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Biden-Harris Final Call: The Protection of Children, Families, Democracy is What Matters in 2025 and Beyond

President Biden’s Farewell Address: The President delivered speech from the Oval Office
in the White House

My fellow Americans, I’m speaking to you tonight from the Oval Office. Before I begin, let me speak to important news from earlier today. After eight months of nonstop negotiation, my administration — by my administration — a cease-fire and a hostage deal has been reached by Israel and Hamas, the elements of which I laid out in great detail in May of this year.


This plan was developed and negotiated by my team, and it will be largely implemented by the incoming administration. That’s why I told my team to keep the incoming administration fully informed. Because that’s how it should be: Working together as Americans. This will be my final address to you, the American people, from the Oval Office, from this desk, as president. And I’ve been thinking a lot about who we are and, maybe more importantly, who we should be.


Long ago, in New York Harbor, an ironworker installed beam after beam, day after day. He was joined by steel workers, stonemasons, engineers. They built not just a single structure, but a beacon of freedom. The very idea of America was so big, we felt the entire world needed to see the Statue of Liberty, a gift from France after our Civil War. Like the very idea of America, it was built not by one person but by many people, from every background, and from around the world.


Like America, the Statue of Liberty is not standing still. Her foot literally steps forward atop a broken chain of human bondage. She’s on the march. And she literally moves. She was built to sway back and forth to withstand the fury of stormy weather, to stand the test of time because storms are always coming. She sways a few inches, but she never falls into the current below. An engineering marvel.


The Statue of Liberty is also an enduring symbol of the soul of our nation, a soul shaped by forces that bring us together and by forces that pull us apart. And yet, through good times and tough times, we have withstood it all. A nation of pioneers and explorers, of dreamers and doers, of ancestors native to this land, of ancestors who came by force.

A nation of immigrants who came to build a better life. A nation holding the torch of the most powerful idea ever in the history of the world: that all of us, all of us are created equal. That all of us deserve to be treated with dignity, justice and fairness. That democracy must defend, and be defined, and be imposed, moved in every way possible: Our rights, our freedoms, our dreams. But we know the idea of America, our institution, our people, our values that uphold it, are constantly being tested.


Ongoing debates about power and the exercise of power. About whether we lead by the example of our power or the power of our example. Whether we show the courage to stand up to the abuse of power, or we yield to it. After 50 years at the center of all of this, I know that believing in the idea of America means respecting the institutions that govern a free society — the presidency, the Congress, the courts, a free and independent press.

Institutions that are rooted — not just reflect the timeless words, but they — they echo the words of the Declaration of Independence: “We hold these truths to be self-evident.” Rooted in the timeless words of the Constitution: “We the People.” Our system of separation of powers, checks and balances — it may not be perfect, but it’s maintained our democracy for nearly 250 years, longer than any other nation in history that’s ever tried such a bold experiment.


In the past four years, our democracy has held strong. And every day, I’ve kept my commitment to be president for all Americans, through one of the toughest periods in our nation’s history. I’ve had a great partner in Vice President Kamala Harris. It’s been the honor of my life to see the resilience of essential workers getting us through a once-in-a-century pandemic, the heroism of service members and first responders keeping us safe, the determination of advocates standing up for our rights and our freedoms.


Instead of losing their jobs to an economic crisis that we inherited, millions of Americans now have the dignity of work. Millions of entrepreneurs and companies, creating new businesses and industries, hiring American workers, using American products. And together, we have launched a new era of American possibilities: one of the greatest modernizations of infrastructure in our entire history, from new roads, bridges, clean water, affordable high-speed internet for every American.


We invented the semiconductor, smaller than the tip of my little finger, and now is bringing those chip factories and those jobs back to America where they belong, creating thousands of jobs. Finally giving Medicare the power to negotiate lower prescription drug prices for millions of seniors. And finally doing something to protect our children and our families by passing the most significant gun safety law in 30 years. And bringing violent crime to a 50-year low.

Meeting our sacred obligation to over one million veterans so far who were exposed to toxic materials, and to their families, providing medical care and education benefits and more for their families.


