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Obama , First Lady Michelle Obama attend summit on the 50th Anniversary of Passage of Civil Rights Act of 1964, landmark legislation that outlawed discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin, Obama remembers President Johnson

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Pictured are President Barack Obama (in blue stripped tie), Georgia Congressman John Lewis (D-GA), (in red stripped tie),  the longest serving Black in Congress, former George state senator and prior National Cleveland NAACP board chairmanship Julian Bond ( in black tie with designs), and former Georgia congressman Andrew Young, also a former Atlanta mayor won and once the United States Ambassador to the United Nations

By Kathy Wray Coleman, editor-in-chief. Coleman is an investigative, legal,  and political journalist who trained for 17 years at the Call and Post Newspaper.

www.clevelandurbannews.com) / (www.kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com)

AUSTIN, Texas.- This week marks the 50th anniversary of the passage, on July 2 five decades ago, of the historical Civil Rights Act of 1964, which President Lyndon B. Johnson, flanked by Civil Rights Icon The Rev Martin Luther King Jr and ranking congressional leaders, among others, historically signed into law among  a divided America..

A Democrat from Texas, Johnson, then the vice president, assumed the presidency in 1963 upon the assassination of Democratic President John F. Kennedy and served out the remainder of Kennedy's unexpired term. He died in 1973 of heart disease.

The Civil Rights Act of 1964 , passed by Congress and enacted on July 2, 1964, is a landmark piece of civil rights legislation in the United States[4] that outlawed discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.  It was intended to end  unequal application of voter registration requirements and racial segregation in schools, at the workplace and by facilities that served the general public (known as "public accommodations"). (References for this paragraph at Wikipedia.Com).

President Barack Obama, America's first Black president, commemorated the anniversary of the landmark legislation during the final day of a three-day summit in Austin Texas yesterday that drew three other presidents, George Bush, Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter, and a host of Civil Rights leaders to the LBJ Presidential Library. And he gave just due to some Black Civil Rights icons in the audience as he spoke, a press conference in fact.

"We celebrate giants like John Lewis and Andrew Young and Julian Bond and  recall the countless unheralded Americans, Black and White, students and scholars, preachers and housekeepers whose names are etched not on monuments but in the hearts of their loved ones and in the fabric of the country they helped to change," said Obama.

He described  Johnson as a genius and a masterful politician. And while the president said that  there have been accomplishments since the legislation took effect,   he said also that Americans cannot rest.

"But we are here today because we know we cannot be complacent f or history travels not only forwards,  history can travel backwards, history can travel sideways, said Obama, a Democrat and former junior U.S. senator from Illinois.  "And securing the gains this country has made requires the vigilance of its citizens."

Obama said that Civil and human rights  "must be nurtured through struggle and discipline, and persistence and faith. "

By the president's side was First Lady Michelle Obama, the country's first Black first lady.

Though Blacks have progressed since the Civil Rights Act, data show that African-Americans still lag behind Whites collectively across the board and relative to education and socioeconomic status . Black children in public schools across the country still struggle even in school districts once subject to court oversight and desegregation orders, many, if not all relived from such court orders without the required remedying of the past vestiges of racial discrimination.

Unemployment has hit the Black community the hardest, the remnants, in part, of failed economic policies of the Bush administration, the president has said, though a steady climb of economic revival is on the rise under his leadership, data show.

The total national unemployment rate is at roughly 6.6 percent,  down from 8.3 percent in December 2012 and 7.9 percent in December 2013, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported last month. That data also show a national unemployment rate for Blacks at 12.1 percent and reveals that unemployment rates overall are down from last year in 42 states, coupled with increases in two states and Puerto Rico, and no changes at all in nine states.

The national poverty rate is interestingly stagnant at 15 percent, with figures that double for Blacks.(www.clevelandurbannews.com) / (www.kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com)

Last Updated on Sunday, 13 April 2014 04:40

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