INSIDER
South Carolina sets Nov. 1 execution as state ramps up use of death chamber
Read full article: South Carolina sets Nov. 1 execution as state ramps up use of death chamberSouth Carolina has set a date of Nov. 1 date for its next execution as the state ramps up use of the death penalty after a 13-year pause.
From Chinese to Italians and beyond, maligning a culture via its foods is a longtime American habit
Read full article: From Chinese to Italians and beyond, maligning a culture via its foods is a longtime American habitItās a practice thatās about as American as apple pie ā accusing immigrant and minority communities of engaging in bizarre or disgusting behaviors when it comes to what and how they eat and drink.
Trump promised big plans to flip Black and Latino voters. Many Republicans are waiting to see them
Read full article: Trump promised big plans to flip Black and Latino voters. Many Republicans are waiting to see themDonald Trump has promised big plans for recruiting voters in Black, Latino and Asian communities.
San Francisco apologizes to Black residents for decades of racist policies
Read full article: San Francisco apologizes to Black residents for decades of racist policiesSupervisors in San Francisco have formally apologized to African Americans and their descendants for the cityās role in perpetuating racism and discrimination.
Schools say dress codes promote discipline. But many Black students see traces of racism
Read full article: Schools say dress codes promote discipline. But many Black students see traces of racismFor as long as schools have policed hairstyles as part of their dress codes, some students have seen the rules as attempts to deny their cultural and religious identities.
What does Watch Night mean for Black Americans today? It dates back to the Emancipation Proclamation
Read full article: What does Watch Night mean for Black Americans today? It dates back to the Emancipation ProclamationThe tradition of Watch Night services in the United States dates back to Dec. 31, 1862, during the Civil War.
National Cathedral replaces windows honoring Confederacy with stained-glass homage to racial justice
Read full article: National Cathedral replaces windows honoring Confederacy with stained-glass homage to racial justiceThe landmark Washington National Cathedral has unveiled new stained-glass windows with a theme of racial justice.
Supporters of reparations for Black residents urge San Francisco to push forward
Read full article: Supporters of reparations for Black residents urge San Francisco to push forwardMore than 200 people rallied outside San Francisco's City Hall to urge supervisors to act on reparations for Black residents.
Alabama riverfront brawl videos spark a cultural moment about race, solidarity and justice
Read full article: Alabama riverfront brawl videos spark a cultural moment about race, solidarity and justiceBystanders who trained their smartphone cameras on an Alabama riverfront dock, as several white boaters pummeled a Black riverboat co-captain, couldnāt have known the footage would elicit a national conversation about racial solidarity.
Harris says Florida rules on Black history pushed by DeSantis are 'propaganda'
Read full article: Harris says Florida rules on Black history pushed by DeSantis are 'propaganda'Vice President Kamala Harris swiped at new standards for teaching Black history in Florida during a trip to Jacksonville on Friday.
Americans mark Juneteenth with parties, events and quiet reflection on the end of slavery
Read full article: Americans mark Juneteenth with parties, events and quiet reflection on the end of slaveryAmericans across the country are observing the relatively new Juneteenth federal holiday with festivals, parades, cookouts and other gatherings.
Black Californians hope state reparations don't become another broken promise
Read full article: Black Californians hope state reparations don't become another broken promiseCaliforniaās first-in-the-nation Black reparations task force is nearing the end of its historic work with a hefty list of recommendations for lawmakers to consider turning into action.
California reparations panel OKs state apology, payments
Read full article: California reparations panel OKs state apology, paymentsCaliforniaās historic reparations task force has voted to approve recommendations for possible payments to Black residents and a formal apology for the stateās role in perpetuating discriminatory policies.
Report finds democracy for Black Americans is under attack
Read full article: Report finds democracy for Black Americans is under attackA new report from the National Urban League is citing what the civil rights and urban advocacy group says are some of the top threats to democracy for Black Americans.
History Untold: Black communityās roots on the West Side
Read full article: History Untold: Black communityās roots on the West SideA thriving African American community took root on San Antonioās West Side, especially after World War II, when many were drawn to the area by the prospect of civil service jobs.
US adds a healthy 236,000 jobs despite Fed's rate hikes
Read full article: US adds a healthy 236,000 jobs despite Fed's rate hikesAmericaās employers added a solid 236,000 jobs in March, suggesting that the economy remains on solid footing despite the nine interest rate hikes the Federal Reserve has imposed over the past year in its drive to tame inflation.
How did the East Side become the heart of the local African American community? KSAT Explains
Read full article: How did the East Side become the heart of the local African American community? KSAT ExplainsSegregation led to African Americans forming communities east of the San Antonio River. In this KSAT Explains, we explore how the city's East Side came to be.
Black contemporary artists share culture, life experiences at new art exhibit in downtown San Antonio
Read full article: Black contemporary artists share culture, life experiences at new art exhibit in downtown San AntonioThe exhibit curated by Barbara Felix and presented by the City of San Antonioās Department of Arts & Culture is free and open to the public starting January 19 through November 17, 2023.
New museum opening to celebrate San Antonioās African American history
Read full article: New museum opening to celebrate San Antonioās African American historyLocal businessman Charles Williams is fulfilling a decades' long dream by opening a museum to pay tribute to African Americans and African American history in San Antonio.