You know, it will take time to feel the full impact of all we’ve done together. But the seeds are planted, and they’ll grow, and they’ll bloom for decades to come. At home, we have created nearly 17 million new jobs, more than any other single administration in a single term. More people have health care than ever before. And overseas, we have strengthened NATO. Ukraine is still free. And we’ve pulled ahead in our competition with China.

And so much more. I’m so proud of how much I’ve accomplished together for the American people, and I wish the incoming administration success. Because I want America to succeed.


That’s why I’ve upheld my duty to ensure a peaceful and orderly transition of power to ensure we lead by the power of our example. I have no doubt that America is in a position to continue to succeed.


That’s why my farewell address tonight, I want to warn the country of some things that give me great concern. And this is a dangerous — and that’s the dangerous concentration of power in the hands of a very few ultrawealthy people, and the dangerous consequences if their abuse of power is left unchecked. Today, an oligarchy is taking shape in America of extreme wealth, power and influence that literally threatens our entire democracy, our basic rights and freedoms and a fair shot for everyone to get ahead. We see the consequences all across America. And we’ve seen it before.


More than a century ago, the American people stood up to the robber barons back then and busted the trusts. They didn’t punish the wealthy. They just made the wealthy play by the rules everybody else had. Workers want rights to earn their fair share. You know, they were dealt into the deal, and it helped put us on the path to building the largest middle class, the most prosperous century any nation the world has ever seen. We’ve got to do that again.


The last four years, that is exactly what we have done. People should be able to make as much as they can, but pay — play by the same rules, pay their fair share in taxes. So much is at stake. Right now, the existential threat of climate change has never been clearer. Just look across the country, from California to North Carolina. That’s why I signed the most significant climate and clean energy law ever, ever in the history of the world.


And the rest of the world is trying to model it now. It’s working, creating jobs and industries of the future. Now we have proven we don’t have to choose between protecting the environment and growing the economy. We’re doing both. But powerful forces want to wield their unchecked influence to eliminate the steps we’ve taken to tackle the climate crisis, to serve their own interests for power and profit.

We must not be bullied into sacrificing the future, the future of our children and our grandchildren. We must keep pushing forward, and push faster. There is no time to waste. It is also clear that American leadership in technology is unparalleled, an unparalleled source of innovation that can transform lives. We see the same dangers in the concentration of technology, power and wealth.


You know, in his farewell address, President Eisenhower spoke of the dangers of the military-industrial complex. He warned us that about, and I quote, “The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power.” Six days — six decades later, I’m equally concerned about the potential rise of a tech-industrial complex that could pose real dangers for our country as well.
Americans are being buried under an avalanche of misinformation and disinformation enabling the abuse of power. The free press is crumbling. Editors are disappearing. Social media is giving up on fact-checking. The truth is smothered by lies told for power and for profit. We must hold the social platforms accountable to protect our children, our families and our very democracy from the abuse of power. Meanwhile, artificial intelligence is the most consequential technology of our time, perhaps of all time.


Nothing offers more profound possibilities and risks for our economy, and our security, our society. For humanity. Artificial intelligence even has the potential to help us answer my call to end cancer as we know it. But unless safeguards are in place, A.I. could spawn new threats to our rights, our way of life, to our privacy, how we work, and how we protect our nation. We must make sure A.I. is safe and trustworthy and good for all humankind.


In the age of A.I., it’s more important than ever that the people must govern. And as the Land of Liberty, America — not China — must lead the world in the development of A.I.
You know, in the years ahead, it’s going to be up to the president, the presidency, the Congress, the courts, the free press, and the American people to confront these powerful forces. We must reform the tax code. Not by giving the biggest tax cuts to billionaires, but by making them begin to pay their fair share.


We need to get dark money — that’s that hidden funding behind too many campaign contributions — we need to get it out of our politics. We need to enact an 18-year time limit, term limit, time and term, for the strongest ethics — and the strongest ethics reforms for our Supreme Court. We need to ban members of Congress from trading stock while they are in the Congress. We need to amend the Constitution to make clear that no president, no president is immune from crimes that he or she commits while in office. The president’s power is not limit — it is not absolute. And it shouldn’t be.


