7/31/2019 Environmental Products (7)
1/8
Images not displaying properly? Click here to view the online version.
A Weekly Column By Walter B. Hoye II
Conflict Of
Interest
In the abortion debate, is there a "Conflict of Interest"within the Black community and among her leaders?
Subscribe Unsubscribe Forward Archives Issue No.: 2012.170
Environmental Products (7)
Black Wall Street
One Of The Worst Race Riots In Our Nation's History Occurred In Tulsa.
"I took my little girl by the hand and fled out the west door on Greenwood. I did not take time to gat a hat for myself or baby, but
started out north in Greenwood, running amidst showers of bullets from the machine gun located in the granay and from the men
who were quickly surrounding our district." Mary E. Jones Parrish,, An eye-witness account of the 1921 Tulsa Race Riot 1
According to the Tulsa Tribune, the National Guard mounted two machine guns
and fired into the area. Black Americans surrendered and were disarmed.
They were taken in columns to Convention Hall, the McNulty Baseball Park, the
http://www.sharethis.com/share?url=http://www.issues4life.org/blast/2012170.html&title=Conflict+Of+Interest&summary=Is+there+a+conflict+of+interest+within+the+Black+community+and+among+her+leaders?+Could+her+leaders+be+complicit+in+the+carnage+of+their+own+people?+Walter+Hoye%27s+weekly+column+examines+the+abortion+debate+from+an+Black-American%27s+perspective+with+a+Judeo+Christian+Worldview.&img=http://www.issues4life.org/images/20090525walterhoye.jpg&publisher=cd4a03ed-661d-424c-8305-634e10fbd2d5http://www.sharethis.com/share?url=http://www.issues4life.org/blast/2012170.html&title=Conflict+Of+Interest&summary=Is+there+a+conflict+of+interest+within+the+Black+community+and+among+her+leaders?+Could+her+leaders+be+complicit+in+the+carnage+of+their+own+people?+Walter+Hoye%27s+weekly+column+examines+the+abortion+debate+from+an+Black-American%27s+perspective+with+a+Judeo+Christian+Worldview.&img=http://www.issues4life.org/images/20090525walterhoye.jpg&publisher=cd4a03ed-661d-424c-8305-634e10fbd2d5http://www.sharethis.com/share?url=http://www.issues4life.org/blast/2012170.html&title=Conflict+Of+Interest&summary=Is+there+a+conflict+of+interest+within+the+Black+community+and+among+her+leaders?+Could+her+leaders+be+complicit+in+the+carnage+of+their+own+people?+Walter+Hoye%27s+weekly+column+examines+the+abortion+debate+from+an+Black-American%27s+perspective+with+a+Judeo+Christian+Worldview.&img=http://www.issues4life.org/images/20090525walterhoye.jpg&publisher=cd4a03ed-661d-424c-8305-634e10fbd2d5http://www.issues4life.org/newsletters.htmlmailto:?subject=You%20Gotta%20Read%20This...&body=Greetings%20%5BYour%20Friend%27s%20Name%20Here%5D:%0A%0aI%20recommend%20you%20check%20out%20this%20link:%0A%0a-%20%20http://www.issues4life.org/blast/2012170.html%0A%0aYou%20gotta%20read%20this%20article%20from%20Walter%20Hoye%27s%20weekly%20column.mailto:[email protected]?subject=Unsubscribe&body=Newsletter%20Manager:%0A%0aPlease%20remove%20my%20email%20address%20from%20your%20list.%0A%0AThank%20you.http://www.issues4life.org/foundationnewsletter.htmlhttp://www.issues4life.org/blast/2012170.html7/31/2019 Environmental Products (7)
2/8
Fairgrounds and to a flying field during the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921. 2
Executive Summary
"The Worse Civil Disturbance Since The Civil War." 3
"Personal belongings and household goods had been removed from many homes and piled in the streets. On the steps of the few
houses that remained sat feeble and gray Negro men and women and occasionally a small child. The look in their eyes was one of
dejection and supplication. Judging from their attitude, it was not of material consequence to them whether they lived or died.