Black representation in Alabama tested before Supreme Court
Read full article: Black representation in Alabama tested before Supreme CourtCongressional districts that a federal court panel said were unconstitutional because they dilute representation for Black voters in Alabama are nevertheless being used for the November election after the U.S. Supreme Court allowed them.
Black Americans living abroad reflect on Juneteenth holiday
Read full article: Black Americans living abroad reflect on Juneteenth holidayAs the United States marks only the second federally recognized Juneteenth, Black Americans living overseas have embraced the holiday as a day of reflection and an opportunity to educate people in their host countries on Black history.
In the shadow of Texas limits on voting rights and lessons about race in school, Juneteenth celebrates Black history, progress and families
Read full article: In the shadow of Texas limits on voting rights and lessons about race in school, Juneteenth celebrates Black history, progress and familiesAmid a rise in conservative efforts opposed to teaching the lingering impacts of slavery and racism, the descendants of formerly enslaved people are using the Juneteenth holiday to educate younger generations.
HBCU medical schools to tackle organ transplant disparities
Read full article: HBCU medical schools to tackle organ transplant disparitiesA coalition including the four medical schools at the nation's historically Black colleges and universities has announced a new initiative aimed at increasing the number of Black Americans registered as organ donors and combating disparities among transplant recipients.
California reparations plan advances movement, advocates say
Read full article: California reparations plan advances movement, advocates sayCalifornia took a big step this week toward becoming the first U.S. state to make some form of restitution a reality by tackling the divisive issue of which Black residents should be eligible to receive reparations for the atrocity and injustices of slavery and racism.
Biden risks progressives, Blacks with pivot to the center
Read full article: Biden risks progressives, Blacks with pivot to the centerPresident Joe Biden is signaling an election year shift to the center to help protect fragile Democratic majorities in Congress, even as key voices across his partyās sprawling political coalition threaten revolt.
Black enrollment, applications rising at UT Health San Antonio Long School of Medicine
Read full article: Black enrollment, applications rising at UT Health San Antonio Long School of MedicineThe next generation of physicians promises to have a greater representation of African Americans, according to Chiquita Collins, chief diversity officer for the Long School of Medicine at UT Health San Antonio.
McConnell: Black people vote at similar rates to 'Americans'
Read full article: McConnell: Black people vote at similar rates to 'Americans'Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell is drawing criticism for comments he made shortly before the GOP blocked a federal elections bill, when he said that āAfrican Americanā voters cast ballots at similar rates to āAmericans.ā.
Black lawmakers to sue to block Michigan redistricting maps
Read full article: Black lawmakers to sue to block Michigan redistricting mapsCurrent and former Black state lawmakers in Detroit have announced a pending lawsuit to block Michiganās newly drawn congressional and legislative districts, contending they illegally dilute the voting strength of African Americans.
How a doughnut-shaped district breaks up voters of color near Fort Hood and helps House Republicans
Read full article: How a doughnut-shaped district breaks up voters of color near Fort Hood and helps House RepublicansThe doughnut district would be in Bell County, a traditionally red area that has trended blue in recent years as the diverse community around the nationās biggest military installation grows.
Court upholds death sentence for church shooter Dylann Roof
Read full article: Court upholds death sentence for church shooter Dylann RoofA federal appeals court has upheld the conviction and death sentence of a man on federal death row for the racist slayings of nine members of a Black South Carolina congregation.
Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick blames Democrats for low vaccinations among Black residents, but more white Texans are unvaccinated
Read full article: Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick blames Democrats for low vaccinations among Black residents, but more white Texans are unvaccinatedIn Texas, the vaccination rate among Black people is low compared with other racial and ethnic groups, but in terms of raw numbers, the biggest group of the unvaccinated is white people.
KSAT Community spotlight: San Antonio African American Community Archive and Museum
Read full article: KSAT Community spotlight: San Antonio African American Community Archive and MuseumThis month, KSAT Community is highlighting local nonprofit, The San Antonio African American Community Archive and Museum (SAAACAM).
Biden to America after Floyd verdict: 'We can't stop here'
Read full article: Biden to America after Floyd verdict: 'We can't stop here'President Joe Biden says the conviction of former Minneapolis Police Officer Derek Chauvin in the killing of George Floyd ācan be a giant step forwardā for the nation in the fight against systemic racism.
Biden to America after Floyd verdict: 'We can't stop here'
Read full article: Biden to America after Floyd verdict: 'We can't stop here'President Joe Biden says the conviction of former Minneapolis Police Officer Derek Chauvin in the killing of George Floyd ācan be a giant step forwardā for the nation in the fight against systemic racism.
House panel votes to advance bill on slavery reparations
Read full article: House panel votes to advance bill on slavery reparationsA House panel has advanced a decades-long effort to pay reparations to the descendants of slaves, approving legislation Wednesday night that would create a commission to study the issue.
Biden works to balance civil rights and criminal justice
Read full article: Biden works to balance civil rights and criminal justicePresident Joe Bidenās difficult balancing act on policing was put on vivid display over the course of a few hours as he tries to navigate criminal justice and civil rights.