And in a democracy, there is another danger — that the concentration of power and wealth. It erodes a sense of unity and common purpose. It causes distrust and division. Participating in our democracy becomes exhausting and even disillusioning, and people don’t feel like they have a fair shot. We have to stay engaged in the process. I know it’s frustrating. A fair shot is what makes America, America. Everyone is entitled to a fair shot, not a guarantee, just a fair shot, an even playing field. Going as far as your hard work and talent can take you.


We can never lose that essential truth to remain who we are. I’ve always believed, and I told other world leaders, America will be defined by one word: possibilities. Only in America do we believe anything is possible. Like a kid with a stutter from modest beginnings in Scranton, Pennsylvania, and Claymont, Delaware, sitting behind this desk in the Oval Office as president of the United States.


That is the magic of America. It’s all around us. Upstairs in the residence of the White House, I’ve walked by a painting of a Statue of Liberty I don’t how many times. In the painting there are several workers climbing on the outstretched arm of the statue that holds the torch. It reminds me every day I pass it of the story and soul of our nation, and the power of the American people.


There is a story of a veteran — a veteran, a son of an immigrant, whose job was to climb that torch and polish the amber panes so rays of light could reach out as far as possible. He was known as the keeper of the flame. He once said of the Statue of Liberty, “Speaks a silent, universal language, one of hope that anyone who seeks and speaks freedom can understand.”
Yes, we sway back and forth to withstand the fury of the storm, to stand the test of time, a constant struggle, constant struggle. A short distance between peril and possibility. But what I believe is the America of our dreams is always closer than we think. And it’s up to us to make our dreams come true.


Let me close by stating my gratitude to so many people. To the members of my administration, as well as public service and first responders across the country and around the world, thank you for stepping up to serve. To our service members and their families, it has been the highest honor of my life to lead you as commander in chief.


And of course, to Kamala and her incredible partner. A historic vice president. She and Doug have become like family. And to me, family is everything.
My deepest appreciation to our amazing first lady who is with me in the Oval today. For our entire family. You are the love of my life and the life of my love.


My eternal thanks to you, the American people. After 50 years of public service, I give you my word, I still believe in the idea for which this nation stands — a nation where the strength of our institutions and the character of our people matter and must endure. Now it’s your turn to stand guard. May you all be the keeper of the flame. May you keep the faith. I love America. You love it, too.


God bless you all, and may God protect our troops. Thank you for this great honor.

Gov. Hochul’s State of the State Address: Agenda for 2025

By Mary Alice Miller
Governor Hochul’s State of the State address focused on affordability and safety, two themes designed to persuade New Yorkers to raise their families in the state instead of moving elsewhere under financial pressure.


In the forward to her 129-page 2025 State of the State book, Hochul stated, “As we reflect on the state of our great state, two things are clear to me: our future depends upon the ability of every family to afford the essentials of life, and our future depends upon our ability to protect the safety and security of our residents.”


The governor outlined a few of her proposals in her address.
She called for a sweeping middle-class income tax cut benefitting 8.3 million taxpayers making less than 323,000 dollars, the lowest tax rates in seven decades. Her national first inflation refund would refund three hundred dollars for individuals and five hundred dollars for families bringing in less than 300,000 dollars annually.


Hochul called for tripling the maximum benefit to 1000 dollars for babies and kids up to the age of four, a boost of the credit for school-age children to 500 dollars in 2026, put New York on a pathway to universal childcare.

Hochul wants the state to invest 110 million dollars to build new childcare centers, renovate existing ones, expand options for families and communities all over New York, and establish a corps of substitute childcare professionals so someone’s always on call.

In addition, Hochul wants every child to get free breakfast and lunch at school so that children who are in need will be spared the embarrassment and the stigma of standing out among their classmates.


“We cannot allow our subway to be a rolling homeless shelter,” said Hochul. She called for dedicated teams to help get the severely ill and homeless off our subways and into supportive housing.

She called for expanding involuntary commitment into a hospital to include someone who does not possess the mental capacity to care for themselves such as refusing help with the basics: clothing, food, shelter, medical care, and strengthening Kendra’s Law so those with serious mental health challenges get into long term treatment.


