The Washington Times
  • Subscribe
  • Times News Services
  • RSS
  • Mobile Headlines
  • e-edition
  • E-MAIL ALERTS
  • REGISTER
  • LOG IN
  • E-MAIL ALERTS
  • WELCOME
  • Your Profile
  • Log Out
  • Front Page Image
  • Classifieds
  • Autos
  • Real Estate
  • Jobs
  • Special Sections
  • Customer Service
  • Home
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Sports
    • NFL
    • NBA/WNBA
    • MLB
    • NHL
    • Tennis
    • Golf
    • Motorsports
    • Soccer
    • NCAA
    • Olympics
    • Outdoors
    • Other
  • Culture
    • Home & Living
    • Family & Kids
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Health
    • Washington Visitors
    • Books
    • Military History
    • Life
    • Auto
    • TV Listings
    • Movie Listings
    • Death Notices
    • Entertainment
  • Themes
  • Communities
  • Shopping
    • Stores
    • Coupons
    • Daily Double
    • Promotion
    • How It Works
  • Videos
    • Two Guys
    • Birnbaum on Washington
    • Liz Glover
    • Amanda Carpenter
    • Morning Briefing
    • Documentaries
    • Joe Giganti
    • Video Game Minute
  • Podcasts
    • About Headlines
    • Audio and Radio
    • America's Morning News
  • National

    VAN CLEAVE: A Thanksgiving message from Russia's spy agency

  • National

    HOLMES: Behind Obama's overseas allure

  • World

    Thailand seeks U.S. help battling insurgents

  • Politics

    Obama taking emissions goal to summit

  • Business

    Retailers banking on Black Friday

  • World

    Corruption stain puts Pakistan leader at risk

  • Politics

    Courage the turkey escapes Obama's plate

Friday, March 9, 2007

A dream dies at NAACP

Rate this story

Average 0.00
after 0 votes
Login or register to rate this story

  • Font Size -+
  • Print
  • Email
  • Comment
  • Tweet this!
  • Share
  • Article
  • Comments ()
  • Click-2-Listen
  • Videos

More Stories

  • Obama calls service members on holiday
  • Gay marriage vote stalls in N.J., N.Y.
  • Dubai debt raises fear in markets
  • Shaq pays for murdered girl's funeral

By

BALTIMORE, Md. -- Bruce Gordon's abrupt departure from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People after only 19 months as president marks the end of a marriage between old-time movement idealism and new-wave corporate problem solving. The marriage now appears to have been doomed from the start.

The former Verizon executive came into office amid grand hopes that he would modernize the nation's oldest and largest civil rights organization. The 98-year-old organization's old civil rights mission has been diminished by the hard-won success of the civil rights movement.

Mr. Gordon had the audacity to hope for an expanded NAACP mission. He set out with a corporate CEO's sense of urgency to target, for example, the continuing crises of undereducated black males. Mr. Gordon understood something that its chairman, Julian Bond, a star 1960s movement veteran, and numerous others in the organization's breathtakingly huge 64-member board refuse to face: White racism is not the biggest problem holding back the advancement of people of color today.

Today overall black poverty is down to about 24 percent from well more than 60 percent in the mid-1960s. But since the mid-1990s, recent studies show young undereducated black males, in particular, are worse off by every statistical measure of unemployment, drug abuse, disease and imprisonment.

If we Americans -- all Americans -- focused our energies on wiping out the black-white test score gap, employment equality would follow. Close the race gaps in joblessness, income and family stability and the final victories of the equal rights revolution would be within reach.

"We are going to be very outcome-oriented, very results-oriented," he said last July, "as opposed to activity and effort-oriented."

Unfortunately, activity and effort -- and endless talking about activity and effort -- were just fine with the organization's old guard. They mischaracterized Mr. Gordon's vision, not as an expansion but as a shift of mission away from civil rights.

"There are many organizations that provide social services," Mr. Bond told the New York Times. "We say, 'Good for them.' But we are one of the very few that provide social justice. It is popular to say that we are in a post-civil rights period, but we don't believe that."

Actually, Mr. Gordon was calling for a better balance of the organization's two important roles of advocacy and service. Unfortunately, his vision, nurtured in the greenhouse of corporate life, clashed with that of the old-time movement folks. In the business world, you have to adapt to changing market conditions or you lose market share and you die. The civil rights movement world is different. You can hang on indefinitely to a 1960s paradigm of problems (racism) and solutions (marches, boycotts and lawsuits), despite changes in both, even as old problems persist and take on a new urgency.