Biden works to balance civil rights and criminal justice
Read full article: Biden works to balance civil rights and criminal justicePresident Joe Bidenās difficult balancing act on policing was put on vivid display over the course of a few hours Tuesday as he tries to navigate criminal justice and civil rights.
At Clemson, unmarked slave graves highlight plantation past
Read full article: At Clemson, unmarked slave graves highlight plantation pastStudents at Clemson University who found an unkempt graveyard on campus last year sparked the discovery of more than 600 unmarked graves most likely belonging to enslaved Black people, sharecroppers and convicted laborers.
AP-NORC poll: 1 in 5 in US lost someone close in pandemic
Read full article: AP-NORC poll: 1 in 5 in US lost someone close in pandemicIn a Feb. 25-March 1, 2021 poll conducted by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, about 1 in 5 Americans say they lost a relative or close friend to the coronavirus. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)WASHINGTON ā About 1 in 5 Americans say they lost a relative or close friend to the coronavirus, highlighting the division between heartache and hope as the country itches to get back to normal a year into the pandemic. A new poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research illustrates how the stage is set for a two-tiered recovery. The AP-NORC poll found about 30% of African Americans, like Parks, and Hispanics know a relative or close friend who died from the virus, compared with 15% of white people. AdThe poll found two-thirds of Americans say their fellow citizens nationwide havenāt taken the pandemic seriously enough.
The Latest: South Korea extends social distancing measures
Read full article: The Latest: South Korea extends social distancing measuresPeople wearing face masks as a precaution against the coronavirus gather at a park in Goyang, South Korea, Wednesday, March 10, 2021. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)SEOUL, South Korea -- South Korea is extending its current measures on social distancing for at least another two weeks as it struggles to slow coronavirus infections in the greater capital area. ___WELLINGTON, New Zealand ā New Zealand has removed remaining coronavirus restrictions on the city of Auckland after containing a small outbreak. ___WASHINGTON ā President Joe Biden is planning to announce during his prime-time address Thursday night that heāll deploy 4,000 additional U.S. troops to support coronavirus vaccination efforts. Thursdayās announcement from the Department of Corrections comes a year after suspending visits at prisons because of the coronavirus pandemic.
Health panel expands lung cancer screening for more smokers
Read full article: Health panel expands lung cancer screening for more smokersLung cancer is the nations top cancer killer, causing more than 135,000 deaths each year. Lung cancer is the nationās top cancer killer, causing more than 135,000 deaths each year. Usually, lung cancer is diagnosed too late for a good chance at survival. But "unfortunately, lowering the age and pack-year requirements alone does not guarantee increased equity in lung cancer screening,ā wrote Dr. Yolonda Colson and colleagues at Massachusetts General Hospital. AdOne recent study found just 14% of people eligible for lung cancer screening under the prior guidelines had actually gotten it.
La Villita museum tells history of trailblazing African Americans that shaped San Antonio
Read full article: La Villita museum tells history of trailblazing African Americans that shaped San AntonioFor the San Antonio African American Community Archive and Museum, the goal is simple: to ācollect, preserve, and shareā African American history that may often go untold.
Biden backs studying reparations as Congress considers bill
Read full article: Biden backs studying reparations as Congress considers billPresident Joe Biden speaks during a meeting with labor leaders in the Oval Office of the White House, Wednesday, Feb. 17, 2021, in Washington. Biden backs the idea of studying the issue, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Wednesday, though she stopped short of saying he would sign the bill if it clears Congress. Even with Democrats controlling both chambers of Congress and the White House, passing a reparations bill could prove difficult. Most Black Americans favored reparations, 74%, compared with 15% of white Americans. AdRep. Burgess Owens, a first-term Republican from Utah, argued against a reparations commission.
Black hospital faces vaccine mistrust from unlikely source
Read full article: Black hospital faces vaccine mistrust from unlikely sourceDr. Rita McGuire, an obstetrician and infection control specialist at Roseland Community Hospital talks Friday, Jan. 29, 2021, with staff members about taking the COVID-19 vaccine. "Itās not something that I trust right now,āā says Bland, 50, who worries about how quickly the COVID-19 vaccines were developed. Many holdouts come from the mostly Black, working class neighborhoods surrounding the hospital, areas hard hit by the virus yet plagued with vaccine reluctance. She acknowledged "centuries of medical injusticeāā against Black Americans but said COVID-19 vaccines resulted from years of solid research. Many workers āāhave not forgotten about those studies where they used us as experiments,āā McGuire said, including the infamous Tuskegee research on Black patients with syphilis.
US jobless claims fall slightly to 793,000 with layoffs high
Read full article: US jobless claims fall slightly to 793,000 with layoffs high(AP Photo/Charles Krupa, File)WASHINGTON ā The number of Americans seeking unemployment benefits fell slightly last week to 793,000, evidence that job cuts remain high despite a substantial decline in new confirmed viral infections. The job market had shown tentative improvement last summer but then slowed through the fall and in the past two months has essentially stalled. Part of that increase likely reflects the processing of a rush of claims after the extension of two federal aid programs just after Christmas. Bidenās proposal would extend, through August, two federal unemployment benefit programs that are set to expire in mid-March. Unlike the previous expiration of extended unemployment aid, which occurred on Dec. 26, the cut-off would be phased in between March 14 and April 11.
