banner2e top

African Asylum Seekers Face Shameful Treatment by Khalil Abdullah

Nov. 18, 2020

African Asylum Seekers Face Shameful Treatment
By Khalil Abdullah

activistsbakarytandiaandhouleyethiam
Activists Bakary Tandia and Houleye Thiam

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from Ethnic Media Services

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Fleeing persecution in Nigeria, arriving in the United States, Pastor Ben said he was immediately taken into detention. “I was told I would see the judge in two weeks,” the time stretched to “five years and two months only because I asked for asylum at the airport.”

Pastor Ben was a panelist at “From Africa to Deportation: Black Africans Confront the U.S. Asylum System,” an Interfaith Immigration Coalition forum on challenges asylum seekers face in America.

Co-hosted and moderated by Sylvie Bello, Cameroon American Council, and Jennie Guilfoyle, Immigration Justice Campaign, the event explored the reasons leading to the desperate journeys by those seeking relief from harsh and sometimes life-threatening scenarios. The forum exposed the disdain and misery to which Africans are subjected in American prisons.

As Guilfoyle noted, ICE’s technically termed detention facilities, “they’re really prisons.” She said they fuel “the deportation machinery” and are typically located in rural, remote areas that make it difficult to find available immigration attorneys, translators, or interpreters nearby. Detainees hail from across Africa, including Guinea, Democratic Republic of the Congo, and of late, Cameroon.

Bello concurred. “They apply for asylum; they seek legal support and with almost no interpreters that are culturally sensitive and language appropriate for African languages and religions.” She contended that judges’ lack of empathy, unfamiliarity with local conditions that spur asylum requests, and impatience with the claimants are hallmarks of the judicial process.

Pastor Ben became a jailhouse lawyer, studied in the law library, learned Spanish and became familiar with other languages so he could help inmates: “Africans, Mexicans, Latinos – name it, different people from different countries… help them look for a lawyer and things like that.”

As many immigration prison facilities are owned by for-profit companies, Pastor Ben said there is likely a correlation with the lengthy stays asylum seekers endure. From the start of the Trump Administration in 2017, ICE awarded contracts of $480 million to GEO and $331 million to CoreCivic -- America’s two largest private prison corporations.

Overcrowding puts detainees at high risk for nfectious disease transmission even while they endure poor food and an abysmal quality of medical care. “Being in that detention system, there is no human dignity,” Pastor been said.

Guilfoyle said the Trump administration’s continuing dismantling of the asylum system makes it almost impossible to qualify for asylum. Given the politicization of ICE’s workforce and administration, solving these issues will require a reorientation “with justice and with dignity -- which is very much missing right now,” she said.

“They are not criminals and should not be treated that way,” insisted Houleye Thiam, a social worker in Columbus, OH, and president of the Mauritanian Network for Human Rights in America. Ohio hosts the largest number of Mauritanian immigrants in America. According to Thiam, they fled a highly racialized society where the ruling minority of lighter-hued Mauritanians, primarily of Arab descent, impose a second-class citizenship upon the Black majority and even slavery on some.

“Immigration is not often a choice,” Thiam stated. “When you leave parents, sometimes children, sometimes childhood friends, sometimes the country you know and love… When you leave all of that behind to try a whole new experience in a different country where you do not even speak the language…it’s because you’re running away from something bigger than yourself… Running away from a whole host of human rights abuse.”

For Bello, solutions to the inequities Black African asylees face include revamping U.S. foreign policy. African asylees are often fleeing regimes that have “a lot of heavy militarization backed by the U.S. government.”

She advocated supporting U.S. politicians who demand domestic policy reforms, as well. “The Muslim ban is the African ban,” she said, by way of example. “Travel bans for Africans have always been part of this immigration system which is based off a racialized anti-Black system that permeates throughout America.”

Decrying the forced hysterectomies of 16 immigrant women in Georgia’s Irwin County Detention Center, Bello was heartened that nurse and whistleblower Dawn Wooten is African American. Bello lauded Rep Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Texas, members of the Congressional Black Caucus and others who got involved in response to the story. “Black women have been all over this,” Bello said.

She sees the racial reckoning in America intertwining the lives Black Africans and African Americans. Opal Tometi, a co-founder of Black Lives Matter, is the daughter of Nigerian immigrants, Bello said, adding that “one out of five Black babies born in America today has an African parent or grandparent.”