Harmless themselves, they apparently could not conceive the brutality and fiendishness of men who would deliberately
set fire to the homes of their friends and neighbors and just as deliberately shoot them down in their tracks." TulsaDaily World, June 2, 1921 4
Commonly known as "Black Wall Street," the
racially segregated district of Greenwood in
Tulsa was one of the most affluent All-Black
Communities in the United States of America. 5
In its day, Greenwwod served as a powerful
economic model of market-based approaches to
abject poverty through private ownership,
conservative values and self-sufficiency forBlack Americans only one generation away from over four hundred (400) years of
chattel antebellum slavery. 6 The area
encompassed a population of 15,000 Black
Americans. 7 However, in a matter of a fourteen
(14) hour period, from Tuesday, May 31st, 1921
to Wednesday, June 1st, 1921, one of the worst
race riots in the history of our nation destroyed a
once thriving, thirty-five (35) square block Black
Business District in northern Tulsa, Oklahoma. 8 In the end, 10,000 Black
Americans were homeless, over 800 injuries
were reported and over 600 successful Black
Businesses were lost. 9 Among these
businesses were twenty-one (21) churches,
twenty-one (21) restaurants, thirty (30) grocery
stores and two (2) movie theaters, plus a
hospital, a bank, a post office, libraries, schools,
law offices, a half-dozen private airplanes and
even a bus system. 10 1,256 homes were reported burned and another 215
looted. 11 Property damage estimates ranging
from 1.5 to 2 million dollars were reported which
would amount to over twenty-one (21) million
dollars in today's money. 12 Of the thirty-seven
(37) death certificates, twenty-five (25) were for
Black males and twelve (12) for white males.
While the true death toll will probably never be
known, nine (9) Black victims were burned
beyond recognition and could not identified. 13
7/31/2019 Environmental Products (7)
3/8
Part One: Findings
On The Way To A Segregated "Colored" Restroom
Tulsa Tribune Headline: "Nab Negro for Attacking Girl in Elevator"
"I shined shoes with Dick Rowland. He was an orphan and had quit school to take care of himself. The Drexel Building was the
only place downtown where we were allowed to use the restroom. Dick was a quite kind of fella. Never in no trouble. When he
went to use the bathroom...in the elevator he slipped and bumped her, she screamed, he ran, and was accused of raping a white
woman. "In broad daylight?" The Tribune wrote a story that triggered the crowd at the Court House: "To lynch a Negro tonight."
The Tribune called him "Diamond Dick." Me, or nobody on Greenwood ever heard that name for him before. They invented it.
Dick Rowland was poor as me. Neither of us probably ever saw a real diamond." Robert Fairchild, Sr., The oral account of a
Black American eyewitness of the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921 14
Tulsa, Oklahoma was a segregated city where
Jim Crow practices were live and legal. Black
Americans were not allowed to use toilet
facilities used by White people. 15 There was no
separate facility for Black Americans at the
shoeshine parlor where Dick Rowland
worked. 16 So the owner of the parlor arranged
for Black American employees to use the
segregated "Colored" restroom on the top floor
of the nearby Drexel Building at 319 S. Main
Street where the Renberg's Department Store
occupied the first two floors. 17 On Monday, May
30th, 1921, Dick Rowland, a Black American
believed to be nineteen (19), entered the Drexel
building elevator to access the "Colored Only"
restroom where he tripped, and while falling,
latched on to the arm of the White elevator
operator, Sarah Page, then seventeen (17)
years old. 18 Startled, Sarah screamed and aWhite clerk in a first floor store called the police
and reported seeing Dick Rowland flee from the elevator and out of the building. 19
The White clerk on the first floor described the incident as an attempted assault. 20
Subsequently, Dick Rowland was arrested on Tuesday, May 31st, 1921. 21
According to the Tulsa World, "[Dick] Rowland's arrest the next morning was
reported in a front-page story in that afternoon's Tulsa Tribune. Headlined 'Nab
Negro for Attacking Girl in Elevator,' the somewhat sensational account reported,
accurately if perhaps imprudently, that [Dick] Rowland was to be charged with
attempted assault. 22 It said [Dick] Rowland scratched [Sarah] Page and tore her
clothes." 23 While in custody, White citizens concerned for the safety of White
women attempted to lynch Dick Rowland, 24 and Black citizens concerned for
Dick Rowland's life attempted to protect him 25 and the Tulsa, Oklahoma Race Riot
of 1921 was on.
