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What Else Could Possibly Go Wrong for Women? By Dr. E. Faye Williams

May 2, 2025

drefayewilliamsnew

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - For years, I have been saying "It is through our struggles that we gain our victories", but I am beginning to wonder where the struggles end for women. The same is true for Black women, but I am on women in general today! 

A short time back, people pretended to excuse everything the orange man said, Senator John Thune said when he was saying crazy things, "He's having some fun with it. He was just joking." His tongue must be tied lately"--especially when he talked about being a dictator only on day one. We are now in the second 100 days--long past Day 1, and he hasn't stopped being a dictator. 

He's not stopped praising the communist dictator of Russia Well, he gets credit for pausing while at the Pope's funeral-- but not for long! I think he was greatly outnumbered there, and at least one person, jokingly or not--said, "The Pope had survived a lot--35 days in the hospital with pneumonia to be exact- until the Vice-President went near him and shook his hand while leaning over to him. The Pope died just hours thereafter! Don't you have to just wonder what happened during that encounter? I am told it wasn't positive!

Well, let's get caught up with the orange man's recent activities.  You'll remember how he told his friends during the 2024 campaign that he could end the war of Russia against Ukraine immediately once he was back in office. He's back and he began praising his good friend Putin to give him some help.  Since being back, he decided to run over to the Vatican to attend the Pope's funeral where he was surrounded by a lot of other powerful world leaders and he changed his tune!  While there he actually said,  he didn't think his friend Putin was serious about ending the war! You think some of that religious stuff got through to him?

Let's move to another area. I pray that our white sisters are listening to what they voted for in 2024.  Lately, the MAGA group's leader has been urging women to have more babies--even talking about putting that in the budget! Even though we know the orange man didn't mean that women with melanin should have more babies, but it was a tragedy no matter who the woman was who suffered a miscarriage recently, and in the midst of it all, she was arrested and taken to jail!

That's right.  A 24-year-old woman in Georgia is currently being put through an unimaginable situation. After a tragic miscarriage at 19 weeks into her pregnancy that she needed, she was arrested!

Georgia authorities are claiming that the woman who lost her pregnancy naturally is a criminal because of how she dealt with the aftermath of the fetus. You see the Georgia state lawmakers have a law that allows that to be done. Citizens are protesting it and calling for the law to be repealed. It's a law that police are using to arrest women who are already grieving the loss of their child. Georgia is using this law since the overturning of Roe v. Wade. The law has been in effect banning abortions after six weeks, before most people even know they are pregnant. Part of that law includes language that could be interpreted as granting fetal personhood -- and that is the part of the law that authorities are using to charge this woman.   

After she suffered the miscarriage, she disposed of the fetal tissue before she passed out. There is absolutely no law in Georgia that dictates how a person must handle a non-viable fetus after a natural miscarriage, and yet authorities are claiming that she broke the law by throwing the remains away. Georgia has no law for the disposal, but Georgia finds that she broke the law!  Amazing! The coroner confirmed that there was absolutely no injury or trauma to the fetus. At 19 weeks, the fetus would not have been able to survive outside the womb, defining it as non-viable. The arrest of this woman is downright evil and unjust. So, in addition to all the other crazy and insensitive behavior of people who aren't even doctors, we must work to have the Georgia Legislature to overturn this brutal law for women in Georgia or it's just around the corner for women in other states. What else could possibly go wrong for women who are continuously losing the right to control their own bodies!

(Dr. E. Faye Williams is President of the Dick Gregory Society.)

Two choices: The Path Forward for America, a Reflection on Our Diverging Futures by Dr. Barbara Reynolds

Jan. 20, 2025

barbara reynolds2

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - As we stand at the crossroads of history, we are confronted with two starkly different futures. On one side of the Capitol, a twice-impeached convicted felon, committed to depriving people of color of affordable healthcare, education, and a sustainable future, is poised to be sworn in as president. On the other side, thousands are converging on Washington to pledge their allegiance to the continuation of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s dream of equality, fairness, and justice for all Americans.

  I will be marching with those who choose to be on the right side of history.  I am 82 but I intend to keep on marching and protesting.  I began my first  march in the 1960’s as a student working to register Black people to vote in Tennessee. Coming from the South, I was so naïve I did not know that showing up  in public after dark or going into white stores with inter-racial friends, was a dangerous terrifying venture. My group was chased by the Klan and we felt blessed  for managing  to escape with our lives. I kept on marching, protesting and as a writer, most of the time as the biographer of  Mrs. Coretta Scott King, I saw how committed non-violent warriors , those who would struggle and trade their blood for freedom, could overcome most anything. I was amazed at the fortitude of Mrs. King to fight for this holiday, rear her four children and continue the movement 30 years after her beloved husband was murdered.