“Why is it that immigration justice consistently fails to look at anti-Blackness within its system?” Bello asked. She described journeys by foot, car, bus, train, and plane, sometimes through as many as eight countries to arrive at America’s southern border, “and then facing deportation and detention, and a lot of times facing death in the U.S. immigration system.”

The South Georgia Immigration Network was among the entities that helped Pastor Ben to gain release from incarceration, but his case is pending. Meantime, he feeds the homeless, helps other detainees, and occasionally preaches. “I was released on supervision after the District Court ordered ICE to release me because of prolonged detention.”

“An ICE officer told me that he would deport me. I asked him, ‘Why would you want to deport me when I fear for my life? If you send me back, I’m going to get killed.”

“It really broke my heart that another fellow human being would know that death is waiting for you and they still want to force you and send you back there.”

#

Could America Learn a Covid-19 Lesson from Rwanda? By Rev. Dr. Jonathan Weaver

Nov. 9, 2020

Could America Learn a Covid-19 Lesson from Rwanda?

By Rev. Dr. Jonathan Weaver

dr.weaver-center1
With masks in tow, Dr. Jonathan Weaver (center) stands in Rwanda with Edouard Ndayisaba,CEO, DGrid Energy (lleft) and Dr. Jean Mfizi, an epidemiologist and deputy vice chancellor for Public Affairs, Adventist University of Central Africa.

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - A month ago I shared with a member of Greater Mt. Nebo African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) Church, the church I’m privileged to pastor, that I would be leaving soon for a two-week visit to Rwanda, to visit friends and pastoral colleagues. To me it should have elicited no surprise as she knew that I had led groups to Rwanda since 2012, a country described as “The Land of a Thousand Hills,” owing to its incredible natural beauty.

However, what I received was a rather horrified look and a quick, “I will be praying for you!” Her subsequent comments noted the ongoing corona virus pandemic and her assumption that I was placing myself at great risk. It was bad enough, she felt, that I would be on two flights to get there, totaling 16 hours in the sky, with a four hour layover in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia after leaving The United States. But she assumed that Rwanda would be a place where the pandemic was running rampant and therefore was placing myself at considerable danger. After sharing with her news reports which detailed Rwanda’s commitment to combatting the virus, her anxiousness dissipated but she ended our conversation by saying, “Well, I’m still praying for you.”

I left two days after my encounter with the member, confident that all would be well. My assurance was not unfounded over the course of my trip. Rwanda, through its leadership and the many people I met, displayed a resilience and determination to protect its population from this dreaded virus, and consequently obliterated the disparaging term used by some elected officials to describe African nations. My experience was not unusual. The requirements for my entry into Rwanda are required for everyone arriving into the country since the international airport in Kigali, the capital city, re-opened at the beginning of August.

Ethiopian Airlines, my airlines of choice when travelling to Africa, currently requires that all passengers must have a recent negative SARS-CoV-2 RT-PCR test result in order to board their flights from The United States. Upon exiting my flight in Rwanda, on the tarmac, before even entering the terminal building, Rwanda government officials met all passengers to determine whether we had the required certification. Once we entered the building, we were greeted by Ministry of Health officials who administered a temperature check. After passing through Passport Control, I proceeded to the baggage claim area when I heard “someone” state in a clear voice, “Welcome to Kigali International Airport. While in Rwanda, please remember to wash your hands frequently, engage in social distancing, and wear a mask.” That “someone” turned out to be a robot, who repeated that friendly, yet firm message several times before I exited the baggage claim area.

From there I proceeded to a government-approved hotel where I would spend the night. Upon my arrival at the hotel but before I checked in, I was required to take another COVID-19-related test. I was then quarantined in my hotel room until the next morning, when upon receiving my negative test result, I was then free to move throughout the country. During my 14-day visit, travelling to three major cities and parts of the rural countryside, everyone wore masks, from the youngest children to elderly people, with virtually no exception. Temperature checks were performed at restaurants, office buildings and stores. Social distancing was enforced at churches.

It became abundantly clear that Rwanda took very seriously its mission to protect its citizens from this dreaded virus. The result; as of October 28, in a country of just over twelve million people, they have experienced only 35 deaths from the corona virus! The country implemented the key preventive measures almost immediately after the first case was reported on March 13. No hesitancy or uncertainty on the part of the national government and no squabbling among the people as far as I could tell based upon my conversations with many people. Despite the inconvenience imposed upon the populace, and yes, the economic challenges they faced, the many people I spoke to were gratified with the measures implemented since it spared the nation from countless more cases and deaths from COVID-19.

