Friday, December 21, 2007

Millions still celebrate Winter Solstice

KNN reveals it's Pagan roots
KNN News Service
Source: Circle Network News

Winter Solstice has been celebrated in cultures the world over for thousands of years. This start of the solar year is a celebration of Light and the rebirth of the Sun. In old Europe, it was known as Yule, from the Norse, Jul, meaning wheel.

Today, many people in Western-based cultures refer to this holiday as "Christmas." Yet a look into its origins of Christmas reveals its Pagan roots. Emperor Aurelian established December 25 as the birthday of the "Invincible Sun" in the third century as part of the Roman Winter Solstice celebrations. Shortly thereafter, in 273, the Christian church selected this day to represent the birthday of Jesus, and by 336, this Roman solar feast day was Christianized. January 6, celebrated as Epiphany in Christendom and linked with the visit of the Magi, was originally an Egyptian date for the Winter Solstice.

Most of the customs, lore, symbols, and rituals associated with "Christmas" actually are linked to Winter Solstice celebrations of ancient Pagan cultures. While Christian mythology is interwoven with contemporary observances of this holiday time, its Pagan nature is still strong and apparent. Pagans today continue to re-Paganize Christmastime and the secular New Year by giving a Pagan spiritual focus to existing holiday customs and by creating new traditions that draw on ancient ways.

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Where have all the men gone? Black gender gap is widening

The fatal price of being a black man in America
By Jonathan Tilove
Newhouse News Service

There are nearly 2 million more black adult women than men in America, stark testimony to how often black men die before their time.

Worse yet, with nearly another million black men in prison or the military, the reality in most black communities across the country is of an even greater imbalance — a gap of 2.8 million, or 26 percent, according to Census Bureau figures for 2002. The comparable disparity for whites was 8 percent.

Perhaps no single statistic so precisely measures the fateful, often fatal price of being a black man in America, or so powerfully conveys how beset black communities are by the violence and disease that leave them bereft of brothers, fathers, husbands and sons. And because the number of black males plummets as they move from their teens to their 20s, the gap first appears with the suddenness of a natural disaster.

KNN Note: This article was originally written in the Seattle Times, May 2005. To see the rest of this article click here: The Seattle Times: Nation & World: Where have all the men gone? Black ...

Monday, December 17, 2007

Felling a little raw?

Try my cucumber salad
By
Sis. Yaheli Israel
KNN Health Specialist

Felling a little raw? Try my cucumber salad, it will make your mouth say WOW. Cucumbers make a great fruit snack or in a salad all by themselves. This is a quick less than 10 min meal and it tastes great. Cucumbers can be eaten raw or cooked, or pickled. The fresh cucumber seeds are a source of vitamin C, vitamin K, and potassium, also providing dietary fiber, vitamin A, vitamin B6, thiamin, folate, pantothenic acid, magnesium, phosphorus, copper, and manganese.

Cucumbers Salad
-4 medium cucumbers
-1 teaspoons salt
-1cup Rice Wine white vinegar
-3/4 water
-2 tablespoons chopped fresh dill
1/4 teaspoon basil
-dash cayenne pepper (optional)

Cut cucumbers into thin slices toss with salt and dill. Marinate in rice wine vinegar and water in the fridge for one hour. Drain liquid from cucumber. Add remaining ingredients and stir.
Return liquid to cucumbers and mix. Cover and refrigerate one hours before serving. Dash of sugar (optional).

Makes 5 servings, it's great and easy to make. Eat and enjoy!!!!

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Live Foods Week Begins

Living foods for a living people
Akote Hodahvyah-KNN Chicago

During Live Foods Consumption Week we will consume only live foods for this entire week. Live foods are defined as foods that have not been subject to cooking (heat) before consumption. Live Foods Week will commence on Motsi Shabbat (Saturday) Dec. 15, 2007 (at sundown) and end on Yom Shee Shee (Friday) Dec. 21, 2007 (at sundown). Enjoy!!!!!!!

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Going 7 Days Sugarless

If one is trying to avoid sugar, what do you do?
By Laviyah Eshet Nahum
KNN-Chicago

Sugarless week has arrived (Sundown Dec. 7th ends Sundown Dec. 14th) and if you are wondering why it is important to give your body a sugar-less week at least four times a year, read on. Sugar is found in so many foods, that if you don’t carefully read labels, you are probably consuming more sugar than you are aware of. Sugar is a product that is found in products that would never be labeled as dessert: bread, ketchup and peanut butter are just a few items that contain sugar. If one is trying to avoid sugar, what do you do? Be aware.