Part Two: The Aftermath
The Klu Klux Klan Benefited From The Riot
The "Assault" Case Against Dick Rowland Was Dropped
7/31/2019 Environmental Products (7)
4/8
In the early 1900s the economic prosperity of
Black Americans was often realized amidst
violent racial and political tension. 26 In
Oklahoma the Klu Klux Klan made its first
major appearance shortly before the riot in
Tulsa. 27 It has been estimated that there were
about 3,200 members of the Klu Klux Klan in
Tulsa in 1921. 28 As to be expected,
researchers suspect that the incendiaryimpetus behind the riot in Tulsa was the Klu
Klux Klan working in consort with ranking city officials and other sympathizers.
However, it is interesting to note, that in the same month the case against Dick
Rowland was dropped following the receipt of a
letter from Sarah Page to Tulsa county
attorney, John Seaver where she stated that
she did not wish to prosecute the case, 29 a
large Klu Klux Klan rally was held at
Convention Hall. 30 Just three (3) months after
the Riot, Wednesday, August 31st, 1921 in a
private ceremony 300 Tulsans, supported by a
throng of 1,500 onlookers, were initiated as the first class of the Tulsa Klan No. 2. 31
By September 1921 twenty (20) hooded vigilantes "bullwhipped" a suspected
bootlegger, car thief and hijackerJ. E. Frazier.
Tulsa county attorney, John Seaver praised
the Klu Klux Klan, intimated that Frazier
probably got what he deserved and twelve (12)
more "bullwhippings" followed. With the attack
on Frazier, Tulsa's Klu Klux Klan era was in fullthrottle. 32 In January of 1922, the Tulsa
Benevolent Association of Tulsa, Oklahoma, a
holding company for the Knights of the Ku
Klux Klan, Inc. was formed. 33 Washington E. Hudson, the attorney for Dick
Rowland, was noted among the founding members of the Tulsa Benevolent
Association, where in a field north of Owasso, Oklahoma, a nighttime
"naturalization" ceremony initiated 1,020 Tulsa
Klavern members before a fiery, 70-by-20 foot
cross. 34 Founding members provided the
financing and leadership necessary to build the
Klu Klux Klan's temple, orKlavern, known as
Beno Hall. It is reported that the locals jokingly
called it "Be No Hall," as in "Be No Nigger, Be
No Jew, Be No Catholic, Be No Immigrant." 35 By March 1922 Klu Klux Klan
abducted and "bullwhipped" John K. Smitherman, a prominent Black American.
The Klu Klux Klan cut off a piece of his ear and tried to force Smitherman to eat
it. 36 By April 1922 , more than 1,700 Klu Klux Klan members marched through
7/31/2019 Environmental Products (7)
5/8
downtown Tulsa while an airplane carrying an electrically lighted cross flew
overhead. 37 In that spring's city elections, Klu
Klux Klan candidates swept every office, and
did the same when county elections came
around in the fall. 38 Between November 1921
and July 1923, according to formal indictments,
thirty (31) Tulsans, everyone an admitted
Klansman were involved in twelve (12)
"bullwhipping" events in the Tulsa. 39 ByAugust 1923, just two (2) years after the riot,
Oklahoma's anti-klan, Democratic Governor,
John Calloway "Jack" Walton (who would
later be impeached), declared martial law in
Tulsa County because of Klu Klux Klan
activity. 40 Looking back, one can easily see how wise a decision it was for Dick
Rowland to leave Tulsa immediately after he was freed. 41
ConclusionAn Open LetterTo Black America
Black Wall Street Is The Model For Our Economic Success
"THE NEGRO CANNOT WIN if he is willing to sell the future of his children for his personal and immediate comfort and
safety." Martin Luther King, Jr. ("The Living King", Ebony, Vol. 41, No. 3, January 1986, Page 63.)42
In 1921 Black Wall Street, in the Greenwood
Section of Tulsa, Oklahoma, was home to over
600 successfulBlack American businesses.