Yet here is the contradiction: after a very satisfying, safe visit to one of Africa’s jewels of a nation, upon my return to The United States at Dulles International Airport, no government official asked me any COVID-19-related questions! No one inquired as to whether I had been sick while out of the country. There were no temperature checks administered. No official asked for a recent COVID-19 test result. In fact I was subjected to the same procedures that occurred in January after my last visit to Rwanda. So many safeguards were implemented by Rwanda to protect its citizens from the potential threat of travelers entering its territory. Was my experience upon my return to America another indication of the cavalier approach and reaction to the pandemic still raging in The United States? Perhaps we could benefit from securing advice from an African nation that has achieved remarkable success in fighting this pandemic.

Police Kill Yet Another Black Man as People Cast Final Votes Nov. 3 By Hazel Trice Edney

Oct. 29, 2020

Police Kill Yet Another Black Man as People Cast Final Votes Nov. 3
Churches, Civil Rights Groups, Activists, Say Justice is at the Polls

By Hazel Trice Edney

barbernaacp
Bishop William J. Barber II of the Poor People's Movement was set to deliver a special message Nov 1, two days before the presidential election, as America faces yet another police shooting.

bishopmichaelmitchell
Bishop Michael Mitchell, president of the AME Council of Bishops, has led a campaign to urge at least 1.5 million of their members to vote early given the importance of the issues facing America.


(TriceEdneyWire.com) - As President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden campaign in key states in final days of the 2020 presidential race, yet another Black man was shot and killed by police Monday afternoon, Oct. 26.

The Philadelphia police shooting of 27-year-old Walter Wallace Jr., a reportedly mentally ill man holding a knife as his mother tried to calm him down when the police arrived on the scene, is the latest of a string of police killings of Black people that had already risen as a major campaign issue. The family had reportedly called emergency for an ambulance for Wallace – not police.

In a video taken by a stander, Wallace appears to be agitatedly walking around and then toward two police officers who were screaming, “Put the knife down!” Wallace walked toward the police; then collapsed in a hail of bullets.

A woman can be heard wailing with shock and grief. A man can be heard saying, “They just killed him in front of me…Y’all ain’t have to give him that many shots.”

Protests broke out immediately as citizens ran toward the dying man and the police in shock and anger.

Wallace’s father, Walter Wallace Sr., in a CNN interview, pleaded for the violence to stop, saying “It will leave a bad scar on my son with all this looting and chaos…This is where we live, and it’s the only community resource we have, and if we take all the resource and burn it down, we don’t have anything.”

Local TV stations showed both looters and protesters in the streets daily. The Pennsylvania National Guard was called in by Gov. Tom Wolf as police continued to clash with protestors. Mayor Jim Kenney has promised a full investigation.

“I have watched the video of this tragic incident,” Kenney said in a statement. “And it presents difficult questions that must be answered.”

Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw said there would be a release of more information in a few days. Outlaw said the officers who killed Wallace were not carrying stun guns. They have not explained why the police did not try to restrain the mentally ill man in another way.

Repeated police killings of Black people have already been a strong issue in the presidential campaign. The most recent controversial killings have been of George Floyd in Minneapolis, Minn., Brianna Taylor in Louisville, Ken., and Rayshard Brooks in Atlanta.

“Our hearts are broken for the family of Walter Wallace Jr., and for all those suffering the emotional weight of learning about another Black life in America lost,” said a statement issued by Biden and vice presidential candidate Kamala Harris. “We cannot accept that in this country a mental health crisis ends in death. It makes the shock and grief and violence of yesterday’s shooting that much more painful, especially for a community that has already endured so much trauma. Walter Wallace’s life, like too many others’, was a Black life that mattered — to his mother, to his family, to his community, to all of us.”

Biden and Harris also walked the fine line of scolding violent and unlawful protestors.

“At the same time, no amount of anger at the very real injustices in our society excuses violence. Attacking police officers and vandalizing small businesses, which are already struggling during a pandemic, does not bend the moral arc of the universe closer to justice. It hurts our fellow citizens," they said. "Looting is not a protest; it is a crime. It draws attention away from the real tragedy of a life cut short. As a nation, we are strong enough to both meet the challenges of real police reform, including implementing a national use of force standard, and to maintain peace and security in our communities. That must be our American mission. That is how we will deliver real justice. All Donald Trump does is fan the flames of division in our society. He is incapable of doing the real work to bring people together.”

A Trump Administration statement issued by Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany leaned to the comfort of the police and blamed Democrats for the chaotic reactions.