Texas Parks and Wildlife Department to celebrate Black History Month with virtual programs
Read full article: Texas Parks and Wildlife Department to celebrate Black History Month with virtual programsSAN ANTONIO ā Park rangers from around Texas, including the Buffalo Soldier Heritage Outreach Program and the Texas Outdoor Family staff, are debuting a new series of virtual programs celebrating Black History throughout the month of February. AdThe series will culminate in a live, interactive Black History Trivia Challenge for the public at 6 p.m. on Feb. 27. āBlack history is really everyoneās history, and our rangers want to support Black History Month by bringing more diverse stories to the forefront of Texas State Parks for our visitors,ā said Jessica Lagalo, Outdoor Education and Outreach Manager for Texas State Parks. Saturday programs will be live-streamed at 1 p.m. from various Texas State Parks across the state, including Ray Roberts Lake State Park, Cedar Hill State Park, Brazos Bend State Park, and Tyler State Park. AdThe series will culminate in a free live Black History Month Trivia Challenge for the public at 6 p.m., Saturday, Feb. 27, on the Kahoot App.
Hank Aaron, civil rights leaders get vaccinated in Georgia
Read full article: Hank Aaron, civil rights leaders get vaccinated in GeorgiaBaseball Hall of Famer Hank Aaron waits to receive his COVID-19 vaccination on Tuesday, Jan. 5, 2021, at the Morehouse School of Medicine in Atlanta. Aaron and others received their vaccinations in an effort to highlight the importance of getting vaccinated for Black Americans who might be hesitant to do so. (AP Photo/Ron Harris)ATLANTA ā Baseball Hall of Famer Hank Aaron, former U.N. Ambassador and civil rights leader Andrew Young and former U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Louis Sullivan got vaccinated against COVID-19 in Georgia on Tuesday, hoping to send a message to Black Americans that the shots are safe. Getting vaccinated āmakes me feel wonderful," Aaron told The Associated Press.
More US churches are committing to racism-linked reparations
Read full article: More US churches are committing to racism-linked reparations(AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)NEW YORK ā The Episcopal Diocese of Texas acknowledges that its first bishop in 1859 was a slaveholder. Some major denominations, including the Roman Catholic Church and the Southern Baptist Convention, have not embraced reparations as official policy. The Episcopal Church has been the most active major denomination thus far, and others, including the United Methodist Church and the Evangelical Lutheran Church of America, are urging congregations to consider similar steps. This will include scholarships for students attending seminaries or historically Black colleges and assistance for historic Black churches. But Dietsche expects some funds will help congregations launch their own reparations initiatives, particularly if their churches had historical involvement in slavery.
Utah senator blocks national museums for Latinos, women
Read full article: Utah senator blocks national museums for Latinos, womenWASHINGTON ā A lone senator from Utah has singlehandedly blocked the bipartisan approval of two new national museums to honor American Latinos and women, arguing that ālast thing we need is to further divide an already divided nation.āRepublican Sen. Mike Lee objected Thursday to the creation of the two proposed Smithsonian museums, stalling two projects that have been in the making for decades and enjoy broad bipartisan support. Senate approval would have sent the legislation approving the Latino museum to President Donald Trump for his signature. The Senate was attempting to pass the measures by voice vote, which requires every senator's consent. Lee said he sees an exception for museums dedicated to American Indians and African Americans that already sit on the National Mall. āWe have been systematically excluded, not because this senator said so but because the Smithsonian itself said so,ā Menendez said.
US lawmakers unveil anti-slavery constitutional amendment
Read full article: US lawmakers unveil anti-slavery constitutional amendmentFILE - This Nov. 29, 2011, file photo shows the signature of president Abraham Lincoln on a rare, restored copy of the 13th Amendment that ended slavery, in Chicago. As ratified, the original amendment has permitted exploitation of labor by convicted felons for over 155 years since the abolition of slavery. Constitutional amendments are rare and require approval by two-thirds of the House and Senate, as well as ratification by three-quarters of state legislatures. In Merkleyās Oregon, voters in 2002 approved the elimination of constitutional language that prohibited Black Americans from living in the state unless they were enslaved. The prevalence of prison labor has been largely accepted as a means for promoting rehabilitation, teaching trade skills and reducing idleness among prisoners.
Harris pays tribute to Black women in 1st speech as VP-elect
Read full article: Harris pays tribute to Black women in 1st speech as VP-electVice president-elect Kamala Harris on Saturday paid tribute to the women, particularly Black women, whose shoulders she stands on as she shatters barriers that have kept mostly white men entrenched at the highest levels of American politics for more than two centuries. āI want us to be committed to the idea that representation is exciting and itās worthy of celebration and also that we have millions of Black women who deserve a fair shot.āHarris is the second Black woman elected to the Senate. Harris' mother raised her daughters with the understanding the world would see them as Black women, Harris has said, and that is how she describes herself today. She attended Howard University, one of the nationās historically Black colleges and universities, and pledged Alpha Kappa Alpha, the nationās first sorority created by and for Black women. Her victory could usher more Black women and people of color into politics.