Being an informed consumer is very important. What equates to sugar? High fructose corn syrup, evaporated cane juice and sucrose are all sugar. These phrases may not be that familiar to you and that is by design. Many companies capitalize off of the ignorance of the consumer. Wordplay is key in causing you to make a purchase. Evaporated cane juice sounds much healthier than sugar. In fact, that identifying ingredient is used in many health food products. However, evaporated cane juice is equal to sugar.

Unfortunately, all sugar is refined. There are just different levels in the refining process. To refine is to free from impurities or unwanted material. For sugar to get from the sugar cane to your meal, it must go through a process, even raw sugar.

Sugar Blues
Besides making food sweet, sugar is responsible for a lot of conditions stemming from consumption of the product. Sugar suppresses the immune system. The sugar from one can of soda suppresses your immune system for up to six hours! That’s from just one can; we haven’t even addressed those who consume a Big Gulp on a regular basis.

Sugar is also responsible for upsetting the mineral relationships in your body. Sugar throws you off balance. Sugar is acid forming. An acidic body is a body that invites disease. All of your major organs suffer from the over consumption of sugar. Sugar causes hyperactivity, anxiety and crankiness in children.

It is fact that sugar weakens the eyesight, causes copper deficiency, contributes to alcoholism, premature aging, obesity, tooth decay, asthma, arthritis, diabetes, cataracts, depression and dizziness. Sugar increases overgrowth of Candida yeast organism, increases PMS symptoms, increases anxiety and irritability. So, why is it in everything?

Sugar Addiction
The average American consumes 115 pounds of sugar per year. Most people are not even aware that they are addicted to sugar. Refined white sugar has been likened to dietary. Most people eating a Western diet eat sugar for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Sugar in tea or coffee or with cereal is for breakfast. Sugar in the salad dressing, peanut butter, soda or even pasta sauce is for lunch. Sugar is in your BBQ sauce and/or ketchup for dinner.

Seven days of sugarless consumption helps to put your body back in balance, helps to restore the strength of your immune system and you might even lose some weight. At the end of the seven day period, you never know, you might not even want something sweet…

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Sugarless Week has begun

Live Foods Week begins next week
By Akote Hodahvyah
KNN-Chicago

In our pursuit of perfect health and Everlasting Life it has been decreed that four (4) times a year there will be a Sugarless Week and a Live Food Consumption Week. During Sugarless Week we will consume no sugar, honey, or other sweeteners that have not been approved by the Ministry of Divine Health. During Live Food Consumption Week we will consume the required live food diet.

Sugarless Week will commence on Yom Shee Shee (Friday) Dec. 7, 2007 (at sundown) and end on Motsai Shabbat (Saturday) Dec. 15, 2007 (at sundown). Live Food Week will commence on Motsi Shabbat (Saturday) Dec. 15, 2007 (at sundown) and end on Yom Shee Shee (Friday) Dec. 21, 2007 (at sundown).

Saturday, December 08, 2007

What Makes Us Human?

A Study of the mind and consciousness-Material Facts from a Nonmaterialist Perspective
From
Vision Insights and New Horizons - USA

"The human brain cannot explain the human mind—there must be a non-physical ingredient, beyond our microscopes, test tubes, electrodes and computers. To the truly open-minded individual, it is fruitless to physically rationalize the uniqueness of mind. There must be a non-physical essence—a ‘spirit’—in man."

"From this Hebraic perspective, what makes humans unique is the nonphysical component, “the spirit in man.”

"In the case of the ancient Israelites, God wanted them to change their ways by first changing their minds."

Ask “What makes us human?” and a range of responses is guaranteed from materialist and nonmaterialist scientist and religious thinker alike. From self-awareness to free moral agency, from conscience to the capacity to imagine, such traits are put forward as distinguishing us from nonhuman species. There’s also the capacity for spoken language, which some say is the most distinctive difference, even innate. On a more troubling level, some might list the deliberate decision not to reproduce ourselves, and more darkly still, the willing invention of weapons that assure mutual mass destruction, threatening extinction of the species.