She wants to see uniformed police on the platforms and on every single train overnight – 9 p.m. to 5 a.m. – over the next six months, more barriers in stations to prevent commuters from falling or being pushed onto train tracks, modernized gates to deter fair beaters, and triage centers at the end of all the major routes where people can get off and get assistance 24/7.


Hochul’s “Unplug and Play” initiative would build new playgrounds and create hundreds of thousands of new opportunities for kids to join music and drama clubs, youth volunteer organizations, and sports teams as an alternative to hours of cell phone social media use.


In order to make housing more affordable, Hochul proposes 100 million dollars to build starter homes and provide down payment assistance for first-time homebuyers and ban private equity companies from bidding on properties the first 75 days that they’re on the market.


She wants to make community college completely free for students ages 25-55 who enter high-demand fields like advanced manufacturing, education and healthcare.
She is calling for an historic $1 billion investment to further the transition to a zero emission economy via offshore wind and hydroelectricity.


Hochul said her overall policies look to driving down crime, lowering taxes, investing in childcare and education, jobs, new homes, clean energy, small businesses and building a strong economy that will endure for generations.


On the opening day of the 2025 legislative session, Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie called for providing more tax relief to our middle-class families and eliminating state income taxes for low-income families.


He would help small businesses struggling under the staggering unemployment liability and penalties held over from the pandemic and replenish more than $6 billion owed to the federal Unemployment Insurance Trust Fund.


Heastie seeks more equitable school funding, an increase funding for afterschool programs for children and families in high need school districts, and expansion of the free lunch program to all students across the state.


He called for federal funding of New York’s transit system.
Heastie wants the state to the needs of people struggling with mental health, substance use disorders and homelessness , and an increase in resources and standards for successful Raise the Age programs across the state.


“Time and time again we have fought to get the most vulnerable New Yorkers the services they need to thrive, and we will continue to work towards a brighter future for all,” said Heastie. “To stay on that path, we must do more than simply identify problems. We must find solutions. And I have faith that we can do that together.”


Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins addressed her conference at the opening of the legislative session by calling for expansion of universal pre-kindergarten, taking it one step further by moving towards Universal child care and continuing to fully fund public schools.


“No New Yorker should put off medical care due to worry about the cost,” said Stewart-Cousins. “Furthermore, as New Yorkers grapple with their utility bills, we will double down on efforts to lower the cost of energy and protect rate payers from price gouging, All this while continuing to tackle exorbitant costs at the register for food and clothing.”


Stewart-Cousins said the state will “continue to stand up for our farmers because they are a critical piece of our fight for affordable food because we know if there is no farm there is no food.”


She called on addressing New York’s housing crisis by protecting tenants and making bold investments in affordable working class, middle income housing, including helping first time home buyers, and support our existing programs that will keep people in their homes amid financial setbacks and advance policies that keep the cost of living down for our seniors and our veterans and other on fixed incomes.


“As the birthplace of the American labor movement we know that unions are one of the shortest paths to the middle class,” said Stewart-Cousins. “We’ll continue to advance robust labor protections and benefits to expand our workforce from the from the ground up. We’ll remain a safe haven with the right to organize and collectively bargain is not only recognized but encouraged.”


Stewart-Cousins said “Tackling the affordability crisis and getting New Yorkers back on track must be our top priority.”

Mayor’s Proposals: The City of Yes or Not Really?

By Nayabe Arinde
Editor at Large
To hear Mayor Eric Adams Nirvana is coming to a city block near you soon.
A sea of different groups rallying against him last week loudly disagreed as he delivered his State of the City address at the Apollo Theater. With a choir and a drumline and plenty of Brooklyn flair, the Brownsville-born, Queens-raised, Manhattan-residing elected delivered his State of the City address. Muiti-issue protesters joined the shut Rikers protestors as they gathered and heckled outside the famed theater.


Mayor Adams said he was aware of the grievances, offering, “We want to close Rikers, yes, but we have to close the damn pipeline that feeds Rikers.”