In South, most Black Senate candidates since Reconstruction
Read full article: In South, most Black Senate candidates since ReconstructionDemocratic U.S. Senate candidate Jaime Harrison speaks at a campaign rally on Saturday, Oct. 17, 2020, in North Charleston, S.C. (AP Photo/Meg Kinnard)COLUMBIA, S.C. ā In the battle for control of the U.S. Senate this year, the Deep South is fielding more Black candidates than it has since Reconstruction. Mike Espy and Adrian Perkins, meanwhile, are launching spirited bids for the Senate in Mississippi and Louisiana, respectively. The Senate currently has three Black members: Republican Tim Scott of South Carolina and Democrats Cory Booker of New Jersey and Kamala Harris of California. āThe more competitive races are, and Black candidates win those competitive races, it diminishes this worry that Black candidates canāt win,ā Abrams recently told The Associated Press. In Mississippi, Espy is trying for a second time to become the stateās first Black senator since Reconstruction with his challenge to Republican incumbent Cindy Hyde-Smith.
Letters, texts, caravans, parades: Advocates mobilize voters
Read full article: Letters, texts, caravans, parades: Advocates mobilize votersVoters have been ushered to the polls by fleets of minivans, with bicycle parades and on horseback in Indian Country. Often unable to knock on doors or chat in person because of virus concerns, advocates have had to adapt. A recent video on social media showed voters in Philadelphia dancing joyfully as they waited, alongside members of the Resistance Revival Chorus. Some voters are wary of catching the virus by voting in person, but they're also concerned about the mail-in option. Like Gehman in New Mexico, Radha Pyati in Philadelphia has devoted untold hours to writing letters as part of Vote Forward.
Black immigrants find camaraderie, divide amid protests
Read full article: Black immigrants find camaraderie, divide amid protestsBut amid the camaraderie younger Black immigrants like her feel with African Americans, they also see a generational divide in their communities. But these have largely been over tactics, said David Canton, a professor of African American history at the University of Florida. During some of their chats, older immigrants tell him they came to America to work and provide a better life for their children, not to protest about race. In fact, one of the co-founders of the original network of Black Lives Matter was Opal Tometi, the daughter of Nigerian immigrants. "We are all one community across the diaspora, whether you are a Black American, raised on the African continent or youāre from elsewhere.ā
Group seeks to combat misleading information online
Read full article: Group seeks to combat misleading information online(AP Photo/Russ Bynum)RIO RANCHO, N.M. ā A group of U.S. Black scholars, activists and writers has launched a new project they say will combat misleading information online around voting, reparations and immigration, supporters announced Friday. The newly formed National Black Cultural Information Trust seeks to counter fake social media accounts and Twitter trolls that often discourage Black voters from participating in elections or seek to turn Black voters against other communities of color. The effort isn't meant to silence groups that are behind any hashtag but counter ābad actorsā who are using the hashtags to disseminate false information, Aiwuyor said. The founders also took issue with the National Black Cultural Information Trust on Twitter after the announcement that the project would monitor the #ADOS hashtag for xenophobic comments and false information. But also to measure the plunder of the ADOS community from 1619 to today.āMembers of the National Black Cultural Information Trust plan to monitor social media posts and flag those spreading misleading and fake stories.
'Driving While Black' shows history of US Black motorists
Read full article: 'Driving While Black' shows history of US Black motoristsNorton shows "Driving While Black: African American Travel and the Road to Civil Rights" by Gretchen Sorin. Norton via AP)ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. ā A new film examines the history of African Americans driving on the road from the Great Depression to the height of the Civil Rights movement. āDriving While Black,ā which airs this week on most PBS stations in the U.S., shows how the automobile liberated African Americans to move around the country while still navigating segregation and violence. The free movement opened the window to migration across the land and away from Jim Crow, ushering in the modern Civil Rights Movement. The new HBO dramatic series, āLovecraft Country,ā centers around a young African American veteran who travels across the segregated 1950s U.S. in search of his missing father.
JPMorgan puts $30B toward fixing banking's 'systemic racism'
Read full article: JPMorgan puts $30B toward fixing banking's 'systemic racism'CHARLOTTE, N.C. ā JPMorgan Chase said Thursday it will extend billions in loans to Black and Latino homebuyers and small business owners in an expanded effort toward fixing what the bank calls āsystemic racismā in the countryās economic system. āSystemic racism is a tragic part of Americaās history,ā said JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon in a statement. Citigroup announced last month it is committing $1 billion toward closing āthe racial wealth gapā in the United States, including $550 million toward homeownership programs for racial minorities. He noted that thereās a 30% gap between Black and white homeownership, amounting to about 4.5 million households. JPMorgan was one of 27 major New York-based companies that joined a program to recruit 100,000 workers from the city's low-income, predominately Black, Latino and Asian communities over the next 10 years.
Biden makes push for voters on National Black Voter Day
Read full article: Biden makes push for voters on National Black Voter DayHarris will speak about what's at stake for Black Americans in November and urge voters to register and make a plan to vote. National Black Voter Day was created this year as a collaborative effort by the National Urban League, BET and a number of civil rights organizations. Black Americans have also been among the hardest hit by the pandemic, suffering high rates of deaths and unemployment from its economic fallout. Bidenās campaign, along with several other organizations marking the first National Black Voter Day, are channeling resources behind that effort. But Brown said the final days will be key toward connecting with some Black voters who feel Biden needs to do more to earn their vote.