That all of these characteristics have a connection with human consciousness is clear. But the definition and operation of human consciousness is not. Despite the fact that a US presidential proclamation declared the 1990s “the decade of the brain,” with the assurance that “a new era of discovery is dawning in brain research,”[i] little has been achieved in understanding the brain-mind relationship. Addressing a 2005 neuroscience conference, Stephen Morse, Professor of Psychology and Law in Psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania, candidly noted, “Here’s a dirty little secret: We have no idea how the brain enables the mind. We know a lot about the localization of function, we know a lot about neurophysiological processes, but how the brain produces mental states—how it produces conscious, rational intentionality—we don’t have a clue. When we do, it will revolutionize the biological sciences.”[ii]

Philosopher of mind John Searle has remarked that in the absence of agreement on the subject of consciousness, he welcomes discussion from all perspectives, including the nonmaterialist, to further the search for an explanation.[v] Thus, it might be helpful to reexamine some of the wisdom of the past for answers of a different order. By this I do not intend a repetition of what has become the conventional Western religious conceptualization of the human being—body and soul—but rather an examination of the largely forgotten wisdom of the ancient Hebrews. In so doing, we might light upon an alternative explanation that could inform present efforts.

Click here to read this very thought provoking article: What Makes Us Human?

Black Hebrews finally get a chance to explore life

"The Black Hebrews" is about to get its own piece of the Holy Land
by Avida Landau
The South African Star
Johannesburg,South Africa

Four decades after they heard what they call an angel's order to leave the United States and move to Israel, a vegan community popularly known as "the Black Hebrews" is about to get its own piece of the Holy Land.

Identifying themselves as African Hebrew Israelites, 300 African-Americans arrived in 1969 in the sleepy desert town of Dimona, claiming to be descendants of the ancient Israelites and wanting a right to settle in the Jewish state.

Despite observing Jewish holidays and practices, they were never recognised as Jews by Israeli authorities, but were allowed to remain. Their legal status has been resolved and the government granted them Israeli residency.

But fire services warned that their homes in the small government-owned compound - which they call the "Village of Peace" - may be a fire hazard. So Dimona Mayor Meir Cohen and the government decided to give the community of 3 000 Hebrews their own tract of land.

On their new property, they hope to build tourist attractions such as a wellness resort, health treatment clinics and restaurants, all reflecting the community's lifestyle.

See: Black Hebrews finally get a chance to explore life

Thursday, December 06, 2007

9 dead in Nebraska mall shooting

Shooter kills 9 then himself
By Oskar Garcia
Associated Press Writer

OMAHA, Neb. - Less than an hour before he killed eight victims and himself in a mall shooting spree, the gunman called a woman who had taken him in to tell her about a suicide note — but she said Thursday she never thought he would hurt anyone but himself.

Debora Maruca-Kovac told CBS's "The Early Show" she found the note after Robert A. Hawkins, 19, called to thank her and her family for their help, to express his love, and to tell her he had left the note behind.

"He had said how much he loved his family and all his friends and how he was sorry he was a burden to everybody and his whole life he was a piece of (expletive) and now he'll be famous," she said, describing the note. "I was fearful that he was going to try to commit suicide but I had no idea that he would involve so many other families."

Hawkins carried out his shooting spree from the third floor of the Westroads Mall, the bullets from his rifle cutting through the sound of Christmas music as he terrorized shoppers and employees.

See: 9 dead in Nebraska mall shooting

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Support A Child International is now "A Better World"

Our focus is global, with projects that embrace the needs of America’s at-risk urban neighborhoods, as well as impoverished international regions
KNN News Service

Formerly Support A Child International, A Better World is 20 years in the making. In fulfilling our mission to create a sustainable future for our children, our programs evolved to affect their surrounding environment and systemic issues.

Our focus is global, with projects that embrace the needs of America’s at-risk urban neighborhoods, as well as impoverished international regions.

Our urban programs respect the interdependence of a healthy mind and body to affect sustainable positive change in children as well as in their surrounding community and family environment. Our international programs focus on creating the economic infrastructure and community empowerment to allow for the sustainable development in impoverished nations.

A Better World’s evolvement and growth is a reflection of our culture and process of never ending improvement and dedication. Our work is never done.

