Friday, December 31, 2021

My Sentiments as a Prayer

Dear Lord:

You gifted me with words
With words I come before you
With words I bow down
With words I confess my life askew.

When my soul is tormented 
When my spirit is vexed 
When my deepest longings are in disarray
I use words to say I’m much more than just perplexed.

When the wheels of justice grind slow
When the chains of death take my people
When hope is dashed upon the rocks
Sometimes I go to that place beneath the steeple.

I do not all of the time come with words
Sometimes I do not know what to say
With groans understood only by you
Is all I can find to pray.

“I Walked These Days” numbers 365
Blog posts with their words are 59
Prayers in the early morning come to 136
Sometimes they’re prose and sometimes they rhyme.

I’ve sat in many a zoom-like meetings
I’ve written many a first draft letters
My recommendations are even in the Justice Act
Sometimes my words bind me like fetters.

Only you know the focus of many a prayer 
Only you know the many unspoken words
Only you move in ways I do not know
Only you know the burdens our people bear.

Congress sits in places of power
USDA hides behind its doors
Perturb their hearts and shake their bones
And settle the long unanswered scores.

Come into this world I pray
Take off the racist chains
Remove the burdens of dreams deferred
While there is life within our bones.

And so this prayer
Has a lot of words
Beneath are so many groans
That reveal the ache hidden deep within our bones.

Still in You we do trust
Come what may and come what will
Even when you are silent
Even then our hearts will not be still.

Amen




Friday, December 24, 2021

Is Jesus Coming This Year? Reflections on Birth, Loss, and Expectations Unfulfilled

Is Jesus coming this year? It's that time of the year. The 25th is upon us. At church tonight we'll have a candle light service with the traditional songs and readings. My wife and I have watched a few Christmas television shows, Hallmark and all, as well as the history of the song "Silent Night" for the second, or maybe third year in a row. It never gets old. 

Something, though, is different this year. It's difficult to enter into the season's joy when the vicissitudes of life pinch, pull, and poke. Yes, when a divorce is happening in the family, that impacts us all, children, parents soon to be exes, grandparents on both sides, cousins, and aunts and uncles, and friends on both sides. The Christmas tree is up. Presents were wrapped. The three (one I've yet to see face to face, though her grandmother has) walk in with joy and wonder. They walk about the house, looking and touching, and remembering favorite things from last year or the year before. They were here for a few days and then gone again. Within those few days, there were moments of grace, reading to the two year old, hugging and talking to the four year old, and cooking breakfast and watching Mr. A. Game with the six year old. The breakfast was a long time coming and it had to be deconstructed from an egg-o. Took me a while, but we made it. 

Augustine and the Apostle Paul talk about the divided self, and that's what I have with these children and Christmas. Many of you know exactly what I mean. 

That, however, is only part of my wondering as to whether Jesus is coming this year. There is a second one, a large second one. 

Back earlier this year, and back into 2020, and even 2019, we anticipated a Christmas present, so to speak, for African American farmers. "Christmas present" is used facetiously because it really is about justice, at least a modicum of it, being served. Debt relief was in the Justice for Black Farmers Act of 2020 and then 2021, and then it was skillfully placed within the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021. We had been led to believe that there were 17,000 Black farmers who would receive debt relief. Come to realize, though, there are only 3,200 or so Black farmers who MIGHT receive debt relief. 

The criteria demand that the farmer has previously received a direct loan. That is a steep hill to climb since many Black farmers had been ruled out of receiving loans of any sort, direct or guaranteed. When we look at the latest census data and realize that there are fewer than 45,000 or so Black farmers, and to realize that only 3,200 of them even qualify for debt cancellation, that is a bitter pill to swallow. 

Another bitter pill to swallow, which makes Christmas a little gloomier this year, is the fact that Secretary Vilsack had about 100 days to get the debts cancelled. Then, unbeknownst to only the most blind of us, white farmers of our country filed frivolous and racist lawsuits which stopped debt cancellation in its tracks. I've written about that elsewhere on these pages, so let it be known once more than I consider those lawsuits ridiculous and a part of the puzzle that makes for white America. We knew from the Biden/Harris transition team back in 2020 that what we wanted, debt relief, was called "unconstitutional" by a senior advisor. Lo and behold, that's exactly what the white farmers have claimed it to be. 

Now, in the current day, hidden within the Reconciliation Bill is a modicum of debt cancellation, not just for socially disadvantaged farmers and ranchers, but  for white farmers as well. Again, on another page here in this blog, you'll find my examination of the dollars received by the first six litigants, one of whom is the Agriculture Commissioner for the State of Texas. Those guys received over $523,000 and their counties received over $1.2B. Is that really what you call reverse discrimination when white farmers get all of the advantages? Not as I see it. 

So, the Reconciliation Bill is languishing in the Senate, held up by the Senator from West Virginia. Yes, the one who lives on a yacht in the Potomac and who drives a Maserati, the one who refuses to support a bill that will benefit the people of his state. It has been said that he opposes it because poor families would spend the child support payments on drugs. Shameful. Absolutely shameful. 

So, tomorrow is indeed Christmas Day. All around us people will be celebrating the birth of the Christ child. That is a good thing. Some of us will be in a somewhat different place emotionally. Yes, we can certainly suspend our emotional selves and engage in the joy of the day. Many of us will do just that. At this house, we plan to.

On the other hand, there are people that I care about whose Christmas Day will be clouded with unfulfilled promises. For some of us, it will be about family, and for a bunch of us it will be about the unrelenting burden of indebtedness and injustices perpetrated upon people we care about by the USDA. 

These are the things I'm pondering today. 

I hope your day is good and that it brings to you all of the joy that you can imagine. Along the way, please be mindful of those whose day will be a little more tattered. Please, especially remember that large group of farmers across the land, African American farmers, who deserve better than they are getting. Pray for them and for those persons in Congress who could ease their burdens a little. 

Thank you and God bless you. And may God bless our women and men in the military serving around the world. 

Monday, December 13, 2021

Cease and Desist on the Foreclosures: The Ball is in Your Court, Mr. Vilsack

We are living in curious times. Sometimes the left hand doesn't know what the right hand is doing. Sometimes that lack of information is part of a sadistic plan. Sometimes it's incompetence. 

Under the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, section 1005 lined out $4B in debt relief to a group known as Socially Disadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers, a designation that has been around since 1990. Section 1006 prescribed $1.01B for outreach, training, education, technical assistance, grants, and loans as well as other matters. 