City Council Speaker Adriene Adams analyzed Adams’ hyper-produced address.
“Building an affordable and equitable city, where all New Yorkers can successfully raise a family, must be a shared goal throughout our government…The reality is that too many families are departing the city they love. Our city’s Black population has declined by nearly 200,000 people over the past two decades due to the rising cost of living and a lack of affordable homeownership opportunities.

Black and Latino New Yorkers are leaving our city at disproportionately high rates, and families with young children are twice as likely to leave than those with no children. In order for our city to stem the exodus of working- and middle-class families, the scale of the Administration’s actions and investments must match this stated priority.”


To halt the suburb-bound flow of NYC families, the Mayor announced the launch of the City of Yes for Families, which could include “800 units of housing alongside a brand new library on the Upper West Side.”


New York City “is finally becoming a City of Yes,” proclaimed Adams. “We shattered affordable housing records for the second year in a row and unlocked billions of dollars for public housing.”


Speaker Adams continued, “This Council has always championed solutions for our working families – from fighting for early childhood education to more affordable housing and homeownership opportunities and expanding economic and educational opportunities – but far too often, we’ve faced resistance from the Administration when it comes time to negotiate the budget. We will continue to work with all stakeholders to achieve these priorities for our city and will also hold the Administration accountable to delivering for New Yorkers.”


Mayor Adams said he is creating “2,000 new mixed-income homes at 100 Gold Street, where many of our city staff work today. We’ve already introduced five neighborhood plans to build up to 50,000 homes from Brooklyn to the Bronx.”


As for homelessness, Adams said that he is using “new teams that brought together law enforcement and nurses. We helped more than 8,000 New Yorkers…move off our subway system into shelters.”
Critics were ready.


“He said he took 8,000 people off the streets and put them where? In new homes? No in shelters, where there are already 130,000 plus families, and of that, there are 146,000 school children. That’s a disgrace,” former City Council and Assemblyman Charles Barron told Our Time Press, “They have more people living in shelters now than ever before under Eric Adams.”


In an effort to keep the subway safe, he praised his “ambitious $650 million investment to tackle street homelessness in New York City,” including 900 new Safe Haven beds and “a new housing facility just for unsheltered New Yorkers with serious mental illness.”


Praising his City of Yes with $5 billion for housing and infrastructure, Adams thanked what he called “an unprecedented coalition of advocates, councilmembers and city agencies.”
Barron continued, “I am still trying to find this fantasy city that he was talking about where crime and homelessness are down, and the city is safe, and they’re building more affordable housing, and everybody is living happily.

He also said he had extended his life expectancy to 83 years old. Tell that to Jordan Neeley, whose killer you complimented–the racist marine who choked him to death on a subway train. He didn’t make it to 83; he was 30 years old.”


Adams told the Apollo Theater audience that he had tasked Police Commissioner Jesica Tisch with keeping riders safe and feeling “comfortable riding our subway–we’re starting by adding hundreds of new police officers to our subway system later this month.”


Barron is undeterred, telling Our Time Press, “Mayor Adams talked about a city that does not exist. We have high crime rates all over the city. We have a $112 billion budget, and he did nothing to eradicate poverty.

He said we have millions of jobs, but it didn’t trickle down to the hood. We have double-digit unemployment in every Black and brown neighborhood. He cut vital services to all city agencies when we had a surplus in the budget.”


The Mayor said his administration “cut Black and Latino unemployment by more than 20 percent,” and “the JobsNYC new website connected nearly 8,500 New Yorkers to jobs and job training.”


The 3-year NYC Mayor talked about how he would authorize “investing in our young people. We know that if we do not educate, we will incarcerate…This year, we began a $163 million expansion of five of our most successful programs that engage young people who need extra help.”


Barron challenged, “Mayor Adams brought back Giuliani’s racist Street Crime Unit; 95% of all the people they arrested and stopped and frisked were Black and brown. Eric Adams brought back solitary confinement. He got the City Council to pass the City of Yes, a pro-real estate policy that allows them to build housing that is not affordable to us.