.   In the 60’s where I entered the struggle for justice, there were no thoughts of an African American president, a Black woman on the Supreme Court or a multi-cultural Vice president we couldn’t even vote in the South or attend schools that were desegrated.   Today, we  now have 62 Blacks in Congress, Black billionaires, like Oprah  Winfrey and Robert Smith who contribute to their communities  and the Black gross national buying power is estimated at 1.6 trillion.

  I would be foolish to not be optimistic about our future.   I understand we have come this far by faith  and hard work, and we will not sit quietly as we are being pushed back possibly as far as  when  in 1857 the Supreme Court’s Dred Scot Decision ruled  Black people had no rights that Whites had to respect .  Moreover, Lynching and the destruction of all Black towns such as in Tulsa Oklahoma were a common occurrence.  Those of us who are seniors have relived so much of what it took to attain today’s victories  and our young people who are not planning to relive  the indignities of yesterday will find a way out of no way.

The Dark Path: A Presidency Rooted in Division and Inequality

 So, The prospect of a convicted felon assuming the highest office in the land is a grim reminder of the fragility of our democratic institutions. This individual, whose tenure has been marked by scandal and impeachment, represents a vision of America that is exclusionary and unjust. His policies have consistently targeted marginalized communities, particularly people of color, by undermining their access to essential services such as healthcare and education.

Under his administration, the concept of a sustainable future has been systematically eroded. Environmental regulations have been rolled back, climate change has been dismissed as a hoax, and corporate interests have been prioritized over the well-being of the planet and its inhabitants. This path leads to a future where the rich grow richer, and the poor are left to fend for themselves in an increasingly hostile environment. And with the marvels of artificial intelligence in the hands of tech wizards like Elon Musk, we cannot say for sure that our votes cannot be cloned, hacked or defused in some nefarious manner.

The consolidation of power in the hands of a few is a defining characteristic of this dark path. With the courts, the House, and the Senate under the new president's grip, and the support of the Billionaire Boys Club, we are on the brink of a dangerous  oligarchy. In this system, money and power creates a network where the elite can break the rules with impunity, leaving everyday people disenfranchised and voiceless.

The Bright Path: A Commitment to Equality and Justice

In stark contrast, the other side of the Capitol will witness a gathering of thousands who believe in the ideals of equality, fairness, and justice championed by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. These individuals are committed to non-violent revolution, advocating for a society where everyone is treated equally under the power of a righteous God.

This path is rooted in the belief that all people, regardless of race, creed, or socioeconomic status, deserve access to affordable healthcare, quality education, and a sustainable future. It envisions an America where diversity is celebrated, and the rights of all citizens are protected.

Non-violence is a cornerstone of this movement. Unlike the violent mob that ransacked the Capitol in 2020, injuring hundreds, these marchers are dedicated to peaceful protest. They draw strength from the Bible, which says not to fret over the crimes of evildoers as  they will ultimately be crushed like blades of grass. Their faith in a higher power and their unwavering dedication to justice provide a moral compass that guides their actions.

As we stand at this critical juncture, the choice before us is clear. Will we allow our nation to be led by a convicted felon whose policies perpetuate division and inequality, or will we join the ranks of those who are committed to a future of justice and equality for all?

.In the words of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., "The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice." Let us choose the path that bends toward justice and work together to build a nation that truly reflects the values of equality, fairness, and justice for all.

Reynolds News Service, author: My Life, My Love, My Legacy: Coretta King, Blogger, Chaplain:Women for Positive Change, www.DrBarbaraReynolds.com  
 

