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The Key to Motivating Young Voters? Young Candidates By Ben Jealous

Sept. 14, 2020
The Key to Motivating Young Voters? Young Candidates
By Ben Jealous
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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - One of the most exciting parts of this year’s Democratic National Convention for me was the keynote speech delivered collectively by a group of young progressive elected officials, many of them Black. They showed us the potential for a promising future once we have gotten past the presidency of Donald Trump.
They also showed us how to get there. One way to make sure we remove Donald Trump from the White House and his enablers from Congress is to support exciting candidates at all levels who can energize Democratic voters—especially progressive young people—to vote.
The mass mobilization we have seen in the Black Lives Matter protests is an essential tool for turning energy into political will and bringing pressure on public officials. Ultimately, though, voting is the only tool we have for putting people who are committed to making the changes our country urgently needs into positions of power.
Many of the problems that have been with us for far longer than the current administration—including systemic inequity in health care, education, housing, and policing--can and must be addressed at local and state levels.
That’s why transformational local candidates are a key to building progressive power and making progressive change. And getting elected and serving successfully in local office is often the first step to higher office.
Look at Virginia, where intense organizing over the past few election cycles turned the former capital of the Confederacy blue. Candidates from underrepresented communities—young people, people of color, women, immigrants, LGBTQ candidates—helped Democrats take control of both chambers of the state’s General Assembly. And that has meant the power to make huge changes for the people of Virginia—expanding access to health care, addressing gun violence, and more.
Opposition to President Trump helped drive change in Virginia and will motivate many people to get to the polls in November. But energy doesn’t come just from the top of the ticket. It runs both ways. In fact, exciting local candidates can generate enthusiasm among people who might see national politics and candidates as far removed from their lives and concerns.
People For the American Way’s Next Up! project supports young candidates running at the state and local level, many of them from communities that have long been denied their fair share of political power. The enthusiasm for their candidacies can boost progressive prospects up and down the ballot.
There’s Arizona, for example, where Democrats have an excellent chance of picking up the U.S. Senate seat now held by the appointed Republican senator Martha McSally. We’re excited about supporting two local candidates Whitney Walker and Jevin Hodge, both young Black people who are engaging their communities by challenging Republican incumbents on the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors.
How about Michigan, a battleground state that helped put Trump in the White House? Chokwe Pitchford is generating excitement as a 21-year old Black man running to flip a seat in the state house.
Young voters have been going to the polls in higher numbers in recent elections. We must do everything in our power to keep that trend rising. If you know a young community-oriented person who ought to run for public office in the future, encourage them. We need their voices and energy to keep turning citizens and activists into voters.
And between now and November, do what you can to support young candidates who have stepped up. They are running in a year when public health restrictions make traditional campaigning harder and when disinformation and voter suppression campaigns are trying to keep Black people from voting. We can and will move this country toward a more just future—and we can’t let anyone convince us to take our eyes off that prize.
For reliable information on voting, visit https://www.vote411.org/ (League of Women Voters) or https://866ourvote.org/state/ (Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights under Law)
Ben Jealous serves as president of People For the American Way and People For the American Way Foundation. Jealous has decades of experience as a leader, coalition builder, campaigner for social justice and seasoned nonprofit executive. In 2008, he was chosen as the youngest-ever president and CEO of the NAACP. He is a graduate of Columbia University and Oxford, where he was a Rhodes Scholar, and he has taught at Princeton and the University of Pennsylvania.

Blame Anybody By Dr. E. Faye Williams

Sept. 14, 2020

Blame Anybody
By Dr. E. Faye Williams

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(TriceEdneyWire.com)It’s so easy to blame somebody else. Donald Trump blames everything on somebody else while he takes responsibility for nothing. Everything has to satisfy his ego or in his mind, it’s fake news. So, he lies to keep the American people from panicking! He fails at that because no matter what he comes up with every day causes many American people to panic. He thinks it was Bob Woodward’s responsibility to tell the truth to the American people. So, what is his idea of presidential responsibilities?

With Trump, there’s something new every day, but it all works the same way. He’s like those kids who say the “darndest things.” The only difference in him and those kids is they’re not President! He’s a very chronologically advanced man who says dangerous things that make no sense while he thinks he’s really smart!