Half the City Council and the Community Boards voted against it. Then, he is trying to manipulate the Black vote by having it in Harlem, which he has done nothing for. With its double-digit unemployment and gentrification and the crime rate. I don’t think he got over.”


Adams asserted “a $485 million action plan to prevent gun violence. Over the past three years, we have driven murders and shootings down by double digits and padlocked more than 1,300 illegal smoke shops.”
Gleefully, Adams cheered on his $5 billion ‘City of Yes’ housing initiative, which aims to create 80,000 new homes in the next decade and a half.
So, the City says it is building affordable housing. But affordable to whom?
For example, not uncommon, the Housing Lottery has $125,000 as a minimum qualifying salary consideration for 150 Noll Housing in Bushwick.

Could this be the City of No, not really, then?
Determined to check every angle, Barron said, “The City of Yes is really the City of Nahh. It is the developers’ proposal that will increase their profit. It is not a people-friendly proposal. It will create gentrification in our neighborhoods.
“He is really not thinking about the working class population. The Mayor should do the same, but he is considering his re-election and real estate cronies.”
Adams said he is striving to create a “safer, more affordable city for working-class people, especially those raising a family, all across the five boroughs.”

Cultural Affairs Commissioner Laurie Cumbo Nurtures Arts Institutions in NYC Communities

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By Fern Gillespie
When New York City Commissioner of Cultural Affairs Laurie Cumbo was growing up in Brooklyn’s East Flatbush, arts and culture were a family affair in her home. Before she was born, her mother, Beverly, worked at Lincoln Center as a tour guide.

Later, she would watch her mother perform as an actor in operas like Aida and La Bohème at the Metropolitan Opera. “My mom would take me to art classes at Pratt Institute.

I also went to Kingsborough Community College for art classes,” she told Our Time Press. Her father, Wilkins, was a jazz aficionado. “He loved taking me to nightclubs and to jazz performances,” she said. “He would take me every year to the International African Arts Festival at Boys and Girls High School. I did a lot of great things that I enjoyed in terms of art exposure in Brooklyn and beyond.”


Then, as a 15-year-old student at Brooklyn Technical High School, she received an internship at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. “That opportunity and exposure changed my life. I knew from working there as an intern that this was in fact what I wanted to do.

Fast forward to now. I am the Commissioner of Cultural Affairs for New York City from the exposure of that one internship,” she said. The Met’s magic continued for her at the 2022 Met Gala when her boyfriend, Bobby Digi Olisa, gallantly proposed on the museum’s famed steps.


“I think that all of the different pieces of my life have completely prepared me for this opportunity,” said Cumbo, who holds a bachelor’s degree in fine arts from Spelman College and a master’s in visual arts administration from New York University.

Her career has also spanned working at the Brooklyn Children’s Museum, Brooklyn Museum, serving on the New York City Council, and founding MoCADA: The Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts.


For fiscal year 2025, Cumbo has secured a record $254 million budget and restored $53 million in cuts to cultural funding. Her impact has been seen in New York City communities that have been systemically underfunded and underserved. Communities like the Bronx, where the City is developing the first Hip Hop Museum, the first Bronx children’s museum, and conducted major renovations to the Bronx Museum of Art.

In Queens, there have been substantial resources to the Louis Armstrong House to bring a state-of-the-art museum and historical site to the beautiful residential community.

For Harlem, capital dollars were put into the National Black Theater, the Studio Museum in Harlem, and the Apollo. In Brooklyn, investments have helped save Magnolia Tree Earth Center, build a new home for 651 Arts and assist MoCADA and Billie Holiday Theatre. For Staten Island, the African American Sandy Ground Historical Society site.

Manhattan has seen the re-opening of LaMaMa Theater; capital is invested into Nuyorican Poets Café and a state-of-the-art theatre space for People’s Theatre Project in Washington Heights.


“It’s really been a time of investment in communities that have been underserved for generations. They are seeing for the first time opportunities for investment, resources, and to have their culture elevated at a very high level,” said Cumbo. “So, that they have world-class, state-of-the-art equipment, theater, and sound systems for world-class stages. That’s so vital when you’re presenting art and culture that it has a world-class state-of-the-art space.”