Rosa Parks' home displayed in Italy as US race tensions rise
Read full article: Rosa Parks' home displayed in Italy as US race tensions riseFILE - This Dec. 12, 2017 file photo shows the rebuilt house of the civil rights activist Rosa Parks in Berlin, Germany. In 2018, Brown University announced it would feature the house as part of a planned exhibition on the civil rights movement organized by its Center for Slavery and Justice. Earlier this year, Mendoza approached the Naples-based Morra Greco Foundation, where he had worked for a year in the 1990s. But now, āinstead of being rejected by the walls of the royal palace, itās embraced and protected by these walls,ā he said. āPotentially thanks to the showing of the house in this way, America will allow the house to have a home.ā___Winfield reported from Rome.
GOP convention showcases rising stars, dark warnings
Read full article: GOP convention showcases rising stars, dark warningsAs Trump faces pressure to expand his appeal beyond his loyal supporters, Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina, the Senates sole Black Republican, and former U.N. Scrambling to find a message that sticks, Trumps team tried out multiple themes and tactics over the course of the night. The opening night of the four-day convention reflected the rising urgency fueling Trumps push to reshape a presidential contest that he is losing, at least for now, with Election Day just 10 weeks away. In a tweet Monday night, Biden told supporters to stay focused.The emphasis on diversity at Trump's convention was an acknowledgement that he must expand his coalition beyond his largely white base. The fact that the Republicans gathered at all stood in contrast to the Democrats, who held an all-virtual convention last week.
Joe Biden launches new national ad aimed at Black Americans
Read full article: Joe Biden launches new national ad aimed at Black AmericansDETROIT Joe Biden's Democratic presidential campaign has launched a new national ad focused on Black Americans, urging them to stand up to President Donald Trump the way their ancestors stood up to "violent racists of a generation ago." The one-minute ad, which was shared exclusively with The Associated Press before its digital and television release on Thursday, is meant to drum up support among Black Americans, a key constituency for Biden, ahead of November's general election. The ad, titled Better America, also takes a direct swipe at Trump, without mentioning the Republican president by name. The ad is part of the Biden campaign's planned $280 million digital and television ad buy that was announced Wednesday and will run through the fall. A campaign spokesman said in a statement that the ad is the start of a series of content aimed at Black voters.
Congress weighs kicking racist chief justice from Capitol
Read full article: Congress weighs kicking racist chief justice from CapitolIt was in that room that Taney, the nation's fifth chief justice, announced the Dred Scott decision, sometimes called the worst decision in the court's history. Lynne M. Jackson, Scott's great-great-granddaughter, says if it were up to her, she'd leave Taney's bust where it is. In Congress, Taney's bust was controversial from the start. "And an emancipated country will fasten upon him the stigma which he deserves.Funding for a Taney bust wasn't approved until almost a decade later. The first, John Marshall, is the only person to serve as chief justice longer than Taney and a revered figure in the law.
Voters to get say in dropping 'plantations' from R.I.'s name
Read full article: Voters to get say in dropping 'plantations' from R.I.'s namePROVIDENCE, R.I. Voters will get another chance to strip the words and Providence Plantations" from Rhode Island's formal name after lawmakers approved a joint resolution to put the question on the November ballot. Although the word plantations in Rhode Islands name does not specifically refer to a place where slaves labored, it elicits such imagery, say sponsors of the bill approved Thursday. Rhode Island was incorporated as The State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations when it ratified the Constitution in 1790, but the name dates to pre-Revolutionary times. Gina Raimondo last month signed an executive order to remove the phrase and Providence Plantations from some official documents and executive agency websites. The ballot question would make the change official in the states constitution if approved by a simple majority of voters.
Trump bristles at question about police killing Blacks
Read full article: Trump bristles at question about police killing BlacksWASHINGTON President Donald Trump bristled Tuesday at a reporter's question about police killing African Americans and defended the right to display the Confederate flag as he continued to play into racial divisions in a pair of interviews. In one interview, Trump seemed taken aback when asked why African Americans are still dying at the hands of police. So are white people," Trump told CBS's Catherine Herridge. In the interview, Trump also defended the use of the Confederate flag, despite saying in 2015 that he believed the flag belongs in a museum. My attitude is freedom of speech," Trump responded.
Trump lags Biden on people of color in top campaign ranks
Read full article: Trump lags Biden on people of color in top campaign ranksTwenty-five percent of the Republican president's senior staff are nonwhite, compared to 36% of Bidens senior staff. Along with adding more people of color to his campaign, Biden has promised an administration that looks like America if he is elected on Nov. 3. His campaign declined to discuss minority representation on the campaign staff. The Biden campaign said LGBTQ staff and staff of color hold such positions as senior advisers, deputy campaign managers, national coalitions director, chief financial officer, chief operating officer and national press secretary, among others. Trumps campaign defined its senior staff as senior leaders who meet regularly to make decisions.