“The riots in Philadelphia are the most recent consequence of the Liberal Democrats’ war against the police,” the White House statement said. “Law enforcement is an incredibly dangerous occupation, and thousands of officers have given their lives in the line of duty.  All lethal force incidents must be fully investigated.  The facts must be followed wherever they lead to ensure fair and just results.  In America, we resolve conflicts through the courts and the justice system.  We can never allow mob rule.  The Trump Administration stands proudly with law enforcement, and stands ready, upon request, to deploy any and all Federal resources to end these riots.”

Meanwhile, church organizations, civil rights groups and activists around the country have for months galvanized get out to vote efforts with a large focus on police reform because of the out of control police shootings, the Coronavirus pandemic, health care, economic justice and other issues of racial inequality.

Among those efforts, the African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church has sought to assure that at least 1.5 million of their members voted early.

Reaching out by social media, emailing, phone calling and home visiting – even while social distancing – Bishop Michael Mitchell of the 12th Episcopal District said the issues facing America warrant massive get out to vote efforts in the Black community.

“What has been happening on the streets in the lives of people is on the ballot. I’d say health care is on the ballot. We believe that our economy is on the ballot. And there are things that can mean the end of our growth and development if we don’t get it right,” said Mitchell, who also serves as the AME Church’s president of the Joint Council of Bishops. “I believe that our voice is at the ballot box. If we want to change things, it’s not by staying home. But rather it’s by showing up at the polls and letting our voice be heard. And so, I see people throughout America, just lining up just going and trying to make a difference and we’re just looking for a positive outcome. The church is not attempting to tell people who to vote for, but I believe if we show up at the polls, then you’ll know what to do. You’ll be able to make the right decision.”

Mitchell points out in a video news release that presidential candidates are only a part of this election. Members of the U. S. House and Senate as well as state and local politicians are also up for election and re-election.

Mitchell says that the AME Church is partnering with Bishop William J. Barber II, co-chair of the Poor People’s Campaign, among other groups. “So, we’re not out here by ourselves. We are partnering with other organizations because it’s going to take all of us.”

Barber was scheduled to deliver a sermon to the nation at historic Rankin Memorial Chapel at Howard University on Sunday, Nov. 1; titled “We Know What We Must Do & We Must Do It Now.” The online event is scheduled for 11 am EST at http://vote.poorpeoplescampaign.org/.

According to a release, Barber’s message would “provide a critical analysis of this moment just two days before election day. He will issue a clear and clarion call for action to get poor and low-income people who vote infrequently to cast their ballot.”

The release also said that Bishop Barber is “among more than 1,000 clergy members, religious scholars and other faith-based advocates who signed a unique statement supporting a comprehensive path to a ‘fair and free election’ and urging leaders to accept the ‘legitimate election results’ regardless of the winner in November.”

As Trump Cries ‘Fraud’, Black Faith Leaders and Activists Take Non-violent Stance Against Election Theft by Hazel Trice Edney

Nov. 4, 2020

As Trump Cries ‘Fraud’, Black Faith Leaders and Activists Take Non-violent Stance Against Election Theft
By Hazel Trice Edney

biden-postelection

Awaiting final counts, Biden predicts he will win the election. (Screenshot)

presidenttrump-postelection

Trump, at the White House, says he will go to the Supreme Court to have the vote counting stopped. (Screenshot)

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - With a nail biter presidential race too close to call by midnight Nov. 3, America awaits on edge for final states to complete their vote counts. Some are early votes so numerous that they take time to count. Others are mail-in ballots allowed largely due to voters using absentee options or state-sanctioned options to avoid contracting the coronavirus.

Yet, President Donald Trump, claiming he won the election and alleging fraud with no evidence, has announced he will ask the U. S. Supreme Court to stop all vote counts. Trump made his announcement around 2:15 am Wednesday following a statement by Vice President Joe Biden.

“We were getting ready to win this election. Frankly, we did win this election,” Trump said from the White House. “This is a major fraud on our nation…We will be going to the U. S. Supreme Court. We want all voting to stop.”

Biden had earlier stated in Wilmington, Delaware, “I’m here to tell you tonight, we believe we’re on track to winning this election…We knew because of the unprecedented mail-in vote and the early vote that it was going to take a while. We’re going to have to be patient until the hard work of tallying votes is finished and it ain’t over until every vote is counted.”

At Trice Edney Newswire deadline, Biden led the race with 224 to Trump’s 213 electoral votes with literally millions more votes to count in five states – Arizona, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin. It takes 270 Electoral College votes to win the presidency.