For cultural organizations, remaining in communities can be a challenge. NYC Create in Place, established by the NYC Department of Cultural Affairs, provides technical assistance and support to cultural and creative organizations that are facing long-term or acute challenges like legal, financial, or housing.

“It’s exposing our organizations to opportunities in the City of New York that will assist help and support their organizations not only to sustain but to thrive,” she said. “We want organizations to come to us to be able to in order to have those resources in place in order to assist them.”


“Economically, cultural institutions are great drivers for the economy. Tourism is critical to New York City’s economy on so many levels. It attracts people to New York City, and then people go and support our restaurants, shopping and retail,” said Cumbo.

“So if neighborhoods really want to thrive, it’s critical that they have a cultural institution there that’s constantly and consistently bringing audience there. So, it can also spill out into the community and it can create an economic flow.”


To make cultural activities available to low-income New Yorkers, there is the Culture Pass through the NYC Public Library, IDNYC Card, and the Cool Culture website. In addition, the NYC Department of Cultural Affairs has created a cool collaboration.

“We are also going to be announcing a program with the American Museum of Natural History where people with EBT cards are going to be able to visit the museum for free, as well as to visit the special exhibitions for free,” said Cumbo. “We are constantly coming up with different programs to be able to experience and see New York City in an affordable way.”


Cumbo is part of a new cultural leadership of Black executives heading major mainstream arts institutions. “It’s something that we’ve never seen before,” she said.

These cultural leaders include Dr. Sean Decatur at the American Museum of Natural History; Gina Duncan at the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM); Atiba Edwards at Brooklyn Children’s Museum; Wes Jackson at BRIC; and Rasu Jilani at Brooklyn Arts Council.


Like her parents, Cumbo is instilling the love of arts in her six-year-old son Prince Noah. “One of the many benefits is that my son is able to accompany me to a lot of events. He’s become quite popular himself and now they want him to participate.

The press want him to talk about different exhibitions and programs,” she said. “He loves to participate. The most fun part is us doing it together. He calls himself the junior commissioner!”

Sharpton Addresses Leaders At Home in Brooklyn

The Rev. Al Sharpton, the globally known social justice advocate, minister and civil rights and human rights leader, was the special guest speaker at the first monthly meeting of the African American Clergy and Elected Officials organization (AACEO), Jan. 3 at Antioch Baptist Church in Brooklyn, NY. The Rev. Dr. Robert M. Waterman is the pastor of Antioch and the president of AACEO. Our Time Press contributor Mary Alice Williams’ coverage appeared in the January 9 issue of this paper. This week, Rev. Robert Waterman, pastor of Antioch and president of AACEO, reflects on the message of his fellow native Brooklynite, whose speech will be presented in an Our Time Press series, leading to 2025 Black History month. AACEO, formed in 1989, is the largest organization of its kind in New York State.

I am happy to be here again for this gathering. And we should not take for granted the unusual and unique blessing that we have in our own Reverend Robert Waterman. He is convening these (AACEO meetings) on a monthly basis, and to have people with influence come together and be accountable is something we should not take for granted.
What Waterman has done (is) now a tradition.


Our leaders knowing they better show up is important because they do not acknowledge you if you do not make them show up. Too often, our ministers go downtown to meet people with some power. It is more important to make them come to see you; their journey to you lets you know they respect you.


If nobody comes to you, they don’t respect you. They put you on their schedule for 15 minutes, smile for a selfie, then head to the gate to “get out of here.”
Waterman has perfected getting folks to come to you here in Bedford-Stuyvesant. Give him his respect.


And to all of you here, let me say that Waterman actually talks publicly about The Black Church in the Trump Era. And this is the second Trump era.


So, as I was riding down Greene Avenue to Antioch Baptist Church, I thought about several things: I remember we used to come here when I was a little boy, maybe nine or ten years old. Rev. George Lawrence was the pastor. And Rev. Lawrence and Rev. Dr. William Augustus Jones of Bethany Baptist Church, Rev. Dr. Sandy Ray of Cornerstone, and Rev. Dr. Gardner C. Taylor of Concord Baptist Church of Christ were the giants of ministry in Brooklyn.