Then, the white farmers across the country decided the the designation of "Socially Disadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers," or 2501 of the 1990 Farm Bill, was unconstitutional. Their lawsuits, some 13 of them at last glance, stopped in its tracks the effort to relieve the indebtedness of historically mistreated farmers. In a recent post on this page, I jumped into the USDA data base and showed how the first six white litigants, including the ag commissioner of the State of Texas, benefited via three pots of money to the tune of over $523,000 and that the counties of those six litigants benefitted to the tune of $1.2B+. They are claiming reverse discrimination when the stats point out how white farmers have always had the upper hand in terms of subsidies, coronavirus relief funds, and the bailout from Trump's failed tariff war with China. 

Provisions of the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 were rewritten in the Reconciliation Bill of 2021 such that even white farmers, who have not been historically mistreated, would also receive debt relief. Whites gain advantages off of Black suffering is the way folks say it with whom I hang out. 

Earlier this year a moratorium was placed on debt collections and foreclosures. You can read that release here. 

But now, while we are waiting for the Senate to work its magic on the Reconciliation Bill, and as we wait to see what Manchin out of West Virginia is going to do, several egregious things are happening at the county level. Farms are being foreclosed on, loans are being accelerated, liens are being placed on crops, and other acts of malfeasance. For instance, a Black farmer has loans to plant and harvest his peanut and cotton crops. He owes the USDA some money and knows that he'll find debt relief around the corner, or at least he hopes so. 

In a magic slight of hand, the company buying the Black farmer's crop has placed a lien on it. This is apparently at the request of the local county office. My questions are several. What right was it of this company to know what the farmer owed? What collaborative gig was set up such that the FSA gets the first dibs on the farmer's money. Did the farmer know about this possibility? The local county office has in some way, shape, or form, realized that this particular grain company is going to process that particular farmer's particular crop and found a way to put a lien on. This means that once the farmer has had his crop sold, the money will go not to him, but to the FSA and put against the loan. This smells like a rat. 

So, there is a moratorium. It reads like this: if you  have a direct loan, the USDA will work with you and will not foreclose on you. The USDA will not accelerate your loans. See the final sentence in Senator Reverend Warnock's letter to Secretary Vilsack below. He is quoting USDA that there will be no adverse actions taken upon any farmer who does not make payments while the debt relief thing is being resolved. There you have it. What USDA said in DC, a local FSA office can undermine. How much sense does that make? Who's guarding the hen house? A bunch of foxes? You know what I mean. 

But then, here comes the foreclosure notice, here comes the loan acceleration notice, here comes the lien on your crops. Here comes all manner of things that the USDA said would not happen. Those decisions are being made at the county level. 

We have advised various Senators as to these shenanigans. One of those Senators has written a strong letter to Secretary Vilsack to call off his dogs. Here is what Senator Reverend Warnock writes: 

"In March 2021, President Biden signed the American Rescue Plan Act into law. This legislation includes targeted debt relief payments aimed at remedying USDA’s well-documented history of racial discrimination. As USDA prepared to implement this legislation, it told eligible farmers that they would not be subject to punishment for failing to make payments on forgivable debts. On a public-facing website regarding the American Rescue Plan Act debt relief payments, USDA states “USDA is not taking any adverse actions on any eligible borrower who does not make payments” on Farm Service Agency direct loans or farm storage facility loans." This letter was signed on December 10, 2021. 

We are also in the process of gathering data across the country. We want to know whether or not this is happening just to Black farmers, and in what counties, and in what states. We want to know what other acts of malfeasance are being done to them. The data is being collected as we speak. 

A lot of people are mad. A lot of people have every right in the world not to trust the USDA. These actions justify that anger and mistrust, if we ever needed more justifications. 

White people, even white employees of the USDA, want to believe these types of actions are sporadic. Wrong. Remember the words, "systemic racism," "systemic discrimination," the system is at fault and the people who stand there with their hands in their pockets. 

And we don't. Plain and simple. Period. Full stop. Period. 



Wednesday, December 1, 2021

Let Justice Ring: Dear Lord, Please Quiet My Troubled Soul

Let Justice Ring: Dear Lord, Please Quiet My Troubled Soul: Dear Lord, please quiet my troubled soul And may I ever be so bold As to make a plea Worded only to thee To give my weary soul ...

Tuesday, November 16, 2021

I'm Just a Layman in Pursuit of Justice: Honors and Opportunities

The documentary, "I'm Just a Layman in Pursuit of Justice: Black Farmers Fight Against USDA," has had some significant successes over the past few months, and for them, we are grateful and deeply honored and moved by the support that the film has garnered. Between 1997 and 1999, fifteen Black farmers went to battle as David versus Goliath, taking on the monstrous US Department of Agriculture and the Department of Justice. 

The list of festivals and honors includes the following: Denton Black Film Festival (People's Choice Award, Honorable  Mention Best Documentary); Seattle Black Film Festival, Impact Awards, La Jolla (Award of Recognition); Twin Cities Black Film Festival; Whistleblowers Summit and Film Festival (Semi-Finalist, Impact Award); Morehouse College Human Rights Film Festival; and Ag & Art Festival, Vacaville, CA.

At each festival, attendees, whether virtual or on the premises, got to hear and see the impact of systemic racism on the lives of Black farmers and families. It is a hard documentary to watch, and it was a difficult documentary to make. Shoun and I listened to stories of pain and suffering. We saw the tears streaming down the faces of men and women. Knowing that employees of the "people's department" had turned it into the "last plantation" for these farmers. Here is the trailer which gives you some sense of the film. 

Lawrence Lucas, President Emeritus of the USDA Coalition of Minority Employees, has been a strong supporter of the documentary. He has shown the trailer on several occasions including Harold Bell's Black Men in America broadcast. Recently, Lawrence spoke to the California Reparations Task Force. Here are his spoken words in which he includes the trailer.  Look for Lawrence at the 15:20 mark. He also showed the trailer at a recent conference, The International Conference On Stolen Black Land, Desecrated Burial Grounds and Healing from MAAFA. Here is his presentation at the conference. You can find him at the 2:41:40 mark. You will find him to be informed, engaging, and provocative in his presentations. 

Several opportunities have presented themselves to us over the last year. Shoun discussed the film and it was shown before the Association for the Study of African American Life and History, an association birthed in 2015 by Dr. Carter G. Woodson. Shoun and I both were interviewed by Dr. Linda Mann of the African American Redress Network. Then, in conjunction with the Morehouse College Human Rights Film Festival, we were interviewed, along with Adrienne Grant Taylor, by Director Kara Walker. 