The threat of election theft by Trump is – in part - the reason that a group of Black faith leaders and activists have called for “nonviolent resistance and economic non cooperation, including a general strike, if trump tries to steal” the election.

In a statement headlined, “We The People Will Defend the Vote and Uphold Democracy:  A Call to Nonviolent Resistance from Black Faith Leaders and Allies,” approximately 100 faith leaders and their activist allies essentially said that they will organize and demonstrate to maintain a free and fair election.

“In a pandemic, the large number of Americans demonstrating with conscience and voting with conviction is a sacred testament to an even larger sacrificial commitment to nonviolence,” says Rev. Cornell William Brooks, former NAACP president and currently professor at the Harvard Kennedy School. “We will honor this commitment by nonviolently opposing and overcoming any effort to undermine our elections.  So many Americans have sacrificed so much for any of us to do anything less.”

With races so close and with Trump casting doubt on the integrity of the election even days before Nov. 3, it has long been feared by political observers that he could try to cheat to win.

“We must not let Trump steal the election. If he attempts to stop votes from being counted or refuses to accept a legitimate victory for Biden, we will not sit by. We will use the power of massive nonviolent resistance that won our people the sacred right to vote to defend the sacred result of our votes today,” said Rev. Erica Williams, founder of Set It Off Ministries. “We as clergy must stand in this moment to be Prophets of God and not chaplains of the empire. We come boldly in the spirit of Fannie Lou Hamer and Ella Josephine Baker who fought tirelessly for voting rights.”

Alarm intensified among the electorate when Trump told the far right leaning Proud Boys, a group that associates with White supremacists, to “stand back and stand by”. This was during the Sept. 29 presidential debate in response to a request for him to denounce White supremacist groups.

But then concerns intensified after several voter intimidation and rogue incidents were reported leading into Election Day and even as voters headed to the polls. Police and FBI are involved in the investigation of some of the situations. They include:

  • A group of Trump supporters surrounded a Joe Biden campaign bus on Austin, Texas’ Interstate 35, appearing to try to run it off the road. Police intervened and escorted the bus to safety. In response, Trump tweeted, "I LOVE TEXAS!" along with a video on the incident and said later, "These patriots did nothing wrong".
  • A federal lawsuit has been filed in North Carolina, claiming voter intimidation, after police there deployed pepper spray during a pre-election day get-out-the vote rally and arrested several people amidst the chaos.
  • Voters across the country reportedly received an estimated 10 million spam calls or texts telling them to “stay safe and stay home.”

Meanwhile, major department stores in cities across the nation were busy boarding up buildings, strengthening security and taking other protective measures this week in anticipation of possible unrest resulting from election outcomes.

According to the statement from the clergy and activists, “The Call to Nonviolent Resistance’s appeal for economic noncooperation -- including the rare escalation of a general strike -- comes on the heels of resolutions by the Rochester, New York AFL-CIO, King County, Washington labor council, and other labor coalitions who have called for a general strike if Trump attempts to steal the election, adding growing moral weight and national credibility to those preparations.”

Rev. Stephen A. Green, chair, Faith for Black Lives, concludes in the statement: “This unprecedented moment requires our commitment to radical love in action through nonviolence to defend the vote. Our faith motivates us to lead the nation with moral resistance in order to uphold democracy and resist any attempt from President Trump to undermine our election, said “We are building a movement to build beloved community through mass action.”

The call asks people to join faith and civic leaders in signing a pledge “to join nonviolent resistance and economic noncooperation if necessary to defend the vote and uphold democracy in response to an attempted coup by Trump.”

 

Days Before the Presidential Election, Millennial Voters are Eyeing the Vice-Presidential Candidates Too By Paapa Ewool, Kaylan Ware, JayJuan Shakur, Aliyah Thompson and Nichelle Robinson Hernandez

Oct. 27, 2020

Days Before the Presidential Election, Millennial Voters Consider the Vice-Presidential Candidates Too
By Paapa Ewool, Kaylan Ware, JayJuan Shakur, Aliyah Thompson and Nichelle Robinson Hernandez

harrisandpence

Vice-presidential candidates Sen. Kamala Harris and Vice President Mike Pence

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Given the ages of the two presidential nominees, former Vice President Joe Biden, 77, and President Donald Trump, 74, and because of the social justice issues that have been largely advocated by millennial voters, the youth constituency is eying vice presidential candidates Sen. Kamala Harris and Vice President Mike Pence alongside Biden and Trump as they make their decisions.

