I see another thread on the topic of colonizing other planets, etc…
I think that is the only way to fix it. Move and start over.
On a more serious note…
The statistics are apalling! There is a war on the black community, I think more evil than ever before. God help us! Please God help us!
Well, my concern is that if we don’t fix this planet, we’ll just mess up the next one too.
Actually, yes, the black community is under tremendous stress. That means that redressing racism and the economic disparities in America (and the world), plus the cultural scars they leave, are part of building the Kingdom of God (and the culture of life it hosts).
I’m not just plugging this as an anti-racism campaign, which it is in part. It’s also a pro-life issue. African Black women in the U.S. get abortions at a much higher rate that white women and Latina women. Black women in the U.S. get about 40% of abortions, despite being around
13% of the overall population of women. In Michigan, the City of Detroit has abortion rates that are the highest in the state. Looking at the ratio abortions/(live births + abortions), for white women the ratio is about 1/7.5; for black women the ratio is about 1/3. I calculated those ratios using data from the National Center for Health Statistics’ most recent
abortion surveillance report.
To me, we can’t view this tragedy as a simple issue of either (a) moral depravity or (b) economic circumstance. Many conservatives will say (a), many liberals (b).
There’s a sociologist at Harvard, William Julius Wilson, whose work I’ve found to be very useful. He’s made a career of studying urban poverty, which often times is among black people. I think his insights speak to the cultural problems that American (and perhaps global, my African friends) face.
He wrote a book in the mid-1990s, When Work Disappears. Unlike many liberal scholars, he doesn’t just say that things like out-of-wedlock marriages are a result of economic circumstances. He actually talks about how that affects culture. This, to me, is why I picked the “gold digger” title.
I’m not sure where, but he talks about the concept of the “unmarriageable man.” That is, in impoverished urban areas with high crime rates, men (usually black) are not good, stable marriage prospects. About 1/3 black men is involved in some phase of the criminal justice system (incidentally, the longer rates of incarceration for blacks vs. whites for similar crimes seems to be due to prosecutors’ decisions to charge blacks with more severe crimes, based on a
study from the University of Michigan and University of British Columbia). Felony convictions are devastating for employment prospects, and hence marriage.
Put a man with long-term unemployment out as a marriage prospect, and he doesn’t look too appealing (think of the TLC song “
No Scrubs” - “*Can’t get with a deadbeat ****”). The perception of men in that position is that the only thing women are looking for is money. So… the “gold digger” reputation is born. But really, it’s about women who are looking for a stable man.
Wilson writes that in poor urban communities, there has evolved over time a negative outlook on marriage. Put sex into the mix and that may explain - in part - why such a large percentage of African American babies are born out of wedlock. Because a large percentage of the urban poor are black, it’s telling to look at the rates of
unintended pregnancy (from the Guttmacher Institute):
It also points to an economic motivation for abortion: women who are themselves in dicey financial shape may want to wait to have a baby until she feels able to take care of it (often on her own).
In addressing how we need to change our culture to build a Kingdom of God, we must think about how to help people out of poverty. Along the way, we may also be able to reduce abortions.