He has no sense of decency. The thing he does best is distort the truth to the point that no one believes anything he says. Those who follow him religiously can’t possibly be doing so because they believe he’s telling the truth or telling them anything that is going to help them. The people who follow him are either not paying attention to what he says or they never listen to real news.

I think he gets up every morning and figures out what lie he can tell that sounds more preposterous than the many he told the day before. Real reporters listen to him and can hardly wait to translate what they just heard. More often than not they’re pointing out his lies. He doesn’t even know how to keep his lies straight. He’ll give one answer today, and answer the exact opposite the next day.

He’s almost at the end of his painful four-year term, and he hasn’t yet realized he was President of the United States! He still doesn’t realize it’s the responsibility of the President who’s currently in the White House to fix whatever he thinks is broken.

He undermined everything scientists were telling him, and kept the truth about what was really going on. He knew how dangerous the pandemic was and still is. He obviously thinks that somebody else is charged with leading the country. Apparently, he was shocked to find out there was something he couldn’t control when he was told exactly what this “China Virus” as he calls it was likely to do. He spoke with Woodward in those 18 calls seemingly jubilant about how dangerous the virus was. He seemed to relish discovering something that was airborne and dangerous. It was like he had this big secret and was only going to tell Bob about it. He was gleeful to go out and tell the American people he had everything under control while knowing he was lying.

What kind of person plays games with a deadly disease that he knows is deadly; yet, gleefully tells the people he’s responsible for protecting that they shouldn’t do the very thing that might protect them? What kind of person would say such horrible things about military leaders who’re also responsible for protecting the American people at his command? Who believes those little Black kids sitting behind him as he speaks even know who he is?

When it comes to truthfulness, Joe Biden runs circles around Donald. It’s obvious Trump doesn’t even understand the concept of truth. What I don’t understand is why people who seem to have a bit of sense follow him religiously.

The way he told Woodward “You drank the Kool-Aid,” he doesn’t need to tell me again that he in no way can relate to the pain and suffering his white privilege still causes others.

(Dr. E. Faye Williams is National President of the National Congress of Black Women. She is host of “Wake Up and Stay Woke” on WPFW-89.3 FM.)

Civil Rights Icon Benjamin Chavis to Host Weekly Black Talk Show on PBS By Hazel Trice Edney

Sept. 8, 2020
Civil Rights Icon Benjamin Chavis to Host Weekly Black Talk Show on PBS
By Hazel Trice Edney
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Dr. Ben Chavis
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Clara Wilkerson, producer

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Civil rights icon Dr. Benjamin Chavis, former NAACP executive director and current president/CEO of the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA), will become host of a weekly Black-oriented public affairs talk show on PBS (Public Broadcasting System) in October.

As racial tensions and disparities have skyrocketed in almost every category of American life, Chavis and the show’s producer Clara Wilkerson says it’s time for a program that challenges the mind and focuses on solutions. They believe the show, Chavis Chronicles, is among the answers. PBS apparently agrees.

“Our nation is polarized by race; polarized by politics; polarized by economics; polarized by health disparities; polarized by the pursuit of education and the education gap; culturally polarized; ethnically polarized; religiously polarized,” Chavis said in an interview with the Trice Edney News Wire. “And so, with all of these multiple polarizations that are undergirded by systemic racism, having a national one half hour in depth discussion about these issues - particularly from an African-American perspective - which the main stream media has not really chosen to focus on, will be crucial.”

American Public Television (APT), the leading syndicator of high-quality, top-rated programming to the nation’s public television stations, has confirmed that Chavis Chronicles is set to air in top markets across the nation, starting Oct. 1.

“We have reviewed the materials and are pleased to confirm it has been accepted for release in October, 2020 to the nation’s public television stations,” said a letter to Wilkerson from Judy Barlow, APT vice president for business development. “We are honored to work with you and Dr. Chavis on this fine series which will bring important conversations to the American people. Thank you for bringing it to us.”

Wilkerson, an award-winning independent producer, has worked with PBS for more than 25 years. Her company, CRW Worldwide, Inc., has produced more than 25 documentaries and video productions held in over 300 libraries internationally. Wilkerson says she created the Chronicles format specifically with Chavis in mind.

