PROFILE OF NEW PRESIDENT OF THE NAACP INCLUDES THESE BITS:

…Only a few years out of college, Jealous quickly climbed the ranks of the nonprofit world. In 2005, he was named president of the Los Angeles–based Rosenberg Foundation, which grants money to groups working in low-income communities. Jealous whipped the foundation into fiscal and managerial shape and directed its money toward an emerging method of dealing with mass incarceration: re-entry programs that help former inmates readjust to society and find work. Jealous plans to prioritize these issues as president of the NAACP. “A hundred years from now we’re going to be judged by our grandchildren,” he says. “They’re going to look back, and they’re going to say, this country had the most incarcerated on Earth. Young black people were the most incarcerated in modern history. What did you do about it?” …

For Jealous, mass incarceration is the civil-rights challenge of this generation. Addressing it, he says, requires more than just changing draconian drug laws; it also requires confronting poverty and a failing public-education system. Young black folks, particularly the urban poor who most need an organization like the NAACP to look out for them, are facing problems of violence, drugs, AIDS, and unequal education. …

Jealous must figure out how to hold Obama accountable without drawing “the hate.” Melissa Harris-Lacewell, a professor of politics and African American studies at Princeton, is optimistic. The NAACP “could become the authentic supportive and yet challenging voice to the Obama administration,” she says.

This is the role Jealous envisions. “It would be disrespectful not to criticize [Obama],” he says. “If we don’t let the brother know when he’s not living up to people’s expectations, he’s only going to be there four years.”

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(via Jack and Jill Politics)


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