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opinion Children of All Classes Hit By Bad Economy years. If anything, it has declined.” This is not what Dr. King urged. Throughout his life he spoke out against injustice in all of its forms and believed economic injustice was one of our nation’s and world’s greatest sins. He also believed we could and must work urgently to right that wrong. “Somehow the preacher and honey, but God has command- ed us to be concerned about the slums down here and his children who can’t eat three square meals a day. It’s all right to talk about the new Jerusalem, but one day God’s preacher must talk about the new New York, the new Atlanta, the new Philadelphia, the new Los Angeles, the new Memphis, Tennessee. This is what we have Hurricane Can’t stop MLk •enteRtainment •music Reviews •bulletin boaRd •Rss Feeds th es ka •local news •national news •Jobs, bids •astoRe I am perplexed that those who are affected by this economy, and those who claim to advocate for them, have not been more effective in protest is also available on mobile phones at theskannermobile.com e.c MOBILE H television because they had urricane Irene hit no means to travel to the East Coast with B ENNEtt Washington. Maybe a vengeance, caus- C ollEGE they’d watch on ing inconvenience, interrup- television. With a rise in tion, and postponements. Julianne the number of people who Perhaps the most notable Malveaux are homeless, there might postponement was that of be no television to watch. the Martin Luther King, Jr. While Dr. King chose to celebration, which was to identify with the poor, the take place on Aug. 28, 48 homeless, the unemployed, years after Dr. King gave his historic “I Have A Dream” speech. many of the African Americans involved in Thus, activities that were to span the week public policy have chosen to ignore them. Former Congressman and Ambassador were, instead, concluded with an interfaith prayer service that drew more than a thou- Andrew Young spoke at the Interfaith Service and invoked Dr. King’s line that sand people. If one adheres to the scripture (Romans “out of a mountain of despair, a stone of 8:28) that “all things work together for hope.” Indeed, the memorial is being good,” it is possible to ruminate about any described as “a stone of hope.” “You and I greater meaning in the postponement of the must become stones of hope in this world of King celebration. It is interesting that one despair,” said Ambassador Young. In the definition of postpone is, “to put off some- face of an economic downturn and the mar- ginalization of the poor, stones of hope would organize, mobilize, and lobby for laws that pro- mote economic fairness. Instead, we have meekly accepted the extension of Bush tax cuts, meekly accepted rising poverty and high unemployment. I am perplexed that those who are affected by this thing until a later time, to defer”. Similarly, economy, and those who claim to advocate the definition of interruption is “to stop or for them, have not been more effective in hinder by breaking in”. Hurricane Irene just protest. Our failures may have the most impact on busted in to stop, to hinder, to defer. And while the beloved Rev. Joseph Lowery said, the next generation, as increased child “With all the things Black folk have been poverty has a negative impact on a young through, no little hurricane can come to stop person’s later life chances. If we claim to be us,” the fact is that Irene did exactly that, if stones of hope for the next generation, then it is incumbent on us to make greater invest- only in the short run. To postpone is to defer. Isn’t that exactly ments in children and their parents. what has happened to Dr. King’s dream? In so many ways it has been deferred, espe- Read the rest of this story online at cially for the poorest of Americans, those www.theskanner.com who would have watched the celebration on Marian wright edelman is a lifelong advocate for disadvan- taged americans and is the President of the Children’s Defense Fund. om Children in suburbs and communities that haven’t experienced significant rates of child poverty in the past are struggling too to do.” Dr. King delivered those words in Memphis on April 3, 1968—the night before he was assassinat- ed. In the months leading up to his death, he was mounting a Poor People’s Campaign urging America to hear and see and “deal with the problems of the poor.” Dr. King’s vision of a new America has not yet come to pass, indeed is vanishing for the 43.6 million poor Americans including 15.5 million poor children, but he believed that as a people we would get there. But that depends on our leaders and the demands citizens place on them. Addressing increasing child poverty and parental joblessness is the very first step the Administration and Congress must take as they return to Washington and get back to busi- ness. And it must be the top prior- ity of governors in every state— too many of whom are eager to give tax cuts to the non-needy and impose budget cuts on the neediest including our children. bil 45.9 percent since 2001. The number of Ohio counties with at least 25 percent of children living in poverty more than doubled from 15 in 2008 to 31 in 2009. Rural child poverty was the most common in Ohio followed by urban child poverty. But in these tough times, children in sub- urbs and communities that haven’t experienced significant rates of child poverty in the past are strug- gling too, and help and solutions are urgently needed from Ohio’s state and congressional leaders. Ohio is far from alone. The Annie E. Casey Foundation’s 22nd annual national KIDS COUNT Data Book shows a sig- nificant decline in economic well- being for low income children and families across the country over the last ten years. The official child poverty rate, which they note is actually “a conservative meas- ure of economic hardship,” must have a kind of fire shut up in his bones, and whenever injustice is around he must tell it . . . Somehow the preacher must say with Jesus, ‘The spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he hath anointed me, and he has anointed me to deal with the problems of the poor.’…It’s all right to talk about long white robes over yon- der, in all of its symbolism, but ultimately people want some suits and dresses and shoes to wear down here. It’s all right to talk about streets flowing with milk mo Marian Wright Edelman increased 18 percent between 2000 and 2009. And they say, “Although the recession is techni- cally over, it is clear that a large portion of America’s families con- tinue to confront daunting chal- lenges . . . Unemployment remains high, median household income is down, and many families have depleted their savings and other assets. As they struggle to recov- er, families face the reality that intergenerational economic mobil- ity in the United States has not changed much over the past 40 er C HIlD W atCH nn “I have the audacity to believe that peoples everywhere can have three meals a day for their bodies, education and culture for their minds, and dignity, equality and freedom for their spirits.” This passage from Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s acceptance speech for the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize is part of the Inscription Wall of the new memorial honoring Dr. King on the National Mall. But as we honor Dr. King’s legacy in our nation’s capital, the audacious belief that every family should be able to afford simple necessities like enough to eat is at risk in Washington, D.C. and across the country. The poor are getting poorer. The Children’s Defense Fund- Ohio, through the support of the Annie E. Casey Foundation, just released the Ohio’s KIDS COUNT: 2010 Data Book, an annual report that provides snap- shots of the well-being of Ohio’s children. With unemployment in Ohio reaching 10.6 percent last year, we found thousands of Ohio children and their families pushed to the front lines of economic suf- fering. The overall poverty rate for Ohio’s children was 21.6 per- cent in 2009, jumping 16.8 percent in a single year and increasing august 31, 2011 The Portland Skanner Page 5