See the new website at: http://www.creatingabetterworld.net/

Sunday, December 02, 2007

Why vegans should read all food labels

There are many hidden animal ingredients in foods
KNN-Cleveland

A vegan is one who eats no meat or dairy products. It is very important to vegans to read all the labels on the food products that they buy. Many ingredients contain animal products that you may not be aware of.

Click on the link below to see a detailed list of these ingredients. See: Foods which contain hidden animal products for reading labels.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

From Sewage, Added Water for Drinking

“Toilet to tap” by the way, is getting a close look in several cities
By RANDAL C. ARCHIBOLD
The New York Times

FOUNTAIN VALLEY, Calif. (Nov 27) - It used to be so final: flush the toilet, and waste be gone.

But on Nov. 30, for millions of people here in Orange County, pulling the lever will be the start of a long, intense process to purify the sewage into drinking water — after a hard scrubbing with filters, screens, chemicals and ultraviolet light and the passage of time underground.

On that Friday, the Orange County Water District will turn on what industry experts say is the world’s largest plant devoted to purifying sewer water to increase drinking water supplies. They and others hope it serves as a model for authorities worldwide facing persistent drought, predicted water shortages and projected growth.

The process, called by proponents “indirect potable water reuse” and “toilet to tap” by the wary, is getting a close look in several cities.

The San Diego City Council approved a pilot plan in October to bolster a drinking water reservoir with recycled sewer water. The mayor vetoed the proposal as costly and unlikely to win public acceptance, but the Council will consider overriding it in early December.

For more info see: Click here: From Sewage, Added Water for Drinking - AOL News

Is the “Sister-Wife” becoming the new social norm?

A sister-wife is one who cares about your life, children as much as you do
KNN News Serivce

(This article was originally written in The Chicago Tribune (June 10, 2007) Title: “Big Love’ in a Michigan Cul-De-Sac:” :Section 2: 1, 5)

Like most people, I was a stranger to the term “sister-wife” until I heard it on “Big Love,” an HBO drama about a polygamous family living on the outskirts of Salt Lake City.

Now, as “Big Love” enters its second season on Monday, the sister-wife concept has taken root on my own cul-de-sac in southwest Michigan. We sister-wives of Lynwood Drive use the term and live the life — only without the shared husband.

As with most well-written dramas concerning the private lives of marginal groups, “Big Love” had a way of creating a new normal. The premise that had first seemed outrageous — a man having up to a back yard full of wives — soon became mundane. Not that we would do it, but we could understand how the characters could.

We found ourselves confessing that plural marriage didn’t look so terrible, even in a drama filled with suffering and intrigue.

It was kind of like the Waltons, what with the big family and the red-state setting. One always had company. There was help with the children. And though the three or more women married to one man didn’t seem so great, it seemed a small point.

Within a few episodes, it dawned on my friends and me: We were envious.
We liked the way the sister-wives’ doors opened onto a common patio, how they wandered in and out of each other’s living rooms, how they dined at one giant table. Alone in her part of the house, a single wife looked lonely. In the kitchen together, even in moments of high tension, they looked cozy.

Halfway into the “Big Love” season, we discussed whether we could be sister-wives, though we did not share a husband and had no intention of making that part of the bargain.

The conversation went well. It seemed like that’s how we were living already anyway, only without a name for it. Our children roam from one house to another and are fed wherever they appear, and the space between our houses feels more like a patio than a street.

Besides, what woman couldn’t use a little more help without having to pay for it? What woman doesn’t occasionally long for a larger family without having to give birth? What woman doesn’t get bored doing the same essential chores alone at home? Who couldn’t use a little more company?

My friends and I first used the word as a joke, then as a term of affection, and finally as a salutation, as in, “Hey, sister-wife, how about dinner tonight?” It felt thrilling to speak it aloud. The word spread through the cul-de-sac.

It was a declaration, a call to solidarity. We took it into the public sphere: the playgrounds, the waiting room at the dance academy, the checkout line at Target. We were testing the market.
We knew that at the very least, this worked for us. Being a sister-wife was kind of like belonging to a women’s union. If you were there for them, they were there for you.

Over dinner we wondered aloud what made a sister-wife. Why did the term stick?
We liked the medieval ring of it, but was there more? We parsed the term. “Sister” wasn’t enough. A sister (real or figurative) could be fickle. “Wife” — with our platonic twist — suggested fidelity.