Shoun premiered the film and dialogued with students from Morgan State University. I was honored to show the film and discuss it as part of the Mississippi  Delta Experience with a number of students and others affiliated with the Carl Spain Center on Race Studies and Spiritual Action at Abilene Christian University. Here is the documentary in which the documentary was situated. 

I was also honored to speak to an honors class under the direction of Dr. Jeffrey Bryson. The class is a part of the criminal justice curriculum at Glenville State College in beautiful West Virginia. 

Also, during the past few months, I was also interviewed by my church around the theme of the diversity of the church. Here is a brief video of that interview. It provides some of the personal background for Charla and me and the making of the film. 

We have no idea how 2022 will roll out; however, I am pleased that we are in conversation with Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, Texas to show the film and discuss it as part of Black History Month. 

If you have an interest in engaging Shoun and/or me, the documentary's webpage will give you contact information. 

We are grateful that people are being moved, oftentimes to tears, as the farmers and their loved ones share the stories in an up close and personal way. This is not a short term venture for us. It is a life time effort. We will not rest until Black farmers experience the same benefits under policies within the USDA as any white farmer. 

Thursday, November 4, 2021

"Slow Walking?" Or, Why Has It Taken So Long, Mr. Secretary?

The wheels of justice grind slowly. The wheels of bureaucracy grind slowly. While the grind is slow and painful, people are dying, losing their land, percentages of their retirement funds and social security taken, and still we are told to wait. Wait, patience, your time will come, all equate to the disaster of never. 

Judge Friedman certified Black farmers as a class in 1999 and called it "The Pigford Class Action Suit." Check out my writings from 2008 and 2018 for more details. 

Some 22,551 applied for entry into Track A. Those who prevailed under this track numbered 16,281. Most of them found some sort of "justice," mostly a $50,000 payment, some with a check for taxes, and a few actually received debt relief. Those prevailing under Track B numbered 137. From both of these tracks, the paltry number of 371......let that sink in...........371 received debt relief. That's what Black farmers needed and wanted, not the pitiful amount of $50,000. 

There were two tracks. Track A promised $50K. Track B did not have a specified sum of money, but required more evidence. Debt relief was promised in both tracks. But then the attorneys for the class allowed "similarly situated white farmer," the death-knell for Black farmers, to be admitted into the system. The farmers assumed that discovery would bring forth white farmers with whom to compare their findings of discrimination. The largely white attorneys waived discovery, an unforgiveable sin in the court system. 

From 22,721 total eligible claimants, only 16,281 prevailed, and only 371 got debt relief. 

There are some significant dates: 

1) March 3, 2021, Senator Warnock succeeds in getting his "Emergency Relief for Farmers of Color Act" passed. 

2) March 11, 2021, President Biden signs into law the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021. Within this package is section 1005 which allowed $4 Billion to be granted to farmers of color for debt relief of their direct loans. It also included section 1006 to the tune of $1.01 Billion for outreach, training, education, technical assistance, grants and loans, and other things related to minority farmers, or Socially Disadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers, a 2501 designation. The debt relief pack was shaped by Senator Warnock's legislation. 

3) The Miller v. Vilsack was filed in Texas on April 26, 2021. White farmers as a class are certified and the preliminary injunction signed by the judge. The white farmers claim reverse discrimination despite the fact that white farmers have received nearly all of the subsidies, coronavirus relief funds, and the funds from trump's failed war with China.

4) Faust etal v. Vilsack was filed on April 29, 2021 and the temporary restraining order granted on June 10, 2021. 

5) Winn v. Vilsack was filed on May 25, 2021. Defendants responded on June 4, a hearing was held June 16, and the judge issued the preliminary injunction on June 23, 2021. 

All of these cases look and sound alike. At the latest information, there are now 13 such cases across the country. 

In an email from an employee high up in the USDA, the secretary was defended against our accusation of "slow-walking" the process. There are also several quotes from Vilsack listed, all affirming that the white farmers' cases are frivolous. Our word, not his, but that the white farmers have been advantaged all along. 

So, when I look at March 3, 2021 when Senator Warnock's legislation passed (which ultimately made its way into the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 signed into law on March 11, 2021).

Then, the earliest judge's decision was signed on June 10, 2021, I cannot help but count the number of days. It looks to me like the gap is close to 100 days. Surely the Secretary of Agriculture knew what was going on in the halls of Congress, especially as things were related to the goings on at USDA. Surely. 

Secretary Vilsack is giving away taxpayers money left and right out of USDA and DC. The dollars are going to reputable issues: climate change, heirs property, and many others. 

Why, then, did Secretary Vilsack move so slowly on getting debt relief into the hands of minority farmers. Does it indeed take an extraordinary length of time? Does it require the courts' decisions? Does it require inclusion in the reconciliation bill? 

I assert that if Secretary Vilsack had wanted to move more quickly, he could have. If he wanted to provide debt relief for socially disadvantaged farmers and ranchers, he could have. If he had wanted to provide debt relief, he could have done so and avoided the 13 white farmer cases. He could have avoided the intensity of the work to have debts relieved under the reconciliation bill. 

We don't know if the reconciliation bill is going to pass. If it does, there will be major dollars that farmers will receive, even the white ones who somehow or other are found meritorious under the current machinations. 

Do you know what is most offensive about this miserable waiting game? White farmers who have all of the advantages that the system gives to them will benefit off of Black suffering. Let that sink in. White farmers benefit from Black suffering. 

Sounds like the same principle upon which our country was built, including the economics of southern agriculture. 

Still..............the question.................WHY DID SECRETARY VILSACK MOVE SO SLOWLY WHEN HE COULD HAVE MOVED EXPEDITIOUSLY, SENT OUT DEBT RELIEF LETTERS, AND SOCIALLY DISADVANTAGED FARMERS WOULD BE BREATHING EASIER RIGHT NOW......RIGHT NOW. 

RIGHT. NOW. 

Thursday, October 21, 2021

Meeting with Vilsack to the California Reparations Task Force: News Travels Fast

It is apparent that news travels fast, either good news of bad news. Indeed, at times news of justice efforts likewise travel fast. My wish is that as news of justice-related matters move at warp speed, that justice itself would similarly move at warp speed. Sadly, that is not the case. Here are some moments in time that connect the dots in some radical ways. 

On May 28, 2021, a group from the USDA Coalition of Minority Employees and the Justice for Black Farmers Group met with Secretary of Agriculture, Thomas Vilsack, his chief of staff, Ms. Ferguson, his appointee for equity matters, Dr. Dewayne Goldmon, and a host of others. We had requested time to discuss our ongoing concerns. What we got was a presentation by the secretary followed by a few moments with Ms. Ferguson and Dr. Goldmon with an admonition to submit our queries by email. 