Health panel may open lung cancer screening to more smokers
Read full article: Health panel may open lung cancer screening to more smokersA U.S. health panel wants to widen the number of Americans offered yearly scans for lung cancer by opening the screening to less-heavy smokers. Lung cancer is the nation's top cancer killer, causing more than 135,000 deaths each year. Usually, lung cancer is diagnosed too late for a good chance at survival. Lung cancer screening is complicated -- not every hospital is equipped to offer it -- and few of those eligible today receive it, just 6% according to one study the task force cited. In contrast, 60% to 80% of those eligible for breast, colon or cervical cancer screening get checked.
AP-NORC poll: White Democrats grow more critical of police
Read full article: AP-NORC poll: White Democrats grow more critical of policeWhile racial inequity has long been a focal point of African Americans, experts say many white Americans, particularly white Democrats, are now grappling with the longstanding impacts of systemic racism in ways they never have before. Trump on Sunday tweeted and later deleted a video showing one of his supporters chanting white power, a racist slogan associated with white supremacists. The increase is especially sharp 40 percentage points among white Democrats. Black Democrats are even more likely than they were in 2015 to say that, 87% vs. 71%. White Democrats are now more likely than they were in 2015 to say police more commonly use force with Black people, 87% vs. 62%.
AP Exclusive: Black Lives Matter groups plan convention
Read full article: AP Exclusive: Black Lives Matter groups plan conventionThe 2020 Black National Convention will take place Aug. 28 via a live broadcast. The first-ever Black Lives Matter convention was held in Cleveland in 2015. Convention organizers said this years event will pay tribute to the historic 1972 National Black Political Convention in Gary, Indiana, which concluded with the introduction of a national Black agenda. Somewhat similarly, the Vision for Black Lives platform and its characterization of Israel as an apartheid state committing mass murder against Palestinian people drew allegations of anti-Semitism from a handful of Jewish groups, which had otherwise been supportive the Black Lives Matter movement. We dont just say Black lives matter and beg people to care.
5 things to watch for in Thursday's jobs report for June
Read full article: 5 things to watch for in Thursday's jobs report for JuneYet because Thursday's jobs report will be based on data gathered in the second week of June, it will still likely reflect an improving trend. Economists have forecast that employers added 3 million jobs in June and that the unemployment rate dropped to 12.3% from 13.3% in May, according to data provider FactSet. In short, the jobs report is more important than ever but in some ways harder to read. Had these people been properly classified, the unemployment rate would have been reported as 16.4%, not 13.3%. In May, even as most large U.S. industries added jobs, state and local governments cut 550,000 workers, after having slashed 950,000 in April.
After Floyd, raw talk, racial reckoning among US Muslims
Read full article: After Floyd, raw talk, racial reckoning among US MuslimsAmerican Muslims, Black and non-Black, are also having raw conversations like Makki's as they grapple with questions of racial equity, tensions and representation in their own faith communities. He and others have called for more Black Muslim speakers and not just to talk about race or only during Black History Month. Ubaydullah Evans, resident scholar for the American Learning Institute for Muslims, says hes experienced interpersonal racism," from some Muslims. Dozens of American Muslim organizations came together to demand police reform and pledged to support Black-led groups. He shared plans to send African American imams to different California mosques for a day.
NASA naming headquarters for 'Hidden Figures' engineer
Read full article: NASA naming headquarters for 'Hidden Figures' engineerWASHINGTON NASA is naming its Washington headquarters after Mary Jackson, the space agencys first African American female engineer whose story was portrayed in the popular film Hidden Figures.Jackson started her NASA career in 1951 as part of a segregated unit of female mathematicians at what is now Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia. Jackson was later promoted to engineer and retired from NASA in 1985. Mary W. Jackson was part of a group of very important women who helped NASA succeed in getting American astronauts into space, NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said in a statement Wednesday. Part of the street in front of NASA headquarters is called Hidden Figures Way" and a computer research facility at Langley is named for Katherine Johnson, another of the Hidden Figures mathematicians, who died in February. A NASA facility is also named for her in West Virginia, her home state.
Icons of 1960s civil rights movement voice cautious optimism
Read full article: Icons of 1960s civil rights movement voice cautious optimismAt front is civil rights worker Andrew Young, and at right, behind King is Rev. Young, a King lieutenant, marvels at both the sizes and the spontaneity of the protests. (AP Photo, File)CINCINNATI Bob Moses says America is at a lurching moment" for racial change, potentially as transforming as the Civil War era and as the 1960s civil rights movement that he helped lead. I dont think anybody has a notion of how big a change this is going to introduce.Moses remains cautious. Some Americans were shocked, it seems to me, to discover they had actually been swimming in this deep, deep sea and didn't understand it.___Contreras reported from Rio Rancho, New Mexico.
Democrats: GOP police bill 'not salvageable,' demand talks
Read full article: Democrats: GOP police bill 'not salvageable,' demand talksWASHINGTON Top Democratic leaders in the Senate say the Republican policing bill is not salvageable, as they signal an intent to block it and demand negotiations on a new, more bipartisan package in response to the killing of Black Americans. That's according to a letter to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell from the Democrats obtained by The Associated Press. This bill is not salvageable and we need bipartisan talks to get to a constructive starting point, write Democratic leader Chuck Schumer and the co-authors of the party's bill, Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., and Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J. The Republican legislation would create a national database of police use-of-force incidents, restrict police chokeholds and set up new training procedures. Congress is under enormous pressure to establish new oversight and accountability of the police as demonstrations spill into cities large and small nationwide.