Built by the blood and sweat of former slaves
who traveled along the "Trail of Tears" to
resettlement camps in Oklahoma and ironically
aided by Jim Crow laws that forced the Black
Community to become self-sustaining and
interdependent, Black Wall Street became
more than a bona fide "rags to riches" story. 43
Black Wall Street, in the midst of a corrupt and moraly bankrupt country,
transformed into a proven economic model and blue print for a productive,
prosperous and secure future. According to
David Reeves, an adjunct professor at San
Francisco State University in the Afro Studies
Department, a Black Wall Street "dollar
circulated 36 to 1,000 times, sometimes taking a
year for currency to leave the community. Now
in 1995, a dollar leaves the Black community in
fifteen (15) minutes." 44 According to John and
Maggie Anderson, founders of The
Empowerment Experiment (formerly called the
7/31/2019 Environmental Products (7)
6/8
"Ebony Experiment"), despite the nearly $1 trillion dollars of buying power in
Black America, for every dollar that Black Americans spend, only $0.02 cents are
invested into Black-owned businesses. The
Andersons advocate buying from Black-owned
businesses to rebuild our community, schools,
tax base and revitalize our workforce. 45 John
Malveaux, President of the Long Beach Central
Area Association, agreeing with the Andersons
puts it this way; "there is a need to bring backsome sense of cohesiveness in the [Black]
community, not only culturally but
economically. 46 I agree. Malveaux is spot on.
Practically speaking, with only $0.02 cents of every dollar of our buying power left
in our community, $0.98 cents of every dollar we spend is being used by those who
would oppress us. Essentially, we're funding our
own demise and I have to wonder if we've lost
our mind? Are we so dependent upon the
government's dole that we can no longer
discern the difference between life and death?
Are we so deep in debt, so desperate and
despondent in our disenfranchisement and
disposition that we've abandoned the bloody
lessons learned from the legacy of Black Wall
Street and bought into the vicious vote buying
schemes inherent in liberal policies? Star Parker, Founder and President of
C.U.R.E., the Center for Urban Renewal and Education, in her "Memo to Romney"
expands the discussion when she says; "getting
off 'Uncle Sam's Plantation' is no longer aproblem limited to our poor. It is a problem and
challenge for the whole country." 47 Here's my
Memo to the Congressional Black Caucus:
Capitalism for the rich and Socialism for the poor
has not, does not and never, ever will work. It is
long, long past time we got off"Uncle Sam's
Plantation." Booker Taliaferro Washington,
championed biblically moral character, personal
responsibility, education and economic empowerment. 48 He was prophetic when
he said: "The greatness of a nation in the future will be measured not by the vessels
that it floats, but by the number of schools and churches and useful industries
that it keeps in existence. It will be measured not by the number of men killed, but
by the number of men saved and lifted up." 49Here is my bottom line: When we
(i.e., Black American consumers and entrepreneurs) invest in each other by
way of the time tested and proven promises of market-based public policies that
promote private property, personal responsibility, and limited government we fight
poverty. When we live by biblical values, such as abstinence, education, faith,
family and freedom, to protect biblically defined marriage, parental rights, the lives
7/31/2019 Environmental Products (7)
7/8
of our women and the life of our children inside
the wombs of their mothers we please God.
When we please God, we win.
Brothers, we really need to talk.
Reference(s):
01. Tulsa Race Riot, "Re-examine the Riot," Produced by the American
Studies Program, Oklahoma State University (http://bit.ly/KFHOHK). Seealso Parrish, Mary E. Jones. An Eye-Witness Account of the 1921 Tulsa
Race Riot by Mrs. Mary E. Jones Parrish as published in 1923: John Hope
Franklin Center for Reconciliation, 2009 Edition.
