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Obama Urges Black Voters, “GO TO THE POLLS!”

Obama Tells Black Voters It’s a “Personal Insult” If They Don’t Go to the Polls

“You want to give me a good send-off? Go vote.”

P.R. Lockhart, motherjones.com

President Barack Obama speaks to the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation's 46th Annual Legislative Conference Phoenix Awards Dinner at the Washington Convention Center. Credit: Olivier Douliery / Pool via CNP (Credit Image: © Olivier Douliery/CNP via ZUMA Wire)
ourtimeathome.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Pg2_Obama-300×186.jpg” alt=”President Barack Obama speaks to the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s 46th Annual Legislative Conference Phoenix Awards Dinner at the Washington Convention Center. Credit: Olivier Douliery / Pool via CNP (Credit Image: © Olivier Douliery/CNP via ZUMA Wire)” width=”300″ height=”186″ /> President Barack Obama speaks to the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s 46th Annual Legislative Conference Phoenix Awards Dinner at the Washington Convention Center. Credit: Olivier Douliery / Pool via CNP (Credit Image: © Olivier Douliery/CNP via ZUMA Wire)

Barack Obama urged African-Americans to go to the polls in November in a speech this weekend at the annual Congressional Black Caucus Foundation Dinner.

“My name may not be on the ballot, but our progress is on the ballot,” Obama said on Saturday night. “There is one candidate who will advance those things. And there’s another candidate whose defining principle, the central theme of his candidacy is opposition to all that we’ve done.”

Obama joked that he felt “relieved that the whole birther thing is over,” after Donald Trump’s recent announcement that after years being a prominent voice in the birther movement, the GOP nominee now believes that the nation’s first black president was born in the United States. (Trump’s Friday announcement opened up a new controversy when he falsely claimed Hillary Clinton started the birther movement during her 2008 presidential campaign.) On Friday, members of the Congressional Black Caucus slammed Trump for his statement, saying that he was a “disgusting fraud” and arguing that his reversal was too little, too late.

Clinton, who has struggled to energize black voters in the tightening race, also appeared at the event and argued that she was the only candidate who would preserve Obama’s legacy. She warned that Obama’s legacy could fall into the hands of someone “whose dangerous and divisive vision for our country will drag us backwards”.

In August, Trump asked African-American voters in a speech in Michigan, “What the hell do you have to lose?” He has characterized the African-American community as being uniquely plagued by crime, poverty and poor education, which were all results, he has said, of policies created and supported by Democrats.  Earlier this month, in an effort to boost his standing among minority voters, Trump told the predominantly black congregation at a black church in Detroit that a Trump administration would promote “a new civil rights agenda”.

Obama challenged that promise. “You may have heard Hillary’s opponent in this election say that there’s never been a worse time to be a black person,” he said. “He says we got nothing left to lose, so we might as well support somebody who has fought against civil rights, and fought against equality, and who has shown no regard for working people for most of his life.”

“Well, we do have challenges, but we’re not stupid,” he said, to applause.

But Obama’s most impassioned pleas came when he emphasized the importance of African-American voters this year. For him, a drop in black voter turnoutwhich hit historic levels during the 2008 and 2012 elections—would be a “personal insult”.

“There’s no such thing as a vote that doesn’t matter,” he said. “You want to give me a good send-off? Go vote.” (Please donate to motherjones.com)

 

It’s Apple Picking Season!

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It’s officially apple picking season in New York and the lower Hudson Valley is ripe for the picking!  Gather up your favorite recipes for Apple Pie, Apple Sauce, Apple everything!

Our favorite spot for picking is Dr. Davies Farm located in Rockland County, just 40miles from Brooklyn.   Family run since 1891, the farm offers over 4,000 trees across 35 acres, enjoy the gorgeous scenery, hay-rides, a visit to the pumpkin patch and stop at the farm stand for fresh-pressed cider and more.  (Note they are cash only, no credit cards or ATM cards accepted.) Dr. Davies Farm is open everyday from 10AM-4PM Call or contact the farm for a schedule of other events.

On October 2nd, Orange County kicks off the season with The Warwick Applefest.  The family-friendly event features several participating pick-your-own orchids, entertainment, hay-rides and more.

Participating farms in Orange County include:

Apple Dave’s: 82 Four Corners Road, Warwick. Relax by the ponds, or sample the latest creations of the Distillery and Applewood Winery. AppleDavesOrchards.com

Overlook Farm Market: 5417 Route 9W, Newburgh. Fall weekends feature hay maze, petting zoo and fishing at the pond. Bakery and deli on site. 4 miles north of I-84. Promises a “no-razz-a-ma-tazz” experience to enjoy nature without the crowds. OverlookFarmMarket.com

 

 

FALL USHERS IN THE TWELFTH ANNUAL BED-STUY ALIVE! CELEBRATION – OCTOBER 8th

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Brooklyn NY (September 16, 2016) –  The Bed-Stuy Alive! Collective is proud to present the 12TH Annual Bed-Stuy Alive! celebration, scheduled to begin on Saturday, October 8th, and span several weeks of exciting happenings throughout the community.. “We are pleased to be a part of this event, which will showcase our great businesses, restaurants, artists, and homes,” stated Michael Lambert, Executive Director of the Bedford-Stuyvesant Gateway Business Improvement District. The project is designed to promote economic development, neighborhood pride, tourism, the community’s cultural richness, and the unique heritage and diversity of the people who live in Bedford-Stuyvesant.
The excitement begins on October 8th, with the Gala Kick-off Street Festival, which will be held from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., on Fulton Street, between Marcy and Brooklyn Avenues.
TOHMA Y. FAULKNER AWARDS
The 10:00 Opening Ceremony is a special time that is set aside to honor the community’s best with the 8th Annual Tohma Y. Faulkner Community Awards. According to this year’s Chairperson, Stephanie Faulkner Brabham, “This is always a very moving and uplifting program. We hope our neighbors will come out to say thank you to those champions who have done so much for Bedford-Stuyvesant.”