“I first and foremost see this show as one that touches the mind, body and soul. PBS is intellectual,” Wilkerson describes her vision for the show. “We’re bringing this program to those who want to see something more introspective - deep thinkers, change makers, leaders - but then we’re not snobs. We’re not saying we just want to do it for those who are highly educated. We want people who are into social justice and what’s good for the masses.”

Chavis Chronicles will be rare programming as there are currently no weekly talk shows on network television specifically from a Black perspective. Also, unlike cable television, PBS is still free of charge, which makes it accessible to people of all income levels, Wilkerson points out. “That’s why PBS is a great place for this. There’s no better place because we can reach the masses.”
PBS is a non-profit corporation established by Congress in 1967. It is funded by multiple resources, including private donations, foundations, federal funds, and dues from member stations. Chavis Chronicles will be self-funded, including through advertising sales, “so we can be more autonomous,” Wilkerson said.

An APT “Fact Sheet” describing the programming of Chavis Chronicles in its first year calls it “a thought-provoking half-hour weekly series with an urban American flair, featuring interviews with famous leaders and politicians, doctors and scientists, cultural leaders and influencers from around the globe…The Chavis Chronicles goes beyond the headlines offering insights on matters that impact the public and provides a unique perspective from a renowned living legend of the African American community.”

More than 62 million homes will have access to the show in 100 markets. They include top Nielson-rated markets: New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Dallas, Detroit, San Francisco, Washington, D.C., Houston, Boston and Atlanta.

Chavis says the first episode will feature an interview with U. S. Rep. Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.) in his home office in Columbia, S.C. It will not only spotlight Clyburn as the nation’s highest-ranking Black lawmaker in his role as House majority whip; but also his family roots and civil rights background.

A social justice activist of more than 60 years, Chavis says his experiences have given him an appeal to people from all walks of life. He started his civil rights career as a youth coordinator for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. He earned his Master of Divinity degree from Duke University while serving an unjust 34-year prison sentence as a member of the Wilmington 10, who Amnesty International declared political prisoners. The Wilmington 10 case garnered international attention and was pardoned 40 years later. He also received a Doctor of Ministry degree from Howard University. He believes Chavis Chronicles will draw a vastly diverse audience despite it being from an African-American perspective.

“The problem of systemic racism is not just a Black problem. It’s a White problem. It’s a Latino problem. It’s an Asian problem; a native American problem. So, this is a program for all audiences from all racial backgrounds. It’s also intergenerational. While I’ve had a longevity in the civil rights movement; I still have an appeal to millennials. I still have an appeal to the Hip Hop generation. I still have an appeal to the environmental justice movement which I helped to initiate 30 or 40 years ago,” Chavis says. “So, it’s very broad in terms of the scope of the program, but it comes from an African-American perspective.”

As president/CEO of NNPA, the Black Press of America, Chavis already has a broad weekly audience as a columnist. He also serves as board chairman of the National Association for Equal Opportunity in Higher Education (NAFEO) and is a regular contributor on the Black News Channel. However, he stresses that his new role as a PBS talk show host will be independent of all of his various other positions and responsibilities.

“And so, we have an unprecedented opportunity to present an in depth discussion; an in depth analysis and also to talk about some solutions to the problems that beset America and that beset people of color throughout the world; particularly those of African descent,” Chavis concludes. “My whole career is about freedom, justice and equality. But, overarching, the struggle for freedom, justice and equality is to stand for what’s true. Speaking truth to power, publishing truth to power, distributing truth to power. Now I have an opportunity to broadcast truth to power. If the Chavis Chronicles is going to represent anything, it’s going to represent the truth.”

Right Wing Watch: The Week’s Weirdest Moments on the Extreme Right

Sept. 9, 2020

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Right Wing Watch: The Week’s Weirdest Moments on the Extreme Right

Right Wing Watch is a project of People For the American Way, dedicated to monitoring and exposing the activities and rhetoric of right-wing activists and organizations in order to expose their extreme agenda.

As Election Day draws closer, extreme right-wing commentators and activists are ramping up their already dark and divisive rhetoric, sprinkling in some claims and ploys so fanatical you'd be forgiven for dismissing them if they weren't so dangerous.