I remember, at the time, SUNY Downstate Medical Center was being built. Early 60’s, 62 or 63. That was so important to me, and it is in my memory all these years later because those ministers said you couldn’t build Downstate unless you hired some blacks at the construction site. Talk about Men – Taylor! Bill! John! Paul! They went to the site and sat down to be arrested and stop the construction until they hired black contractors. All of them! Together! Look at Bill Anderson from Siloam Presbyterian.


I look back now and see one of the things that’s been done so well is the separation of our generations from the generations that came before. If they can cut you off from your background, from your history, then you won’t know what worked and what didn’t work because they got you thinking history started with you. Nice, nice, nice.


The first thing they do is work on your mental state: when they brought us here in 1619, first thing they did was make you forget your history. Yes, yes. Because if you remember you were princesses, princes and scientists and all in Africa, it would be hard for them to enslave you. So the first thing they did is, well, forget all of that.

We say, “Your daddy, your Georgia, your mom down in Alabama, your sister in Mississippi.” Forget all that; your name is not Kunta Kunte anymore, it’s Toby. Now, we’ve been going from state to state for centuries of Toby’s because they forgot who they were. One of the things that amazed me about Downstate was Bishop Anthony Washington, who I started preaching under when I was four years old.


Bishop Washington. was in the Church of God in Christ. He was not politically active or civil rights active in the 1960s, but joined Reverend Jones and the rest of them at Downstate and got arrested. One of the few coaching preachers that would do that. But the other person that was there that was uncharacteristic was Malcolm X. And Malcolm X stood there. Am I right? I heard a yep, you must know. Yeah, the old folks told me. The old folks told you. You trying to call me old folks? No, I’m sorry. We’ll talk about that after.


What I’m saying is that there was a time when we did not find it impossible to cross our ideological, religious, and denominational lines. Because we understood some things benefited all of us. And what they’ve been able to do is divide us. And division is what kept slavery in line for 246 years. 246 years of slavery. After that, 100 years of Jim Crow. All of that worked, as long as we were divided.


If you read American history, we were brought here in 1619, James Day. Correct. They never incorporated and brought the country together. In fact, they never even declared independence until 1776, which meant we’d been slaves 157 years before they even told King George they wanted independence. We’ve already slaved. Then they made a Constitution in Philadelphia to reform the country. We had already been slaves. The constant in this country was to work us without wages. And that’s what made the U.S. what it was.


Then we went all the way to the 1800s. The Abolitionist movement started. Blacks and whites were in it together. And they began saying slavery wasn’t lawful. They were the minority. They were the outcasts. It has always been those that were on the outside that were considered fringe. They had to change the mainstream to make it work. So, Lincoln became president, and we saw the rise of the South, Jefferson Davis, and the Confederates.

Lincoln was not an abolitionist. But the abolitionists had gained enough steam to get the attention of the country. And as Sherman and the Confederate army started moving north, many of them went to Lincoln and the abolitionists and said, “You need to free the slaves and let them join the Union army.” Lincoln didn’t want to do it because Lincoln was torn between his morality and his politics.


Finally, when they got far enough north, they got all the way to Virginia and Maryland, Lincoln freed the slaves because they needed the manpower to fight the Confederate Army. And when he freed the slaves in the South and they joined the Confederate army, he backed them up. And the Confederate army, under Sherman and then Robert E. Lee, was backed up by slaves reinforcing the Union army. That’s why we won’t teach our children that Lincoln freed the slaves. The slaves freed Lincoln. And because of that, Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation.


Now, the Emancipation Proclamation was not law. It was a presidential order. Just like we got Biden to sign the George Floyd Bill. The Proclamation didn’t become law until it went into the Constitution.


Lincoln signed the proclamation. In the proclamation, he said that on January 1, 1863, the slaves can walk off. They can leave the plantation. They’re free. Watch Night for us was always different than Watch Night for others. Because Watch Night for us was to see whether Lincoln was going to keep his promise. That’s why I celebrate Watch Night differently than Martin Luther King did.
Because I’m thinking about whether the promise was kept.

  • to be continued