Honorees this year are:
Arts and Culture Trailblazer – Chinita Pointer, Executive Director of the Noel Pointer Foundation
Community Service – Bernice McRae, Community Leader
Economic Development Trailblazer and New Entrepreneur – Beatrice P. Jones, Owner of Good Samaritan Day Care Center and the new Honey Baked Ham and Café
Outstanding Educator – Adofo Muhammad, Principal, Bedford Academy High School
Youth Achievement – Explorers of the 79th and 81st Precincts
“We will be welcoming home our own Assembly Member, Annette M. Robinson. She has been our greatest supporter since the beginning of this project, and we are honored to have her serve as our Mistress of Ceremony once again”, stated Brenda Fryson, Vice-chair for the event.

FULTON STREET COMES ALIVE AT NOON
Fulton Street, between Marcy and Brooklyn Avenues will be jumping with the Bed-Stuy Heritage Market, the Savor Bed-Stuy Food Court, and the lively Children’s Village, complete with bike giveaways. The Health Pavilion will provide screenings and information, and the Community Partners’ Row, with representatives from a broad range of education and social service organizations.
The large stage will be the backdrop for Restoration’s annual Restoration Rocks. This year’s line-up includes Fantastic Negrito, Ryan Davis Harris, and DJ Reborn.

The Collective includes: Bridge Street Development Corporation, Bedford-Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation, the Brownstoners of Bedford-Stuyvesant, Inc., the Bedford-Stuyvesant Artists’ Association, Bedford-Stuyvesant YMCA, the Bedford-Stuyvesant Gateway Business Improvement District, and 500 Men Making a Difference. This year’s corporate sponsors include ABC Television Network, Foodtown, Applebee’s, and AlphaCare. Supporters include the Mayor’s Office Community Assistant Unit, Borough President Eric Adams, New York State Senator Velmanette Montgomery, New York State Assembly Member Annette M. Robinson, and Council Member Robert E. Cornegy, Jr.

Magnolia Tree Earth Center Delivers on Back to School Supplies

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Organizers and volunteers of the Magnolia Tree Earth Center of Bedford-Stuyvesant collected donated school supplies and distributed them to over 80 young people from kindergarten to high school on Saturday, Sept. 12 at the 377 Lafayette Avenue home of MTEC.

 

Organizers were: Joy “Ishine” Grey, Trina Malloy, Jacinta “Jazz” Fenton, Sanchia Vaughn and Andrea “Cuchy” Brathwaite.  Volunteers: Marsha Pierre, Trevor Robinson, Claudette Spence, Aziza Clunie, Tahirah Powis, Michael Powis,  Ansel Cridland, Tyisa Brathwaite , Rogelio Rook, Joe Morris, Brian Hooper and Brian Clunie.

UPSTATE JOURNAL: A River, Tugboats and a Field of Dreams

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By Bernice Elizabeth Green

A week ago (September 8), The New York Times ran a story on G.E.’s dredging of the Hudson River.

The headline read, “G.E. spent years cleaning up the Hudson. Was It Enough?

The article by Jesse McKinley was accompanied by a (May 2015) photograph of a barge “lifting soil to remove PCBS from a Hudson River bank near Troy, N.Y.”

McKinley reported that some area residents believe G.E. has not done enough.

For years the company used the Hudson as a dump site, a toilet, for waste filled with the synthetic chemical, polychemical biphenyls (PCBs) which is used in such products as transformers and other electrical products.

Now it said that in our children’s lifetimes the river may not be as it was before G.E.

Recently, G.E. announced it had done enough, and was moving on.

But New York State is not buying it.

According to The New York Times about 130 acres of underwater sediment “still hold ‘unacceptably high’ levels of PCBs”.

McKinley wrote, “The State said Federal officials had allowed G.E. to declare mission accomplished too soon. Both the amount of sediment and the fish are suggesting that the initial goals of the remedy have not been, and may not be met, for decades.”

Meanwhile, residents in villages located on the banks of the Hudson still behold the beauty of the river from a distance.

Two separate moments last weekend occurring just yards from the River reminded us that doing the right thing is something left up to the people in the final analysis, not so much with huge corporations so far from them.

On Friday, the Tugboat Round-up parading up the Hudson to Watertown captivated a seven-year-old whose home is yards from the Hudson. You met Jasanah in Our Time Press’ October 2015 “Lansingburgh Story”. She appeared as the liveliest of three children at play in fallen leaves near an empty field which will soon hold new homes of vets.

Photo: Jodi Stariknok
Groundbreaking for veterans homes

The day after Jasanah waved to and cheered tugboat captains, last weekend, Troy officials, broke ground for the long-awaited veterans houses – to be built less than a block from the Hudson. The small ceremony – primarily a photo opportunity captured here by Jasanah’s mother, Jodi – is the beginning of the closing of the loop on the city’s journey (and one of the first in the nation to complete it) to provide a place for every homeless vet in its area.

Jasanah is writing a story on the tugboats and the annual Watertown festival for Our Time Press’s young readers, and interviews are in progress with the construction company that will develop the properties on the bare site, some perhaps with River views.

Jasanah, 7, waves to tugboats on the Hudson Photo: Bernice Green

And for closure on this chapter in our continuing Upstate Journal story, several months ago, Our Time Press’ request for an interview with the CEO of General Electric was at first considered seriously and then turned down flat.