Scott Adams, the creator of the Dilbert comic strip, has transformed into a prominent online pro-Trump commentator in recent years and has recently been using his popular YouTube channel to highlight some pretty amazing "facts." Namely that Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden and Satan share some eerily similar characteristics.

In a video posted​ Tuesday, Aug​. 25, Adams explained that there are only "two people who are famous for living underground": Joe Biden and the Prince of Darkness.

Adams went on to assert that Biden’s campaign slogan—“Build Back Better"—contained satanic symbols, with the number six being hidden in the capital B's of the slogan, meaning that the slogan was really code for 666. ​The rest of his claim is almost too ludicrous and complicated to explain: Adams went on to say that Biden's name itself likewise contained a hidden 666, whereby if you combined the J and O together, they formed a "backwards six," while if you turned the lowercase e upside down, that formed another six. Those two sixes combined with the six hidden in the B of Biden's last name formed 666, while the reminder of his last name—I-D-E-N—was code for "identity​." ​If you got lost following that chaotic claim, just know you're not the only one.

“666 identity. That’s what Joe Biden’s name actually is,” Adams said.

Who can argue with that?

And just in case ​accusing one of being buddies with Satan wasn't enough, shady right-wing ​political operatives Jack Burkman and Jacob Wohl have begun rolling out robocalls targeting Black voters with lies and disinformation aimed at dissuading them from voting by mail.

In the robocall, a copy of which was obtained by Right Wing Watch, a woman identifying herself as "Tamika Taylor" warns that police will use information from mail-in voting to track down voters, that credit card companies will collect outstanding debts with the information provided, and even that the Center for Disease Control will use the information to force people to receive mandatory vaccines. Here's the robocall in full:

Hi, this is Tamika Taylor from Project 1599, the civil rights organization founded by Jack Burkman and Jacob Wohl. Mail-in voting sounds great, but did you know that if you vote by mail, your personal information will be part of a public database that will be used by police departments to track down old warrants and be used by credit card companies to collect outstanding debts? The CDC is even pushing to use records for mail-in voting to track people for mandatory vaccines. Don’t be finessed into giving your private information to the man, stay home safe and beware of vote by mail.

Wohl and Burkman are notorious smear merchants who revel in leveling absurd allegations and spreading baseless lies and may soon find themselves in the cross hairs of Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson​ who said in a tweet that her office “will use every tool at our disposal to dispel this & other false rhetoric & seek justice on behalf of every voter who was targeted & harmed by this vicious attempt at voter suppression.”

Perhaps Biden's supposed connection with Beelzebub explains why so many ​extreme right-wing Christian commentators have recently begun declaring that it would be a mortal sin for anyone to vote for him.

During a recent interview on a religious-right podcast, multimillionaire prosperity gospel preacher Kenneth Copeland proclaimed that any person who doesn't vote for President Donald Trump or votes for Biden in the 2020 election is "guilty of murder."

Not to be outdone, ​extreme right-wing commentator John Zmirak declared a few days later that any Biden voter would be committing a “serious sin” akin to murder for which they will have to answer to God on Judgment Day. Elizabeth Farah, the co-founder and chief operating officer of the right-wing conspiracy theory website WorldNetDaily, echoed that sentiment in a video that she posted Friday, Aug​. 28 in which she insisted that everyone is "obligated to vote for Trump/Pence in this 2020 election" because to do otherwise is a sin akin to doing nothing while one’s family is viciously raped and attacked by home invaders.

COVID-19 and Sickle Cell Disease by Glenn Ellis

Sept. 7, 2020

COVID-19 and Sickle Cell Disease

“Having sickle cell disease (SCD) increases your risk for severe illness from COVID-19”

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - September is Sickle Cell Disease Awareness Month, and COVID-19 has given the need for awareness more urgent than ever.

The CDC has issued this statement a couple of weeks ago, as it pointed out that people of any age with certain underlying medical conditions are at increased risk for severe illness from COVID-19. Like, seemingly, everything else about COIVD-19, Blacks/African Americans are carrying a much heavier burden as it relates to those with sickle cell disease. Thirty years ago, the U.S. sickle cell anemia population was estimated to be 32,000 –50,000.