Their views were largely formed during the one vice presidential debate Oct. 7.

“Age and health are major factors for these presidential candidates, so knowing how these vice presidential candidates would lead is something that I wanted to hear more about,” said Adjoa Ewool, a recent Duke graduate who studied Psychology and German. Ewool felt that both candidates were being dishonest and misleading. “The way [Pence] is framing this administration’s response to the coronavirus is just not true at all. Saying that ‘Oh, 210,000 people are dead, but we're still doing great.’ That’s just not true,” Ewool said. “I did have some issues with Kamala Harris’ stances as well. Her flip-flopping on banning fracking and her general stance on the future of policing in this country didn’t sit well with me.”

Because the first Biden-Trump debate was so venomous; especially with the pervasive interruptions, mostly by Trump, the Harris-Pence debate was met with more anticipation than vice presidential debates in previous elections. However, the vice-presidential debate was wrought with dodging of questions, lack of control from the moderator, and an insect – a fly - being the most memorable participant of the entire evening. A fly that sat on Pence’s hair near the end of the debate probably got more comments on social media than the debate itself.

“I thought Kamala did a good job representing Howard and the fly bit was funny,” said Aaron Oates, a Washington, D.C. medical student. “I feel like they both acted a lot like standard politicians when answering questions, but it didn't really matter to me since I already voted.”

Arthur Cribbs, a Howard University senior journalism student from Los Angeles, watched much closer. “I personally felt that the candidates deflected several times throughout the debate, especially Mike Pence, so I’m not sure if I gained much perspective from a policy standpoint,” he said.

Cribbs believes Harris won the debate mainly because she rightly attacked the Trump administration on their slothful response to the coronavirus pandemic.

Ewool also thought Harris won simply based on debating skills and standards. “The way that Kamala spoke her full two minutes even while constantly getting interrupted by the moderator and Mike Pence - when the moderator never spoke over Pence - that, to me, was truly the black woman experience,” said Ewool, also a Black woman.

Jaylen Williams, a senior broadcast student at Howard, also noticed disrespect toward Harris.

“Pence tried to overtalk Senator Harris. But I think we are seeing now that women will not be mansplained to. It didn’t help Pence that he had an incredulous, know-it-all demeanor during the whole thing,” Williams said. “So, Kamala Harris definitely won that debate by being politically savvy and calm, even under interruption.”

Jada Buford, 22, a filmmaker from Chicago, also says Harris won the debate. “She was very focused on staying on point and answering the questions, unlike Pence. It actually seemed like at one point…she was the only one debating,” Buford said.

Not everyone agrees that Harris won the debate.

“As much as I like Kamala and I think her nomination for VP is historic, she tried to appeal more to emotion instead of just arguing the facts. She’s not a good debater,” said Donyel Hodges, 20, a Chicago Native who is a criminal justice student at Clark Atlanta University. “Pence appeared more calm but not really convincing to me. I’m still voting for Biden.”

Tracie Ivera, 21, a fashion design student from New York, says her watching the vice-presidential debate caused her to run out of options. “I thought the debate was filled with more information than the presidential debate. But I’m still not impressed. I’m still not voting either way,” she said.

Lily Robinson, 23, a program and research associate in New York City, said Harris displayed the conduct necessary in the largely male-driven world of politics.

"Harris' composure when being met with the egotism that Pence displayed about his work and the work of President Trump showed the actions that are needed for an effective and fair debate,” Robinson said. “However, Harris' ‘I'm speaking’ stood out to me and was symbolic of the way the American public had a lack of respect and consideration in the last four years of politics."

The average life expectancy for a White male in America is 78.6 years, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Therefore, although both Biden and Trump say they are in good health, some political observers believe the vice-presidential candidates should be watched closely.

“Not only did the debate attest to the political character of both candidates but it also challenged them to respond critically to the concerns of a nation in crisis, desperately looking for leadership,”  said Brianna Nargiso, 21, a teacher in Hollywood, Fla.

Shannon Jones, 31, an executive assistant in Alexandria, Va. concludes that even after what appeared to be a debate that was unfair to Harris, the American electorate will be politically astute enough to choose wisely between the presidential candidates.

“Pence consistently dodged the moderator’s questions, instead speaking about whatever he wanted to, often without even logical redirection, and going well over his given speaking time,” Jones recalls. “My takeaway and hope after watching is that our citizens will assess the professional character of what we saw play out that night, and more importantly to do their own research on current events and candidates in order to inform their own opinions and decisions as we count down to Election Day.”

 

 

 

 

X