We were grossly dissatisfied with that meeting and many things related to it. We articulated those concerns in a follow-up letter to him on June 2, 2021. That letter under the signature of President Emeritus, Lawrence Lucas, is found here. I hope you will read it. 

We continued our advocacy in a number of directions, and then, on September 13, 2021, Yvette Carnell, noted podcaster and activist conducted an entire podcast on the plight of the Black farmer. She entitled it, "The Dept of Agriculture Set Black Farmers Up to Fail. Again." Here is the link to her podcast. It is excellent, and I hope you'll find time to watch it. You will see in the podcast that she plays off of our letter to Secretary Vilsack. She doesn't use all of it, but rather significant pieces of it. She also references other folks we follow with much interest, good people who are good investigative reporters. 

Then, a person who works for the Department of Justice in California who was watching the podcast contacted Lawrence Lucas and invited him to provide testimony for the California Reparations Task Force. On October 13, 2021, Lawrence provided testimony in both written and spoke form. Here is his spoken testimony. Please scroll forward to 15:00 for the beginning of his presentation. Here is his written testimony. If you want to read just what he presented, scroll down to page 307 and you'll learn a lot about the history of Black land theft at the hands of the USDA and its egregious policies; however, there are other pieces of compelling testimony that might interest you as well. 

So, packed into this brief post is a timeline of May 28, 2021; June 2, 2021; September 13, 2021; and, finally, October 13, 2021. This time-line moves swiftly. 

Also, packed within this brief post are significant pieces of information in our fight for Black farmers: the meeting with Secretary Vilsack and his team; our summary letter, dissatisfaction with the meeting, and key points that we want to discuss with him further; the brilliant podcast of Ms. Carnell playing off of the letter to Vilsack that some how or other landed in her lap; and then Lawrence Lucas' engaging testimony and written statement about the long term history of Black land theft at the hands of the USDA and other related matters. 

As Lawrence Lucas says on many occasions, "If not now.......when? If not now.......why?"

Thursday, September 23, 2021

Critical Race Theory: Who Cares?

I am more than slightly amused and agitated by the current political climate and what is being made of Critical Race Theory. After all, who knows anything about CRT? Apparently not many know much about it. Then, if that’s the case, who is talking about it as a big deal? Apparently, many people all the way from the White House to the halls of congress to the state house to my friends and neighbors, and yours as well. It has become synonymous with race and slavery and other such words and notions. It has been weaponized by some folks over on the right to beat up folks over on the left. It has left school teachers in a quandary as to how to teach the history of America in these polarized and polarizing times.


The Short Verse

The short verse, for people who like to look at short summaries of things I write, goes like this. The concept of Critical Race Theory was developed in a law school setting as a way of organizing a massive amount of information around race, racism, systemic racism, laws, oppression, and the like. It is not something that is taught in middle schools or high schools. It is taught in political science departments as what it is, a theory that organizes information. In the world from which I come, psychology and marriage and family therapy, “theory drives practice,” and the converse, “practice shapes theory.” CRT developed as a way of making sense out of complicated systems that impact people of color. It became weaponized in 2020 when a researcher was interviewed on Fox News. President Trump watched the interview and called the writer to his office a couple of days later. Soon thereafter, the President signed the executive order, “Combating Race and Sex Stereotyping,” as a reaction to sensitivity trainings that were being held at various federal entities around the country. At the same time, religious folk caught wind of it and began to make a big to-do of it which led to the Southern Baptists and their decree against it in favor of the Bible taking primacy in matters of race and racism. From there, various state legislatures in Republican dominated states took up the mantel and wrote laws outlawing CRT, despite the fact that CRT had never been taught in those states, even lifting key points from the list inside the executive order.

So, much ado about nothing. Something that academics think about has now been foisted upon the schools and teachers of our country out of a reactionary stance that will lead to downplaying the significance of race, slavery, oppression, and all manner of things that are important in this history of our country. Besides, no one teaches CRT to elementary, middle school, or high school kids. To assume such is ridiculous. Teach them the truth of America and let them know that we are a democracy, a work in progress, still ongoing and yet unfinished.

For Those Who Want More Detail, Please Read On

I am a family psychologist. I have a doctorate in counseling psychology and am licensed as a psychologist and marriage and family therapist in Texas. In my work with families, I am guided by several theories:  family systems theory, general systems theory, and by a basic set of models with their theoretical orientations and assumptions. The mantra is “theory drives practice” and “practice shapes theory.” Rather than just going on and doing stuff with individuals, couples, or families, students are taught theoretical orientations and the techniques and interventions that are consistent with those orientations. They learn what the assumptions are for those theories. There are with each theory assumptions about universalities as well as idiosyncrasies.

I have spent my academic life learning, teaching, supervising, and practicing from a number of theoretical orientations with their assumptions and interventions. I love that stuff.

In terms of Critical Race Theory. Notice the second word and the third word. Those are important. RACE. THEORY.

Some people do not know what they are talking about and their ignorance shows.

For instance, here is a politician from Colorado who seems to get a lot of traction with CRT. Lauren Boebert, @laurenboebert, who tweeted on May 20, 2021:

“Critical race “theory” is a complete farce. Anyone familiar with the scientific method would know you need a hypothesis before a theory. They use pseudoscientific terms to try and make people fall for their racist delusions.”

Her tweet is ludicrous on so many different levels. It does not merit a response other than "she needs to go back to school and attend some basic science and social science classes."

One of my questions is this:  how did a theoretical frame from an academic environment, specifically originating in a legal environment, generally taught to upper division undergraduate students, or first year law students, come to be a tire-tool for politicians and people on the right end of the spectrum? This article chronicles the story. A reporter, Christopher Rufo, did his research and appeared on the Tucker Carlson show. President Trump heard the interview, called Rufo to his office, and then on September 4, 2020, he signed an executive order. https://religiondispatches.org/where-did-white-evangelicalisms-hatred-of-critical-race-theory-really-begin/

This, however, is only one thread. Pastor John MacArthur, a minister of some renown, had been speaking and writing about the evils of CRT for some time. Southern Baptists then took it up at their national convention and approved a resolution denouncing doctrines related to Critical Race Theory.

The table was set. That which we know nothing about is now spouted in the highways and the bi-ways of life in America in print and across various social media platforms.