02. 1921 Tulsa Race Riot: captured men. Photo by Tulsa Historical Society: "Black detainees are led to the Convention Hall
following a race riot in Tulsa, Okla, June 1, 1921. The National Guard rounded up blacks by the thousands and took them to the
fairgrounds, the Convention Hall and a baseball stadium where they were given food and water. By day's end, many thriving black
businesses in a 35-block area had been torched." (http://bit.ly/MOZn2V).
03. Tulsa Reparations Coalition, Prologue and quote by State Representative Don Ross, "Tulsa Race Riot A Report by the
Oklahoma Commission to study the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921" (http://bit.ly/Md5IE1).
04. Tulsa Race Riot Report, The Final Report of the Oklahoma Commission to Study the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921, February 28,
2001 (http://bit.ly/LSs3fq).
05. Greenwood, Tulsa, Oklahoma, "The Black Wall Street," Wikipedia (http://bit.ly/b9PcZ8).
06. Randy Krehbiel, World Staff Writer, "The Questions That Remain, A conversation about Tulsa's Race Riot and racism
today" (http://bit.ly/kmOj2L). See also "Slavery in America History.Com Articles, Video, Pictures and Facts." Quote: "Slavery in
America began when the first African slaves were brought to the North American colony of Jamestown, Virginia, in 1619, to aid in
the production of such lucrative crops as tobacco." (http://bit.ly/dERwex).07. "The Eruption of Tulsa": An NAACP Official Investigates the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921 (http://bit.ly/I7zidR).
08. Race Riot: Timeline | Tulsa World, "Timeline" (http://bit.ly/kmOj2L).
09. Tulsa Race Riot, Wikipedia (http://bit.ly/2Cp2CU).
10. Greenwood, Tulsa, Oklahoma, The Tulsa Race Riot, Wikipedia (http://bit.ly/h0pbkE).
11. Greenwood, Tulsa, Oklahoma, Aftermath, Wikipedia (http://bit.ly/MEOcZS).
12. The 25 Worst Riots of All Time, #9 Tulsa Race Riot of 1921 (http://bit.ly/8Wa3pa).
13. Race Riot: Timeline | Tulsa World, "The Toll" (http://bit.ly/kmOj2L).
14. Tulsa Race Riot, "Meet the Survivors," Robert Fairchild, Sr. (http://bit.ly/LhqEQa).
15. The Rise and Fall of Jim Crow, Jim Crow Stories, "Tulsa Riot (1921)" (http://to.pbs.org/Lrb9SE).
16. AfricanAmerican Resource Center, Tulsa Race Riot Timeline with Maps, "The Seeds of Catastrophe", May 31st, 1921
(http://bit.ly/NtmOos).
17. Dick Rowland, Wikipedia (http://bit.ly/Mdyogj).
18. Ibid.
19. Ibid.
20. Ibid.
21. Ibid.
22. The Tulsa Tribune, "Nab Negro for Attacking Girl In an Elevator," Tuesday, May 31st, 1921 (http://bit.ly/c49bGW).
23. Ibid.
24. Dick Rowland, Wikipedia (http://bit.ly/Mdyogj).
25. Scott Ellsworth, "The Tulsa Race Riot History Does Not Take Place In A Vacuum" (http://bit.ly/Ne6fN).
26. Greenwood, Tulsa, Oklahoma, "The Black Wall Street," Wikipedia (http://bit.ly/b9PcZ8).
27. Ibid.
28. Ibid.
29. Dick Rowland, Wikipedia (http://bit.ly/Mdyogj).
30. Race Riot: Timeline | Tulsa World, "The Aftermath" (http://bit.ly/kmOj2L).
31. Historical Atlas of Oklahoma, by Charles Robert Goins, Danney Goble, James H. Anderson, "Reported Incidents Involving
The Ku Klux Klan, By County" (http://bit.ly/LSXKFw). See also Scott Ellsworth, "The Tulsa Race Riot History Does Not
Take Place In A Vacuum" (http://bit.ly/Ne6fN).
