National Urban League Mourns the Loss of Kobe Bryant and Daughter
ReMarcs Newsletter - January 25, 2020
New Jersey ends prison gerrymandering. The state will now count incarcerated people where they lived, not where they are imprisoned. Here's why this is a win.| Deadline approaching. January 31st is the last day to save on registration for this summer's National Urban League Conference in Houston. Don’t miss out! | 2020 Join Week. If you're a young professional looking to give back and network, this is your chance. Learn more during the kickoff call with Marc Morial on Jan. 29. |Want to buy a home? Homeownership can feel out of reach but it doesn’t have to. We are here to simplify the process! Learn more and find out how to get started. | New episode! With all the talk about possible war with Iran, we chat with a foreign policy expert who walks us through how we got in the current crisis. Take a listen.
New Jersey Ends Prison Gerrymandering; Other States And The Federal Government Must Follow Its Example
Marc H. Morial
President and CEO
National Urban League
“When districts with prisons receive enhanced representation, every other district in the state without a prison sees its votes diluted. And this vote dilution is even larger in the districts with the highest incarceration rates. Thus, the communities that bear the most direct costs of crime are therefore the communities that are the biggest victims of prison-based gerrymandering. The Census Bureau’s decision to count incarcerated people in the wrong place interferes with equal representation in virtually every state.” – Prison Policy Initiative, The Prison Gerrymandering Project
The Census is one of the most powerful tools the African American community has to claim our rightful voice in the political, legislative and social institutions of our nation.
Unfortunately, it also is one of the most abused.
‘You are the medicine,’ Urban League Leader Tells MLK Day Service in Morristown
ReMarcs Newsletter - January 18, 2020
MLK Observance. Don't miss Marc Morial's keynote speech at the Calvary Baptist Church in New Jersey on Monday! Follow updates on social media (@MarcMorial) | MLK Day. One way to honor Dr. King on his 91st birthday is to participate in Day of Service. Find an opportunity to serve your local community. | Hate crimes and Jewish-Black tensions. In the wake of the anti-Semitic attack at a Rabbi’s home in New York, it’s time to put aside our differences and come together. | Remembering James Buford. He spent over 25 years fighting for economic empowerment as head of the Urban League of St. Louis. More on his legacy. | Time is ticking. January 31st is the last day to save before registration prices go up for this year's National Urban League Conference. Don’t miss out! | What's new in DC? From impeachment to Oscars So White and the campaign trail, there’s a lot happening in the news. Washington Bureau Insider has the latest!
MLK’s Legacy Even More Relevant As Hate Crimes Continue To Rise
Marc H. Morial
President and CEO
National Urban League
“The ultimate weakness of violence is that it is a descending spiral, begetting the very thing it seeks to destroy. Instead of diminishing evil, it multiplies it. Through violence you may murder the liar, but you cannot murder the lie, nor establish the truth. Through violence you may murder the hater, but you do not murder hate. In fact, violence merely increases hate.” – Martin Luther King, Jr.
A report that hate crimes surged in America’s five largest cities last year has broken just as we prepare to honor the nation’s best-known victim of a hate crime.
The Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino, found that hate crimes were at their highest level since September 11, 2001, in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, with the Jewish community being the most frequent target in all five of the cities.