And then I got to thinking, “What do I know about Critical Race Theory, and how far back does my limited understanding go? I had to go no further than an article published by Hinson and Robinson in 2008.

I actually stumbled onto the concept by accident somewhere prior to 2008. Dr. Edward Robinson and I had been writing an article about African American farmers and their struggles with land loss and the USDA. Sandra Jones-Havard (2001), a professor at the University of Baltimore School of Law, a person with whom I correspond on occasion, had written materials that were game-changing for me. She helped me understand the political and economic machinations of the county committee system across America and how it had been co-opted into taking land from Black farmers.

Professor Jones-Havard made this assertion:

“In this instance, I posit that critical race theory provides a basis for understanding how flawed representational democracy presents an example of political space and its consequences. In other words, critical race theory provides a basis for examining the construction of race as a neutral, accepted dominant norm. While there is a tendency to view what is really a failed attempt at power sharing between the federal and local government as successful cooperative federalism, I argue instead that the geographical space (the county) defines the political space (who becomes representatives or members of the county committee). The all-white composition of those committees turned the race-neutral process of determining loan eligibility into one of domination and subordination (337).”

 

In other words, CRT provides a framework for understanding how a “neutral” construct like race with its application in a particular location, e.g., the county, comes to be a context in which domination and insubordination occur. White farmers elect their white friends to the committee, and those white committee members have the power to go thumbs up or thumbs down for all manner of things related to farming including farm/home operating loans, loans to purchase additional farmland, disaster relief programs and all manner of other things.

In my vernacular, I have said for years publicly and privately, “The County Committee System is the best of democracy and the worst of democracy. We get to vote, a right of a citizen of our country, and we get to vote our prejudices.” And sometimes those votes and prejudices become power and a reflection of institutional racism because the system allows itself to continue.

To back track a tad, “What is Critical Race Theory and where did it come from?” Lauren Michelle Jackson, in her article in The New York Times, chronicled the development of CRT by Professor Derrick Bell and his work in civil rights and working for Thurgood Marshall. His text, “Race, Racism, and American Law” is generally considered pivotal to the development of CRT. These things happened in the mid-1970s, not really that long ago. They happened in a law school setting, not in grass roots America. Here is the article here

Critical Race Theory is Defined

“Critical Race Theory, or CRT, is a theoretical and interpretive mode that examines the appearance of race and racism across dominant cultural modes of expression. In adopting this approach, CRT scholars attempt to understand how victims of systemic racism are affected by cultural perceptions of race and how they are able to represent themselves to counter prejudice.

See the full article here.

For those who want to read some more, try this one as it explains the path CRT has taken from an academic to a weapon of the right, the story is found here.

Here is another good article

 A good article is here.

Another good article here.

The Southern Baptist statement is here.

The President’s Executive Order, the White House to the State House

So, Trump wrote, or rather signed, an Executive Order in September, 2020. It was clearly written by lawyers and all. It provides a huge section of background, all explaining the error of our ways if we use this theoretical formulation to draw any practical conclusions. His document then lists a number of “divisive concepts,” all of which in my opinion are grossly overstated and appealing to a particular segment of our society, e.g., his supporters. See the entire document here.  

A number of states like Texas and Tennessee have developed language which mimics the Executive Order. Here is one from Texas.  

Here is the one from Tennessee.

Here is what I find most fascinating when looking at the Executive Order, Texas’ bill, and Tennessee’s bill: the bills appropriate the language of the Executive Order, and sometimes the precise language is followed. Some additions are made, but by and large, the template was laid out by the president for state legislatures to perpetuate legally. In academic circles that is called plagiarism, but I guess it’s called something else when it comes from the White House to the State House.

All of these create “straw figures” against which to fight. All of these illustrate extraordinarily shallow thinking about the history of our country, racism, slavery, Jim Crow, the mistreatment of First Nations people, and all manner of other things. They all assume that if we critique our country, that we will hate it. The opposite might actually be true. So, let’s get legislators involved in the teaching business and tell them what to teach and how and what the consequences will be if they don’t. Seems like we left out the notion that teachers are prepared and know how to teach what.

So, What is America Afraid Of?

One thing that the Texas bill includes that is not in the Executive Order nor in Tennessee’s bill, is a list of topics and key authors. Yes, Native Americans, slavery, and other key topics, along with key persons like Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglass, and numerous others such as Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings (wow!!).  MLK, Brown v.  Board of Education, Cesar Chavez, Susan B. Anthony, the history of the KKK, the civil rights movement, and many others. It is curious that the lists are not exhaustive. Other materials can be included. Teachers, however, are limited in their ability to respond to difficult topics. They must discuss all sides of an issue, something that I think is a good idea anyway, and the topics more often than not must be student initiated. Some thing that the laws will dampen teachers’ abilities to teach. I hope to find out how it works out for teachers in my area of Texas.

So, a theory which originated in a law school setting has now been placed into law in several states and the theory has become a tire tool for which one party can beat up on another party. A legal theory that helps us to understand how we got to where we are, what we need to change, and what the future holds if we do has become overblown and taken way out of context.

So, if you ever hear me speak publicly or read what I write about the USDA and its mistreatment of minority farmers and women farmers, especially Black farmers, you’ll understand that Critical Race Theory undergirds what I’m saying or writing, but you will likely not hear me use the term. Using the term is not necessary. Where I speak and write are not law schools. That which is embedded into our laws and our systems within the US are indeed, in my opinion, based upon the color of whiteness and not just whiteness but maleness. And, it’s time for us to make sense out of these things and work toward change and equity for all of God’s children.

I think white America is afraid that it is losing ground to a brown America. Republicans are afraid of losing their footholds in American life and politics. Look at all of the voter suppression laws that are proliferating across the country. That’s a blogpost for another day.

So, What is Critical Race Theory?

The next time someone pulls this out as a tool to bash someone with, politely ask them, “Can you tell me what Critical Race Theory is all about?”

Then, sit patiently and wait.

Thursday, September 9, 2021

Why Am I Writing This? The Threats and Threads of Racism

I frankly do not know what I am writing this. There are too many entanglements for the sake of clarity. Here, however, are a few random thoughts.

Jemar Tisby, Reparations, and the American Rescue Plan Act

Jemar Tisby. I was listening to his podcast this morning while exercising. He spoke of reparations and why the need for. I had read in days gone by Ta-Nehisi Coates and his compelling article about reparations. I recall Senator Mitch McConnell’s comment about sections 1005 and 1006 of The American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 as reparations. Tisby and Coates get it, and McConnell does not.