"It is almost analgesic to talk about what the white man is doing against us," Bill Cosby told the annual convention of Jesse Jackson's Rainbow/PUSH Coalition in 2004. "It keeps you frozen in your hole you are sitting in."

Mr. Cosby gave a grouchy, but perceptive voice to a widespread sentiment in black America. Although in the eyes of offended civil rights traditionalists he had stopped preaching and gone to meddling, Mr. Cosby expressed a growing sense that the old-style civil rights strategies were ceasing to be relevant.

That's why, with its 100th anniversary approaching in 2009, the NAACP boasts 500,000 members but its conventions look like a mostly-black version of the AARP. Its original agenda was largely won in the 1960s with passage of the Civil Rights Act, Voting Rights Act, the Fair Housing Act and the rise of a new black middle class and political class.

Still, a shamefully high percentage of black children don't have access to a decent education. It is even more shameful that so much of this deterioration of opportunity has occurred under the watch of local governments largely dominated by black politicians. Fortunately, many of the NAACP's 2,000 affiliates have taken that new civil rights battle to local communities, even while the national organization's leaders battle internally for its soul and its future.

The NAACP will continue to have work to do in fighting for black advancement. But in the great battle to help those whom the civil rights revolution left behind, civil rights is just one skirmish in a larger war.

Clarence Page is a nationally syndicated columnist.

Post a comment

There are comments on this article, submit your opinion!

Commenting is disabled for this entry.
If you feel there is still something worth mentioning about this entry please contact the author or the site admin.

Ask a Question

You Report

Do you have another point of view, photos, audio, video or more information about a story?

Top Stories

Most Read

  1. EDITORIAL: Hiding evidence of global cooling
  2. Top Republican lawmakers not attending State Dinner
  3. Conservatives seek test for RNC funds
  4. Fenty trails Gray in D.C. poll
  5. Climate 'czar' says hacked e-mails don't change anything
More Top Stories »
  1. Food snobs fork over $225 for taste of heritage turkey
  2. D.C. sports icon, Wizards owner Pollin dies
  3. PRUDEN: Obama's due process doctrine
  4. List of W.H. state dinner guests
  5. Grade-schooler unearths fossil at dinosaur park

Most Shared

  1. EDITORIAL: Hiding evidence of global cooling
  2. EDITORIAL: The duty of a nation to obey God
  3. Grade-schooler unearths fossil at dinosaur park
  4. The global-cooling cover-up
  5. Climate czar rejects doctored data claims
More Top Stories »
  1. VAN CLEAVE: A Thanksgiving message from Russia's spy agency
  2. The United Socialist States of America
  3. Climate 'czar' says hacked e-mails don't change anything
  4. EDITORIAL: A call to prayer and repentance
  5. White House logs point to donor access

Most Commented

  1. EDITORIAL: Hiding evidence of global cooling
  2. Climate 'czar' says hacked e-mails don't change anything
  3. Climate czar rejects doctored data claims
  4. Obama to attend Denmark climate summit
  5. Ky. hanging, ruled a suicide, leaves bloggers at loss for words
More Top Stories »
  1. A-listers, fundraisers at W.H. state dinner
  2. EDITORIAL: The duty of a nation to obey God
  3. EDITORIAL: Kennedy vs. Catholicism
  4. Obama taking emissions goal to summit
  5. EDITORIAL: Obama's sacked inspector general

Listen to Washington Times Radio

  • America's Morning News

    with John McCaslin and Melanie Morgan

Blogs & Columns

  • Hot Button Blog

    RNC: Breast cancer recommendations may lead to 'rationing'

  • Belief Blog

    Evangelicals OK civil disobedience

  • Out of Context

    Foods that might kill libido

  • On the Fly

    United lifts some 'award' blocking

  • Technology

    Facebook wins round against phishing spammer

  • Redskins 360

    Redskins matchup

  • SNOBlog

    Beyond 'Woody'

Videos

Advertising Links
TWT Store
  • e-edition
  • Print Edition
  • Weekly Washington Times
TWT Affiliates
  • Middle East Times
  • Golf
  • UPI
  • Arbor Ballroom
  • Washington Times Global
  • About TWT
  • Press Room
  • F.A.Q.
  • Work for TWT
  • Advertise
  • Sponsors
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Site Map

All site contents © Copyright 2009 The Washington Times, LLC.