32. Beno Hall: Tulsa's Den Of Terror, by Steve Gerkin, September 3rd, 2011 (http://bit.ly/MdPVov).
33. Ibid.
34. Ibid.
35. Ibid.
36. Historical Atlas of Oklahoma, by Charles Robert Goins, Danney Goble, James H. Anderson, "Reported Incidents Involving
The Ku Klux Klan, By County" (http://bit.ly/LSXKFw).
37. Race Riot: Timeline | Tulsa World, "The Aftermath" (http://bit.ly/kmOj2L).
38. Ibid. See also The House of Kerr of Ardgowan, The Grandfather Kerr Clan. Quote: "The enormous economic power and
political leverage of Tulsa's oil establishment has always managed to suppress much public knowledge of the 1921 Tulsa Race
War or the complete Ku Klux Klan political takeover of Oklahoma after the November 1923 impeachment of Oklahoma's
courageous anti-Klan Governor Jack Walton orchestrated by Richard Lloyd Jones." (http://bit.ly/MdTEm6). See also Tulsa Race
Riot Survivors Sue Tulsa Tribune, by Attorney Jim Lloyd of Tulsa represents the survivors, Dated: Friday, May 30th, 2003,
Here's the case: "On the eve of the 83rd anniversary of the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921, survivors of the Riot are filing a civil
lawsuit in the Western US District Court, Kansas City Missouri, naming the Tulsa Tribune newspaper, the Estate of Editor and
Publisher Richard Lloyd Jones Sr., the Estates and Family Trusts of Jones Family members and members of the Ku Klux
Klan organization in Tulsa for their deliberate actions that started one of the worst race riots in American history."
(http://bit.ly/NEmDW9).
39. Historical Atlas of Oklahoma, by Charles Robert Goins, Danney Goble, James H. Anderson, "Reported Incidents Involving
http://bit.ly/NEmDW9http://bit.ly/MdTEm6http://bit.ly/kmOj2Lhttp://bit.ly/LSXKFwhttp://bit.ly/MdPVovhttp://bit.ly/Ne6fNhttp://bit.ly/LSXKFwhttp://bit.ly/kmOj2Lhttp://bit.ly/Mdyogjhttp://bit.ly/b9PcZ8http://bit.ly/Ne6fNhttp://bit.ly/Mdyogjhttp://bit.ly/c49bGWhttp://bit.ly/Mdyogjhttp://bit.ly/NtmOoshttp://to.pbs.org/Lrb9SEhttp://bit.ly/LhqEQahttp://bit.ly/kmOj2Lhttp://bit.ly/8Wa3pahttp://bit.ly/MEOcZShttp://bit.ly/h0pbkEhttp://bit.ly/2Cp2CUhttp://bit.ly/kmOj2Lhttp://bit.ly/I7zidRhttp://bit.ly/dERwexhttp://bit.ly/kmOj2Lhttp://bit.ly/b9PcZ8http://bit.ly/LSs3fqhttp://bit.ly/Md5IE1http://bit.ly/MOZn2Vhttp://bit.ly/KFHOHK7/31/2019 Environmental Products (7)
8/8
The Ku Klux Klan, By County" (http://bit.ly/LSXKFw).
40. Race Riot: Timeline | Tulsa World, "The Aftermath" (http://bit.ly/kmOj2L). See also Governor of Oklahoma
(http://bit.ly/MEUNn6) and Impeachment (http://bit.ly/NtU3rE). See also Hiram Wesley Evans, the Imperial Wizard who "devoted
funds to fighting Jack C. Walton, the anti-Klan governor of Oklahoma; to the group's joy, Walton was impeached and removed
from office in 1923." (http://bit.ly/K8RILU).