Sections 1005 and 1006 are not reparations in the strictest sense of the word. They are about debt relief for Socially Disadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers who experienced egregious maltreatment at the hands of the county FSA office of the USDA. Debt relief was allocated for those who had one of three different types of loans guaranteed by the USDA. But then, the white farmers stepped in and claimed their privilege so as to be included in the debt relief despite the fact that they are not members of the class of SDFRs and neither have they been discriminated against. Nobody ever said that farming was easy, but it should not be made more difficult because of the color of one’s skin. And that, my friends, is the root of the story of discrimination within the USDA.

White Farmers Feel Discriminated Against

To add fuel to the fire, the litigation on behalf of white farmers against the USDA and the debt relief is Stephen Miller, and also Mark Meadows, via American First Legal. As we know, Miller was in charge of trump’s aggressive immigration policy that marginalized all sorts of people. It’ll take a while to overcome those policy decisions and for trust in America to be restored. Many see this move on behalf of Miler and American First Legal as another white nationalism effort.

White farmers never ever experienced the degradation of discrimination by employees of the USDA at the County Committee level. There are literally dozens and dozens of federal reports and reports and briefs done by outside consultants which explain definitively what happened to Black farmers. For a briefer story, check out details in Hinson 2018.

The Numbers of Enslaved People Who Made it to Our Shores

I reviewed the numbers for those enslaved Africans who embarked for the Americas and those that arrived in the Americas and those that arrived in American ports. The numbers are astonishing: 12,521,335 embarked and 10,702,657 disembarked in the Americas. Into American ports disembarked 388,747 and then 835,000 were moved across the Second Middle Passage. Check out Hinson 2018 for more details.

I then reviewed some numbers of whites and Blacks back to 1790 in the census for that year and up this way. In 1790 there were 607,681 Blacks and in 1860 there were 3.95M. In 1790 there were 3.17M whites and in 1860 there were 26.92 million. And, there were 59,527 free people of color in 1790 and in 1860 there were 488,070. Whites outnumbered Blacks and free people of color.

The Economics of Slavery

 Then, I perused an online article entitled “Measuring Slavery in 2020 Dollars” published by the Measuring Worth folks. You can find the article here: https://www.measuringworth.com/slavery.php.

Slavery had incredible influences on the economic, political, and social fabric of our country.  Do not let anyone tell you otherwise. The average price of an enslaved person in 1850 was $400. In 2020, the price would be anywhere from $14,000 to $240,000. $400 was much larger than the average person’s income during 1850, so why would enslavers want to spend so much money on them. Profits. It was all about the profits. If an enslaved person costs $400 but was able to generate well up into the 100,000 during his or her lifetime, then the investment would be worth it. When compared to the costs and profits of hiring someone to work the cotton or the corn or the rice or the whatever was much, much less.

Despite the horrors that enslaved people had to endure, up to the point of death, and living on meager amounts of food, working sun up to sun down and longer, and wearing woeful clothes, the profits were clear. Take a good look at what Frederick Douglass said in chapter 7 of the “Life and Times of Frederick Douglass,” and the glaring distinctions between life in the big house and life in the row houses were brutal.

Divided by Commitment to Enslaving People for Economic Gain

And still, as we attempt to litigate or deconstruct or defend whatever our position is in terms of the Civil War, some say it was all about states rights. Others declare it was about slavery. However you cast it, it was about slavery and the right to own people because it was the best economics of the time. Here is one pivotal quote: “Our position is thoroughly identified with the institution of slavery-- the greatest material interest of the world. Its labor supplies the product which constitutes by far the largest and most important portions of commerce of the earth.” The entire document is found here:  https://avalon.law.yale.edu/19th_century/csa_missec.asp

Black Farmers then and Now

And then switch to more modern times.  Black farmers, just a generation or so removed from slavery owned something like 16-19M acres, and there were approximately 925,000 of them. Now, there are approximately 37,000 Black farmers who are farming somewhere around 4M acres. White farmers are far more numerous and farm substantially more acreage. Their farms are larger, something like 436 acres to 120 acres. 

And then move this way a little further. In 1990 the Farm Bill designated a group of farmers as Socially Disadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers.  Not a lot of noise about that until 2020 when hidden within the America Rescue Plan Act of 2021 was a sum of money for debt relief for Black, Hispanic, Asian, and American Indian farmers and then a sum of money for programmatic sorts of things.  And then the white farmers come out en masse and file lawsuits in federal courts in Texas, Wisconsin, and Florida, led ostensibly by one of trump’s henchmen in charge of the immigration policy. Their complaints have several layers to them, all nuanced around white privilege and white supremacy, alleging that the designation of SDFRs was unconstitutional and that debt relief for that group was unconstitutional and that white farmers should have their fair share of it.

Mistreated, Discriminated Against, Now, How is That?

So, I decided to see how unfavorably the first six litigants were treated. Those six pulled in $523,000 in subsidies, MFP, and CFAP, the latter two of which are for Trump’s failed war with China and the other is coronavirus relief funds. That’s a lot of money for being mistreated between 1995 and 2020. Farmers and ranchers in the counties within which those farms and ranches are located pulled in over $1.2B during those same years. If indeed there is an appreciably small percentage of SDFRs in those counties who received little if any support in terms of subsidies, MFP, and CFAP, then I would not say that the white farmers have been treated poorly. In fact, in keeping with how the USDA has worked since the beginning, the system continues to work the way it is supposed to work, toward those who have white skin.

What About Those Threads?

So, do you see the threads of this post?

What do you see?

If you and I were talking, and if I were saying the words printed above, what would you hear me saying?

Sunday, August 22, 2021

On Developing a Model Announcement for Churches in This COVID Era

Perhaps you are a follower of Jesus who attended church in person or on-line these days. Perhaps you, like me, have been perplexed at churches who make little to no mention of the congregation’s stance on COVID, safety, and fellowship in the Lord. 

So, with that in mind, I offer my own Model Announcement.

 “For some time now, the leaders of this church, its women and men who care about this body of believers, have been studying the encroachment of the COVID-19 virus around us. We know that many of you are doing the same, and that you are taking precautions to ensure your health and those of your family and friends.

For us as a body of believers, it is important to orient ourselves toward the sacred texts for work and worship. We do so now, and in a few short words, our task is to love one another for love is of God for God is love. By this the world will know that we are disciples because we love one another.

We live in a specific state, county, and community. If someone is watching on-line this morning, the numbers will perhaps vary with where you are.

While there are a number of reputable web sites to go to for information, we encourage you to go to the Center for Disease Control’s web page: https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/?utm_term=The%20Atlantic%20Daily#datatracker-home.

