It's been a long week for the state of Missouri. First, a graduate student at the University of Missouri went on strike because of racial issues having gone unaddressed. Then, a group of African American football players on the Mizzou squad said they would no longer participate in any football related activities until the school president stepped down or was removed. This morning I woke up to the news that school faculty would stage a walkout at some point today standing in solidarity and support of the students on the campus and the issues they too saw on campus. But that walkout never happened. It wasn't necessary because late this morning the president of the University of Missouri system formally resigned. It was a shocker to most, coming just one day after President Tim Wolfe released a rather adamant statement that he would continue his job and somehow work through the issues that he never felt the need to be addressed previously. But ultimately the voice of students prevailed. And the onslaught did not stop there. Late this afternoon the school chancellor said he too would resign. It's the beginning steps in the healing process to a school and a community that has gone through so much.
Less than three miles away Michael Brown was gunned down by a Ferguson police officer in August of 2014. But there were no school statements, no school wide discussions, nothing. Students shared incidents of racial slurs being called the "n-word" while walking to and from class. Another student said a professor once said she was there because of affirmative action. It was incidents like these and others that led to built up frustration on the campus. Then, the tipping point came when a swastika was drawn with feces on the wall of a campus building. Many students had had enough. The school was not doing anything, so the students would make something happen. The voices started small with demonstrations. They grew louder as time went on. There was the time when a group stood in front of Wolfe's car during a parade in a peaceful demonstration. Wolfe's driver revved the engine and had police escort them away. But still no conversation and little to no acknowledgement. The football team decided to step up and step up in a big way. Their sacrifice made this a national issue. The SEC football team said they would stand up for what they saw was right. Their head coach supported them. It was unbelievable to watch the number of events that unfolded. It was inspiring. It make so many people feel hopeful, but we must understand it's the beginning steps. There are real issues. There is teaching that needs to take place and there are demands that need to be met. When people question diversity, they question true growth. Much of the ignorance going on around the world is rooted in the past and/or rooted from a place of misinformation. When people say black students take up most of financial aid, they're wrong. When they say all black people benefit most from affirmative actions they're wrong, women do. There are a lot of disconnects. It starts with education of facts and the education of different cultures from a young age. Then things will not be so foreign. As the University of Missouri enters into its second phase of healing, there needs to be an entire culture shift at the school. All the students need to be treated equality. All issues to any group should be treated with haste and seriousness. No student should be marginalized or like she/she does not belong. This is America we are talking about in 2015 and we continue to deal with real issues that should have been addressed a long time ago, but we push on. We learn and we grow. We see what true democracy looks like. We see what real unity is. We see what we can do when we stand up together for a cause. We see our voice matters. If this is what we can do on a school level, imagine what we can do on a national stage.
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This week Republican candidate Ben Carson is the new national leader in GOP polls. He has replaced Donald Trump atop the GOP field and Carson's fundraising has been through the roof. His politics are out there, his subdued demeanor is unique and his latest radio ad is driving people nuts, but together it's all working. It's a far cry from the man I grew up admiring when I read his autobiography "Gifted Hands: The Ben Carson Story". It actually hurts my soul, but the reality is Ben Carson is who he is.
Carson's childhood wasn't easy. He grew up with one brother and was raised by a single mother after his father left the family when he was young. Carson's mother worked two and three jobs during his childhood just to make ends meet. As a teen Carson dealt with anger issues as he chronicled in his book. One time he almost hit his mother with a hammer over a clothing dispute and another time he nearly stabbed a friend for changing the radio station. Carson benefitted from public assistance as a youth. He went on to West Point, Yale, then Michigan Medical. He has a wonderful story of persistence and hard work, but today Carson has turned from his childhood. The help he once received he now seeks to take away from others. In 2014 Carson said Pres. Obama is depressing the economy to keep people on welfare. Carson also believes sexual orientation is a choice. He has argued that “a lot of people” in prison change their sexual orientation. As many people have pointed out, sexual behavior is not the same as orientation. He also says Pres. Obama signed immigration reform to bring in government-dependent voters. I cannot understand how someone can live through a struggle and turn from everything that struggle has taught them. How can you receive help and when someone else asks for a hand up, slap it away? I raise these questions because I really want to understand who the real Ben Carson is. Is Carson the product of the American Dream from Detroit? Or is Carson a hoodwink of a man who can't stand for something positive? I am not sure, but when it comes to voting we all have a voice. Then it is our chance to speak up. I ask one more time, 'Will the real Ben Carson please stand up?'. |
Marquise Francislives by one word: achievement. in anything and everything, achieve. Archives
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