41. Dick Rowland, Wikipedia (http://bit.ly/Mdyogj).
42. Martin Luther King, Jr., "The Living King", Ebony, Vol. 41, No. 3, January 1986, Page 63 (http://bit.ly/LzCLHI). See also
Stride Toward Freedom by Martin Luther King, Jr.: "The Negro cannot win the respect of his oppressor by acquiescing; he
merely increases the oppressor's arrogance and contempt. Acquiescence is interpreted as proof of the Negro's inferiority. The
Negro cannot win respect of the white people of the South or the peoples of the world if he is willing to sell the future of his
children for his personal and immediate comfort and safety." (http://bit.ly/LccWus).
43. Greenwood, Tulsa, Oklahoma, The Roots, Wikipedia (http://bit.ly/MgPqdj). See also "Burning of Greenwood, Oklahoma - The
Black Wall Street" by Samuel Black: "Based on the growth of African-Americans in Greenwood, Jim Crow laws legalizing
segregation were passed in 1908." (http://bit.ly/bVsusN).44. David Reeves, "What Is Black Wallstreet?" (http://bit.ly/1Q5eOf).
45. Black Dollars, Support Black Businesses, by Dianne Anderson, Precinct Reporter Group, (http://bit.ly/LbcJKa).
46. Ibid.
47. Star Parker, author of "Uncle Sam's Plantation: How Big Government Enslaves America's Poor and What We Can Do About
It" (http://amzn.to/MPW4sh). Star Parker is the founder and president of CURE, the Center for Urban Renewal and Education
(http://bit.ly/8EtAxr), a 501(c)(3) non-profit think tank which promotes market based public policy to fight poverty. Hear ye her in:
"Memo to Romney: Whole nation is on government plantation" (http://bit.ly/xaEPsR).
48. Booker T. Washington, Wikipedia (http://bit.ly/1qr4J).
49. Vote God, is committed to motivating and mobilizing people of Faith to amply Vote! Recent statistics show, 75% of
"people of Faith" don't vote! This will change, and MUST change this year (2012)! The earth groans and God stands, waiting for
"people of Faith" to take a STAND for Him! Visit us on Facebook here: http://on.fb.me/KBRliU or stop by our website here:
http://bit.ly/KIgp34.
Click Here To Support Our Work. The Issues4Life Foundation is a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization. All
donations are tax deductible. To send a donation via U.S. Mail, please make the check or money orderpayable to the "Issues4Life Foundation" and send it to the address below. We have also partnered with
Real Estate ForLife, where you can support our Pro-Life work at no cost to you! For more information please
click here.
Issues4Life Foundation
1684 Decoto Road, Suite 261
Union City, California 94587-3544
www.issues4life.org
California Civil Rights Foundation
1684 Decoto Road, Suite 251
Union City, California 94587-3544
www.civilrightsfoundation.org
Copyright 2012 Issues4Life Foundation | California Civil Rights Foundation. All rights reserved.To ensure our newsletter always reaches your inbox, please add the above "FROM" email address to your
address book. If you prefer not to receive news from us in the future, you can unsubscribe here.
mailto:[email protected]?subject=Unsubscribe&body=Newsletter%20Manager:%0A%0aPlease%20remove%20my%20email%20address%20from%20your%20list.%0A%0AThank%20you.http://www.civilrightsfoundation.org/mailto:[email protected]://www.issues4life.org/mailto:[email protected]://www.realestateforlife.org/http://www.issues4life.org/donations.htmlhttp://www.issues4life.org/donations.htmlhttp://www.issues4life.org/donations.htmlhttp://bit.ly/KIgp34http://on.fb.me/KBRliUhttp://bit.ly/1qr4Jhttp://bit.ly/xaEPsRhttp://bit.ly/8EtAxrhttp://amzn.to/MPW4shhttp://bit.ly/LbcJKahttp://bit.ly/1Q5eOfhttp://bit.ly/bVsusNhttp://bit.ly/MgPqdjhttp://bit.ly/LccWushttp://bit.ly/LzCLHIhttp://bit.ly/Mdyogjhttp://bit.ly/K8RILUhttp://bit.ly/NtU3rEhttp://bit.ly/MEUNn6http://bit.ly/kmOj2Lhttp://bit.ly/LSXKFwTop Related