In this web page, you can discover national trends and data as well as on down to your county.

Here where we live, once you get to the link above, type in your state, and ours is ________.  Next, type in your county. Our county is _____________.

The percentage of citizens 12 years of age and up who have received at least one shot is _____ and the percentage of those who have received both shots is ___________.

There you will see that our county transmission rate is ____________.

Over the last seven days, we have seen an increase of ___________. The current number of infected persons is _____________.

Our positivity rate is _____________ and that is an increase/decrease of ____________.

Our new hospitalization rate is _________ and that is an increase/decrease of ________.

The number of beds used for COVID in our hospitals is __________ and is an increase/decrease of _______________.

More information is found there.

What do all of those numbers mean? The short verse is that things are getting worse, things will not get any better soon, and that we can mitigate these matters by doing the basics that show that we love one another. We are not as a leadership body choosing politics over people. We are choosing people and doing our best to discern what is good for this group of people and our community. 

While we know there are a number of perspectives and opinions on these complicated matters, our collective wisdom, as we live before the Lord Almighty, the Holy One of Israel, is the following: 1) get the vaccine as soon as possible, and if you have had the first two shots, please anticipate getting the booster shot as soon as you can; 2) wear your mask, especially in enclosed spaces like our sanctuary, classrooms, and the gymnasium here on the church property, and do the same in other locales where you find yourself, even if you are vaccinated; 3) practice social distancing; 4) avoid crowded spaces as often as possible; 5) congregate as you wish if you are vaccinated, but we encourage your own wisdom in being with people who have not been similarly vaccinated; and 6) wash your hands often and keep any frequently used surfaces clean.

Here in the United States we prize our individual rights. As a citizen of the Kingdom, we place community rights and obligations alongside those.

We honor and respect those with whom we are in community, the community of faith and the community of all of us as citizens of this country and the world.

With the beauty of citizenship also come the responsibilities to take care of one another. The life you may save may be your own, or it may be someone you love.

Here at this church, we are concerned about your soul. We are also concerned about the physical body within which your soul exists."

 

Monday, July 26, 2021

Whistleblower Summit & Film Festival, Panel on USDA, Documentary on Black Farmers

 Media Advisory

USDA Coalition of Minority Employees

Justice for Black Farmers Group

 July 25, 2021

The 9th Annual Whistleblower Summit and Film Festival begins July 25 and ends August 1, 2021. Speeches, panel discussions, and films have been organized by Michael McCray and Marcel Reid, co-organizers. The Summit web page is here: https://www.whistleblowersummit.com/ The ACORN 8 and the Society of Professional Journalists (DC Chapter) are hosting this year’s Whistleblower Summit & Film Festival. The theme this year is “Salute to the 50th Anniversary of the Pentagon Papers and Rise of Investigative Journalism.” The event will include a keynote presentation by Daniel Ellsberg among others. 

A wide array of panel discussions will begin on Sunday, July 25.  The topics include global whistleblowing, student debt, immigration justice, and many more. The list of panel discussions can be found here:  https://www.whistleblowersummit.com/summit-schedule.  These events are free of charge, but registration is required

The USDA Coalition of Minority Employees, an organization that has been in existence since 1994, has played significant roles in addressing discrimination across the USDA including the Forestry Service and the Farm Service Administration. The Coalition’s website is found here: http://agcoalition.org. We are featured in this year’s Summit and Film Festival.

Members of the Coalition will present a panel on Thursday, July 29, at 10:00am EST. The panel is entitled, “Systemic Discrimination at the US Department of Agriculture (USDA Coalition of Minority Employees)” and will feature Lawrence Lucas, President Emeritus, USDA Coalition of Minority Employees, as panel moderator; Tracy Lloyd McCurty, Founder and CEO of Black Belt Justice Center and Acres of Ancestry; Lesa Donnelly, Vice-President of the USDA Coalition of Minority Employees; Lloyd Wright, Black farmer and former Director, USDA Office of Civil Rights (OCR); and Waymon Hinson, independent research, author, and film co-producer. Secretary Tom Vilsack and other USDA officials have received significant push-back along with the OCR and Farm Service Administration (FSA). Investigative reporting reveals numerous injustices and failures by him and the OCR. The panelists will present disturbing information which presses the need for systemic change within the Department, or as it is labeled, “THE LAST PLANTATION,” in order to eliminate racism, sexual abuse, retaliation, and other abuses against minority farmers, especially Black farmers, and employees. The panel website is here: https://filmfestivalflix.com/zoom-meetings/combating-systemic-discrimination-at-u-s-department-of-agriculture/

In conjunction with the panel addressing systemic discrimination at USDA, the Film Festival will screen “I’m Just a Layman in Pursuit of Justice: Black Farmers Fight USDA,” an award-winning film co-produced by Shoun Hill and Waymon Hinson. The film chronicles 9 Black farmers and families who prevailed against the USDA in the late 1990s as they tell their stories in their own words of the injustices perpetrated upon them by the USDA.

The film is located here: https://filmfestivalflix.com/whistleblower/purchase-tickets/ It premiers on July 27 at 1:00 pm EST, and is available for 72 hours thereafter.

For further information, contact the following:

Panel discussion, Lawrence Lucas, LawrLCL@aol.com,  856-910-23

Documentary, Waymon Hinson, Waymon.hinson@gmail.com, 903-271-4654

Friday, July 23, 2021

Dear Mr. Vilsack, Black Farmers and Employees are Waiting, July 23, 2021

July 23, 2021

Secretary Thomas Vilsack
Attention: Chief of Staff, Katherine Ferguson
                  Director, FSA, Zach Ducheneaux
                  Senior Advisor, Dewayne Goldmon
U.S. Department of Agriculture
1400 Independence Ave., S.W.
Washington, DC 20250
 
Secretary Vilsack:
 
As a follow-up to our letter of July 16 requesting a meeting with you and your staff, for our next meeting we submit the following.
 
The USDA Coalition of Minority Employees and the Justice for Black Farmers Group have long advocated for major changes to be made within the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), Office of Civil Rights (OCR). Six months into your administration as Secretary, our concerns remain the same. Therein lies our challenges and, hopefully, many opportunities for you and your staff to partner with us to create change within USDA on behalf of minority farmers, especially Black farmers and USDA employees.
 