A sister-wife is one who cares about your life, children and appliances almost as much as you do. She will not drop your baby. She will make your child a sandwich he will like.

We took stock of our daily lives. Like our mothers before us, we feed, comfort and scold one another’s children. We are the baby-sitters when there is no baby-sitter. We give each other clothes. We gaze unself-consciously into each other’s refrigerators when ours no longer look interesting.

More often than not we eat together, and the more we’re at it, the more seamlessly it works. Instead of buying six ears of corn, we buy two dozen. We call up our neighbors and, voila: The corn gets shucked and the corn gets eaten. Sickness, health, richer, poorer, we’re there for all of it. The absent sexual component notwithstanding, we feel as if we are married.

I have five sister-wives now, four in my neighborhood and one married to my brother. So far, so good. When “Big Love” starts up again, we will renew our vows. And we will remind each other that as long as we each shall live in this neighborhood, we are — as our forebears put it — sealed for all eternity.

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

FDA Probes Asthma Drugs for Kids

Top-selling asthma drugs Serevent and Advair is back in the spotlight
Reuters News Service

LONDON - The safety of GlaxoSmithKline Plc's top-selling asthma drugs Serevent and Advair is back in the spotlight this week as a U.S. regulatory panel meets to consider their safety in children.

Europe's biggest drugmaker said on Monday it remained confident the benefits of its products outweighed any risks.

Concerns about rare and potentially fatal side effects were raised in briefing documents posted by Food and Drug Administration staff ahead of a November 27-29 meeting of the agency's Pediatric Advisory Committee.

There were nine cases of adverse events in children under 16 using Serevent, or salmeterol, in the year following granting of pediatric market exclusivity in March 2006, including five deaths, papers posted on the FDA Web site show:

(http://www.fda.gov/ohrms/dockets/ac/07/briefing/2007-4325b_03_05_Salmeterol%20Adverse%20Event%20Review.pdf).

Serevent, a long-acting beta agonist used to ease breathing, is also included in Advair, Glaxo's biggest product with worldwide sales of 3.3 billion pounds ($6.8 billion) in 2006. U.S. sales accounted for 1.9 billion pounds last year.

It is not the first time that rare adverse events have been reported with Advair and Serevent and industry analysts said the latest regulatory scrutiny would probably not have any immediate impact.

"While the FDA's attention is unwelcome, any formal additional recommendations against use in children that would significantly affect prescribing behavior would seem some way off," analysts at Deutsche Bank said in a note.

The FDA already issued a warning in November 2005 that drugs containing long-acting beta agonists, such as Advair and Serevent, can sometimes paradoxically trigger severe asthma attacks and death.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Chicago's Ahk Zarakyah hits the air waves

SOUL REPATRIATION RADIO can be heard worldwide!!!
KNN-Chicago

SOUL REPATRIATION RADIO - Every other Thursday on WHPK (88.5 FM), 12 P.M.-1 P.M.

Soul Repatriation Radio, hosted by Zarakyah Ben Ahmadiel and Tkumah Tsadeek, will feature progressive, revolutionary, and regenerative discourse on politics, spirituality, sociology, history, nutrition, etc accented by hip hop, soul, and world music weaving a story of restoration. Our goal is to restore the soul of the people to a position of strengh, vigor, and power through Truth. Expect special guest artists, community activists, international leaders and most importantly, real talk for real people...

SOUL REPATRIATION RADIO can be heard worldwide!!!The show also streams live online at http://www.whpk.org/. Just click the link to our show, SOUL REPATRIATION, and tune in...

If you can't catch the time, podcasting (digital archiving) is also available at http://www.whpk.org/ This weeks topics--The Real on Thanksgiving--historical lies, current confusion; Western Imperialism/Indigenous Resistance and more.

Saturday, November 24, 2007

'Black Hebrews' getting kibbutz

The move will be another milestone for the Black Hebrews
JTA News Agency
Israel's "Black Hebrews" are getting their own kibbutz.

Dimona Mayor Meir Cohen, whose cramped Negev town has been home to the so-called Black Hebrews since their founders emigrated from the United States in the 1960s, announced this week that the community had been allotted a tract of nearby desert land on which to found a kibbutz.

The move will be another milestone in the Black Hebrews' efforts to be recognized by the Jewish state.

