Messages
17,077
Reputation
14,051
Daps
138,536
Obama was the first black president to me. He will be forever :salute: for that. All the other shyt is crabs in a barrel to me :manny:

brehs are QUICK to say "what did Obama do for us?" But won't/don't vote locally, don't know their district, don't know who their senator is or even their governor :mjlol:

People become political pundits when it comes to Obama but couldn't tell you shyt about platforms of any other president. Have no clue how "No Child Left Behind" affected their own education, don't know who the Attorney General is...but want to say "but but but Obama didn't give me anything"

If it ain't congratulations then it sounds like hatin
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

The Original
WOAT
Supporter
Joined
Dec 9, 2012
Messages
328,055
Reputation
-34,087
Daps
634,417
Reppin
The Deep State
Obama was the first black president to me. He will be forever :salute: for that. All the other shyt is crabs in a barrel to me :manny:

brehs are QUICK to say "what did Obama do for us?" But won't/don't vote locally, don't know their district, don't know who their senator is or even their governor :mjlol:

People become political pundits when it comes to Obama but couldn't tell you shyt about platforms of any other president. Have no clue how "No Child Left Behind" affected their own education, don't know who the Attorney General is...but want to say "but but but Obama didn't give me anything"

If it ain't congratulations then it sounds like hatin
The Obama they wanted, would not have been elected.

Obama had to apologize for shyt he didn't even do. Reverend Jeremiah Wright said that shyt about America, and Obama didn't even go to church that day :heh: . Think about this for a moment. :wow:


I mean, even Jesse Jackson would have had to make compromises in office.

Look at Trump, he's really not even doing THAT much tangible and legislative harm outside of saying massively dangerous shyt and perpetuating a general republican agenda.

The Trump effect will be felt a lot more radically in 2018 and beyond. 2017 wasn't a good signal though.
 

hostsamurai

Demon King Of Salvation
Supporter
Joined
Nov 18, 2016
Messages
4,960
Reputation
9,075
Daps
23,776
Reppin
Bloodline
I've never heard anyone explain what exactly Obama was supposed to do for black people as a singular group. Or give an example of what a recent president has done for one singular race that didn't benefit any other races.

The facts are that unemployment, including black unemployment, declined over Obama's 8 years. The economy improved. The uninsured rate went down significantly, including for black people (but not as low as it should have gone, thanks to the Supreme Court allowing states to decide whether they wanted to expand Medicaid or not). The Obama DOJ protected black voter rights, challenged countless attempts to supress the black vote. His DOJ was lax on marijuana and ended the crack cocaine sentencing disparity. His DOJ advised a reduction in mandatory minimum sentencing for drug offenses.

I'm not going to fault Obama for not fixing everything, nor am I going to fault him for having entire regions of the country actively attempting to obstruct his administration and literally punish black people for 8 years.
I'm not an Obama hater, but whenever people start saying "Well golly, what did y'all expect" it always rub me the wrong way, because blacks voted for him in 08 because he was black and thought he would do something, anything, explicitly for black people. That didn't happen.

Then comes 2012 and black voters thought after he got his second term he wouldn't have his hands tied, but he didn't bring anything substantive. The only things I can really remember him trying were the grand bargain, TPP and never quite learning the GOP would never come to the table.

Also that cousin pookie moment, and saying if blacks didn't turn out for Hillary it would be a personal fail annoyed me.
 
Last edited:
Top