Contained in President Biden’s plan for rural America in his Build Back Better initiative, there is an assertion that the Obama Administration created improvements in civil rights at USDA and a new chapter had begun, and that the previous administration (referring to Trump) slid backwards in these areas. One of the most significant lines in the policy is this: “Under Obama-Biden, the USDA sought to address both the structural and cultural causes of systemic inequality that had in prior generations been reproduced by the policies and practices of the agency.” A recent Washington Post article captures the complicity of the OCR during your administration, “Even as USDA suggested that a civil rights renaissance had occurred during the Obama administration, the department persisted in ignoring race discrimination complaints. It ran out the clock on complaints bound by a two-year statute of limitations, and foreclosed on many farmers of color with pending complaints.” The complete article is found here: https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/2021/06/28/black-farmers-debt-forgiveness-constitutional/
 
We see little evidence of change. That is precisely what we want to work with you on….rooting out systemic racism and inequality for farmers and employees.
 
We began corresponding with the Biden/Harris Campaign and meeting with the Biden Transition Team in early 2020 followed by a host of communications with you and your team, none of which have resulted in the substance and clarity that we are seeking.
 
Our complaints remain as follows:
 
·         The historical mistreatment of Black farmers and related systemic factors;
·         The institutional organizational structure that allows for a devolution of 
        responsibility;
·         The failures of the County Committee system;
·         The failures of the OCR;
·         The intrenchment of the Office of General Counsel (OGC) in the affairs of the OCR;
·         An environment that lacks "accountability;”
·         Inequities of Pigford I and Pigford II with regard to both denials and debt relief;
·         The absence of utilization of the USDA's land bank by Black farmers;
·         The incompetent manner in which Census of Agricultural data is misused by the 
        USDA;
·         A complete organizational evaluation and set of changes to insure equitable 
       treatment;
·         The endorsement of a program of reparations for Black farmers;
·         Review and update the Endangered Black Farmer Act of 2007;
·         Conduct a series of meetings with key persons to assess systemic racism in programs
       and services;
·         Greater institutional and programmatic support for urban farmers and urban 
       communities; and
·         Discussion regarding the Commodity Credit Corporation and how it can benefit 
       Black farmers and others.
 
The above list is not new. Senator Elizabeth Warren found our issues and concern to be compelling. She addressed them in her plan during her presidential campaign. Our opinion is that 90% of the changes we recommend are found in The Justice for Black Farmers Act of 2021 and that they could be enacted with the stroke of your pen.
 
Investigative reporting supports our assertions that your policies during your first two terms led to even further disenfranchisement of Black farmers and others. Unless you move swiftly and thoroughly, things will continue to deteriorate under your leadership. One of the things that is most troubling for us is what we heard from a member of the President Biden Transition Team on July 31, 2020. We were told that what we were asking, debt relief for Black farmers, was “unconstitutional.” Surprisingly, we are now hearing that term in the white farmer lawsuits which have derailed the historic debt relief for Black farmers and others.
 
For our issues and concerns, listening sessions are by far not the cure. USDA knows their internal and external problems and solutions. So, let’s get on with the business of fixing the systemic problems at USDA. For instance, USDA already has all it needs in terms of information about the problems. You have the Civil Rights Action Team report (February, 1997), the Civil Rights Implementation Team Report (March, 1998), the Harvard Brief, the $10M Jackson Lewis Report, the Office of Inspector General reports, the General Accounting Office Reports, and a host of other reports and research, just to name a few. Many of the recommendations found in these reports can solve the systemic racism problems at USDA. The Clinton/Glickman Administration established the framework for all future administrations to follow in order to correct systemic racism and the administration and processing of civil rights complaints for the future. The Vilsack/Leonard administration refused to use these reports and processes as benchmarks. The Senator Warren Plan and The Justice for Black Farmers Act of 2021 have many of the resolutions to the systemic problems at USDA.  USDA does not have to reinvent the wheel.
 
We are obviously concerned about debt relief and how the numbers of Black farmers and others eligible for relief continue to change. We remain disturbed about your process, one that is well beyond 134 days, which is prolonging the economic suffering of Black farmers. Former President Trump was able with a stroke of the pen to provide relief for predominantly white farmers in 12 to 14 days via the Market Facilitation Program without congressional approval.  President Biden could do the same. If USDA has the records to abruptly foreclose on Black farmers, you could have paid off the debts with similar speed. This is an added political miscalculation.
 
More importantly, and painfully, we can count over 40 Black farmers who have died waiting for justice. How many more Black farmers must die waiting for justice from USDA?
 
As noted above, we continue to be especially disturbed about the OCR and Deputy Assistant Secretary, Monica Rainge, and her conflicting remarks with regard to how many cases remain unresolved/backlogged. This does not explain the enormous number of civil rights complaints that have been in Deputy Assistant Secretary Monica Rainge’s office for decades. As we stated, historically OCR has been called “a closing machine” and “dysfunctional.” We have no evidence to suggest to the contrary. In fact, several farmers on our recent call with you have ongoing cases within OCR. We are led to believe, then, that Monica Rainge was providing us false information. Based on her response, we are also not convinced that there is indeed a “fire-wall” between OGC and OCR as she stated. This needs to be explained to us with clarity. This cannot be accomplished with everyone rushing off the Zoom call to attend other meetings after only a half hour of discussion.
 
We remained troubled by the decades of systemic discrimination at USDA that harms especially Black farmers and USDA employees. Many of the items that were offered during our previous meeting with you did not get to the solution/resolution (told after 30 minutes the meeting would end) of the many systemic concerns that we had previously addressed in our communications. Again, recent reports and investigative news articles confirm our allegations of the continued widespread racism and other abuses at USDA. Also, we clearly expressed our concerns regarding the county committee system that still inflicts pain and suffering on Black farmers and remains central to the marginalization of Black farmers and others. Nothing has been done by this administration to correct it.
 
By way of summary, accountability, transparency, independent oversight, and rooting out systemic racism are vitally important to us all. Guilty officials are able to act with impunity.
 
When we met with you and your team in late May, we found the meeting to be unsatisfactory in terms of the amount of time we had allocated and the lack of attention to the substantive issues that we brought to the table. In short, the meeting left us frustrated, disappointed, and insulted. We have voiced our displeasure by your mistreatment and you have been unresponsive.
 
We look forward to meeting with you and your staff in the next few weeks toward a better outcome. The people we serve (approximately 100 urban and rural farm groups and advocates around the country) deserve better.
 
Until then, silence is not an option.
 
Respectfully,
 
 
 
Lawrence Lucas, President Emeritus
USDA Coalition of Minority Employees
Representative, Justice for Black Farmers Group
www.agcoalition.org
LawrLCL@aol.com
856-910-2399