Identifying itself as "African Hebrew Israelite," the 3,000-member community claims descent from the Ten Lost Jewish Tribes, but this has long been rejected by rabbinical authorities as baseless.

The Black Hebrews are strict vegans and polygamists, and they practice some Jewish rites. They said their kibbutz will feature tourist attractions like a health spa and restaurant.

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Food for thought

Oranges with seeds – add it to your dietary intake today!!!
Sis. Yaheli-KNN Health Specialist
Raw Food Creations
Celebration of Life Inc.

Today is the day to ask your self the question. What am I going to do different in my life today? I know this is a loaded question with so many things we need to address. So let me help you, let’s start by eating something that will enrich our live and rejuvenate out souls. First, food for though:

-Thinking perfected by doing
-Doing perfected by thinking
-Decision implies action
-Action = Results

Food for today: Oranges with seeds – add it to your dietary intake today!!! Orange Benefits:

-Vitamin B6 helps support the production of hemoglobin that carries oxygen to all parts of the body.
-Magnesium helps maintain blood pressure.
-Thiamin helps to convert food into energy.
-Calcium that helps protect and maintain the health of our bone and teeth.
-Folic Acid for proper brain development.
-Potassium helps maintain electrolyte balance in the cells, and is important in maintaining a healthy cardiovascular system.

Nutritive Values:

-Vitamin A
-Vitamin B
-Thiamine
-Vitamin C
-Calcium
-Phosphorus
-Potassium

For more info contact Sis Yaheli at: yaheli_777@yahoo.com

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Bangladesh cyclone toll rises

Country grieves as death toll tops 3,100; officials fear it may hit 10,000
Associated Press

PATHARGHATA, Bangladesh - Bangladesh sought more foreign aid Tuesday to help thousands of survivors after Cyclone Sidr killed more than 3,100 people, according to an official tally that still was expected to rise.

Food, fresh water and temporary shelter still had not reached many of the hungry and exhausted survivors of the storm that tore across the country’s coast last Thursday.

“At this time we will welcome support from the international community,” said a statement from Bangladesh foreign ministry. “We are doing as best as we can do ourselves.”

See: Bangladesh storm toll rises

Friday, November 16, 2007

KNN Exclusive-Africans in America: Why are we still here?

Ahtur Keymah B.N. Aharon
KNN-Cleveland

This past week USA Today ran several articles speaking to the state of Africans in America. It reveled that things have continued to get worse with no hope for the future. It further revels that all the plans for the advancement for our people in America have failed.

Please review the two articles below to get the latest update on the progress of Africans in America. To some this may be new news but to others it is just a stark reminder of what we already know.

"And it shall come to pass, when all these things are come upon thee, the blessing and the curse, which I have set before thee, and thou shalt call them to mind among all the nations, whither thy Yah hath driven thee, And shalt return unto thy Yah, and shalt obey his voice according to all that I command thee this day, thou and thy children, with all thine heart, and with all thy soul; That then thy Yah will turn thy captivity, and have compassion upon thee, and will return and gather thee from all the nations, whither thy Yah hath scattered thee. If any of thine be driven out unto the outmost parts of heaven, from thence will thy Yah gather thee, and from thence will he fetch thee: And thy Yah will bring thee into the land which thy fathers possessed, and thou shalt possess it; and he will do thee good, and multiply thee above thy fathers."
Deuteronomy 30:1-5


We invite any comments that you may have.

Poll: Blacks grow more pessimistic

Black Americans are more dissatisfied with their progress than at any time in the past 20 years
By Marisol Bello
USA TODAY

WASHINGTON — Black Americans are more dissatisfied with their progress than at any time in the past 20 years, and less than half say life will get better for them in the future.

A poll released Tuesday by the Pew Research Center found that one in five blacks say things are better for them now than five years ago. In 1984, almost two in five blacks said things were better than they were five years earlier.

MORE FROM THE STUDY: Pew Research Center

Less than half of blacks surveyed say they think life will get better, compared with 57% in 1986.
"There's a great deal of anxiety, cynicism and pessimism today," says Marc Morial, president of the National Urban League. He says growing rates of crime, unemployment and mortgage foreclosures are shrinking wealth in black communities, which contributes to the dissatisfaction.

See Complete Story: Poll: Blacks grow more pessimistic