AP-NORC poll: Politics drive divergent view of US economy
Read full article: AP-NORC poll: Politics drive divergent view of US economyThe economy is in terrible shape and improving rapidly, said Harvard University professor Jason Furman, formerly the top economist in the Obama White House. Overall, 63% of the country says the economy is in poor shape, down somewhat from the 70% who felt that way in May. The change was driven by increasingly optimistic Republicans, only 43% of whom described the economy as good a month ago. Forty-two percent of white Americans say the same. Thirty-four percent of Hispanics, 29% of African Americans and 20% of white Americans said someone in their household has been laid off.
Beyonc drops surprise single 'Black Parade' on Juneteenth
Read full article: Beyonc drops surprise single 'Black Parade' on JuneteenthLOS ANGELES Beyonc did not let Juneteenth pass without dropping one of her signature surprises a new single called Black Parade.Im going back to the South, Im going back where my roots aint watered down," Beyonc sings, opening the track. Black joy is your right, the message said. We got rhythm, we got pride, we birth kings, we birth tribes, Beyonc sings toward the end of the nearly five-minute song. The release of Black Parade is the singers latest philanthropic effort. In 2013, Beyonc released the self-titled album Beyonc, also without any notice.
Juneteenth march planned for San Antonio on East Side
Read full article: Juneteenth march planned for San Antonio on East SideSAN ANTONIO Local organizers have planned a Juneteenth march and rally in San Antonio to commemorate when the last enslaved African Americans learned they were free in 1865. Demonstrators will march east down Martin Luther King Drive to the Freedom Bridge near MLK Park. Organizers say they are marching to make Juneteenth a federal holiday while remembering emancipation. According to the Associated Press, Hawaii, North Dakota and South Dakota are the only states without official recognition of the holiday. It is recognized in 47 states but is not yet a federal holiday.
America marks Juneteenth as protests bring new attention
Read full article: America marks Juneteenth as protests bring new attentionProtesters march in a Black Lives Matter demonstration organized by the Dallas Black Firefighters Association on Juneteenth 2020 in Dallas, Friday, June 19, 2020. Juneteenth marks the day in 1865 when federal troops arrived in Galveston, Texas to take control of the state and ensure all enslaved people be freed, more than two years after the Emancipation Proclamation. Former President Abraham Lincoln first issued the Emancipation Proclamation on Sept. 22, 1862, and it became effective the following Jan. 1. Word didnt reach the last enslaved black people until June 19 of that year, when Union soldiers brought the news of freedom to Galveston, Texas. Kristi Noem proclaimed Friday as Juneteenth Day, but the proclamation does not make the day a state-recognized holiday.
Poll: Americans not buying White House spin on coronavirus
Read full article: Poll: Americans not buying White House spin on coronavirusFILE - In this March 22, 2020, file photo Vice President Mike Pence speaks alongside President Donald Trump during a coronavirus task force briefing at the White House in Washington. Pence says the U.S. response to the coronavirus pandemic is a cause for celebration, but a new poll finds more than half of Americans calling it fair or poor. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File)WASHINGTON Vice President Mike Pence says the U.S. response to the coronavirus pandemic is a cause for celebration, but a new poll finds more than half of Americans calling it fair or poor. Among political independents, 57% rated the response as fair or poor, while 20% said it was excellent or very good. There was widespread agreement, however, on one point: By 88% to 11%, Americans want the government to negotiate the prices of coronavirus treatments with the pharmaceutical industry.
Malcolm-Jamal Warner on Fighting Racial Injustice With New Documentary (Exclusive)
Read full article: Malcolm-Jamal Warner on Fighting Racial Injustice With New Documentary (Exclusive)Now, years later, the 49-year-old actor continues to use his voice to help fight against racial injustice with his new documentary, Word Warriors III, out June 19. "Word Warriors is a film that follows a couple of different poets and chronicles life as a black man," Warner tells ET's Kevin Frazier. "[Right now, people] will be in a place where they can really, wholeheartedly receive what the spirit of Word Warriors is about. It's also about the craft of poetry and how spoken word poetry is a very viable and very necessary avenue for pain to be expressed." Word Warriors III will be released on DVD and North American VOD platforms on June 19, also known as Juneteenth.
Mississippi official: Black people 'dependent' since slavery
Read full article: Mississippi official: Black people 'dependent' since slaveryAfter rejecting a proposal to move the monument, Sanders said this week that African Americans became dependent during slavery and have had a harder time assimilating into American life as other groups who have been mistreated have. After rejecting a proposal to move a Confederate monument, a white elected official in Mississippi said this week that African Americans became dependent during slavery and as a result, have had a harder time assimilating into American life than other mistreated groups. In northeastern Mississippi's Lowndes County, supervisors voted along racial lines Monday against moving a Confederate monument that has stood outside the county courthouse in Columbus since 1912. The monument depicts a Confederate soldier and says the South fought for a noble cause. Three white supervisors voted against the proposal and two black supervisors voted for it. One of the two black supervisors, Democrat Leroy Brooks, said people were not trying to change history, but wanted to rechannel some things that are offensive."