Today, assessing the number of individuals with SCD nationwide with sickle cell disease is, for all practical purposes, is impossible, since there is no coordinated system of data collection and reporting of the prevalence and death rate from this disease. Sadly, because of this, the number of individuals who died with or of sickle cell disease or even the number of individuals that go unreported, is unknown.

Back in 2010, a study in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine pointed out that the average age of death (39 years) and the proportion of individuals surviving to age 45 years (35%) were lower in 2006 than the proportion of individuals surviving (50%) before 1994. This is in spite of the presumed improvements in health care in this country.

Many of us don’t understand that sickle cell disease is a genetic condition. People who have it have inherited certain genes in their blood from their parents. If a child inherits a sickle cell gene from each parent, they have sickle cell disease. If a child inherits a sickle cell gene from one parent and a normal hemoglobin gene from the other has sickle cell trait rather than sickle cell disease. Most people with sickle cell trait don't have symptoms but can pass the gene to their children. Sickle cell disease (SCD) disproportionately affects Black/African Americans in the United States as well as forebearers from sub‐Saharan Africa, the Western Hemisphere (South America, the Caribbean, and Central America), and some Mediterranean countries.

Symptoms and complications of sickle cell disease are different for each person and can range from mild to severe. However, people with the condition inherited a mutation that causes red blood cells to transform from a round shape into a sickle shape (a process called “sickling”). Healthy, round red blood cells are able to move easily through the blood vessels to carry oxygen to all parts of the body. Sickle-shaped red blood cells, however, are not able to flow through blood vessels as easily: They can get stuck and clog blood flow, which can inhibit oxygen delivery, damage blood vessels and lead to inflammation.

The symptoms of sickle cell disease include abdominal pain, bone pain, shortness of breath, delayed growth, fatigue, fever and chest pain. A bone marrow transplant may cure the disease; otherwise, treatment focuses on symptom management.

Due to the impact other infections can have on people living with sickle cell (including pneumonia and acute chest syndrome) anyone with a sickle cell disorder who has a worsening cough, difficulty in breathing or fever.

Thanks, in large part, to Dr. Mary T Basset, a physician during the American civil rights movement, who protested the fact that sickle cell disease research, screening, and treatment received little to no funding and was neglected because patients were of mostly African American descent. As a result, one of the civil rights movements’ achievements was the establishment of the Sickle Cell Anemia Act of 1972. Since then, there has been more public awareness of the genetic disorder and it has led to more funding towards finding a cure for the disease. Now, the National Institutes of Health (NIH), spends about $100 million on sickle cell disease research each year.

The Case Western Reserve School of Medicine and University Hospitals reports that, according to the NIH, “the only cure for sickle cell disease is a bone-marrow transplant, a procedure in which a patient receives bone marrow from a healthy, genetically-compatible sibling donor. However, transplants are too risky for many adults, and only about 18% of children with the disease have a healthy, matched sibling donor”.

There is some very promising hope, as a result of the years of research. A young African American woman, Jennelle Stephenson, 28, who was born with sickle cell disease, fully recovered after receiving genetic treatment as part of an NIH clinical trial that might hold the key to a cure of this disease. This is truly exciting news!

In the meantime, we must especially remember that those with sickle cell disease are particularly vulnerable, and we have an obligation to ensure that they are protected and receiving the best of care.

COVID-19 can cause severe inflammation and injury to the lungs. This can take a greater toll if you have sickle cell disease, a group of inherited red blood cell disorders.

Be sure to stay well hydrated, wash your hands frequently and avoid close contact with other people who have symptoms of a respiratory infection!

Remember, I’m not a doctor. I just sound like one! Take good care of yourself and live the best life possible!

The information included in this column is for educational purposes only. I do not dispense medical advice or prescribe the use of any technique as a replacement form of treatment for physical, mental or medical problems by your doctor either directly or indirectly. Glenn Ellis, MPH is a Visiting Scholar at The National Bioethics Center at Tuskegee University and a Harvard Medical School Fellow in Research Bioethics and Writing. He is author of Which Doctor? and Information is the Best Medicine. Ellis is an active media contributor on Health Equity and Medical Ethics. For more good health information visit: www.glennellis.com

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