As Dr. King Once Asked, Where Do We Go from Here? By Charlene Crowell

 
January 9, 2025
 
MLK Close Up Western California University
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. PHOTO: Western California University
(TriceEdneyWire.com) - The year 2025 marks the nation’s 39th observance of a national holiday honoring Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Ironically, the still-beloved minister and martyr was only 39 years old age when an assassin’s bullet took his life on April 4, 1968.
While many will rightly recall his valiant civil rights activism, his equally vigilant call for economic justice remains as urgent today as it was decades ago. Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community?, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s fourth and final book was published in 1967 after a decade of activism that led to the enactment of federal laws on civil rights (1964), and voting rights (1965).  Despite notable and significant victories, he wrote of the unfinished journey that America still faced, and was morally-bound to pursue.
“There is nothing to prevent us from paying adequate wages to schoolteachers, social workers and other servants of the public to ensure that we have the best available personnel in these positions which are charged with the responsibility of guiding our future generations,” wrote Dr. King.
“Let us be dissatisfied until America will no longer have high blood pressure of creeds and an anemia of deeds. Let us be dissatisfied until the tragic walls that separate the outer city of wealth and comfort from the inner city of poverty and despair shall be crushed by the battering rams of the fires of justice.” 
Multiple and recent research reports highlight in precise terms many of the ways Black America remains economically shortchanged.
Across the country, local communities continue to struggle with the still-rising costs of housing and homelessness. In 2024, about 23 of every 10,000 people in the United States – experienced homelessness in an emergency shelter, safe haven, transitional housing program, or in unsheltered locations across the country, according to the most recent report by the Department of Housing & Urban Development (HUD). Further, although Blacks comprise just 12 percent of the nation’s population, and 21 percent of the country’s poor, we bear a disproportionate 32 percent of all people experiencing homelessness.
In times past, America’s homeless were frequently veterans. But in the past year, children under the age of 18 represented a 33 percent increase in homelessness, the single largest surge, while that of veterans dropped by eight percent, according to HUD.
“Sadly, we know exactly how we got here”, said Congresswoman Maxine Waters in reaction to the disturbing findings. “For decades, a lack of investment in affordable housing has forced countless families out of their homes and onto the streets. This is a crisis in every county and city across America, whether they be rural, urban, or suburban communities.” 
For generations of Black Americans, higher education has long been viewed as a ladder away from poverty. But today, millions who dedicated time and energies in pursuit of higher education remain mired in unsustainable and long-term debt. Among Black college graduates, the detrimental effects of historic economic disparities are particularly severe for those who attended Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs).
"Paying from the Grave”: Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) Alumni and the Burden of Student Loan Debt, a 2022 report by the Center for Responsible Lending tracked nagging and extensive economic hardships borne from heavy student debt.
“Representing only 3 percent of the nation’s colleges and universities, HBCUs enroll 9 percent of all Black students and award 13 percent of all bachelor’s degrees earned by Black students,” states the report.
“HBCU graduates are more likely to use loans to pay for college and to borrow greater amounts than non-HBCU graduates,” the report continues. “Taking on a large debt at an early age impacts lifetime earnings and generational wealth by delaying or preventing the opportunity to buy a home, start a business, or invest in retirement, thereby widening the racial wealth gap.”
Unfortunately, Black America’s saga with student debt extends into the older years of many consumers, according to the New York Federal Reserve Bank. Its analysis of indebtedness by generation showed although borrowers ages 35 to 49 ($635 billion) and those ages 25 to 34 ($490 billion) held the highest debt in dollars, significant billion-dollar debt was still owed by borrowers ages 50 to 61 ($284.5 billion), and 62 and older ($116 billion).  
This high level of debt that extends over multiple decades makes building wealth or some measure of financial stability that much harder for Black America. As this column recently reported, a report by the National Association of Real Estate Brokers (NAREB) detailed how owning a home – the nation’s most reliable building-block to wealth – shortchanges Black America yet again. In fact, the 400 wealthiest Americans control the same wealth as all 48 million Blacks.
These and other contemporary economic challenges were prophetically championed by Dr. King.
“When machines and computers, profit motives and property rights are considered more important than people the giant triplets of racism, economic exploitation and militarism are incapable of being conquered,” Dr. King foretold in a speech entitled,  The Three Evils of Society. “A civilization can flounder as readily in the face of moral bankruptcy as it can through financial bankruptcy.”
In a few weeks, Congress must wrestle with both a recurring debt limit and budget priorities as authorization on each face a ticking time clock.  
“Freedom is not won by a passive acceptance of suffering,” wrote Dr. King in his final book. “Freedom is won by a struggle against suffering. By this measure, Negroes have not yet paid the full price for freedom. And whites have not yet faced the full cost of justice.”
 

Malcolm X Lawsuit Is an Opportunity for NYPD & Federal Law Enforcement to Draw the Curtain On an Era of Corruption and Injustice by Marc H. Morial

To Be Equal 
November 22, 2024

Express written permission must be obtained from Mauri Solages Photography for usage

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - “For decades, {U.S. government agencies and the NYPD]  viewed Black activism as a threat to national security, resulting in the unchecked targeting of prominent leaders, including Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Marcus Garvey. This lawsuit seeks accountability for the systemic negligence and intentional actions that deprived Malcolm X’s family and the world of his life and legacy.” – Civil rights attorney Ben Crump

Six days before Malcolm X was gunned down at the Audubon Ballroom in New York City, an undercover NYPD detective told the department he’d seen “a dry run” of Malcolm X’s assassination, which he believed would happen on the upcoming Sunday.

The next day, two members of Malcolm X’s security team were arrested and detained in connection with a bogus plot to bomb the Statue of Liberty.
Malcolm X’s daughters charged in a lawsuit filed this week that the arrests were coordinated by the NYPD and federal law enforcement agencies “to weaken Malcolm X’s security, which knowingly facilitated his assassination.”

In a letter written in 2011 and unveiled after his death in 2020, the undercover officer who drew the men into the plot wrote, "It was my assignment to draw the two men into a felonious federal crime, so that they could be arrested by the FBI and kept away from managing Malcolm X's Audubon Ballroom door security on February 21, 1965.”

The lawsuit pulls together years of systemic and institutional corruption within the NYPD, the FBI, and the CIA. A swift settlement would allow these agencies to draw the curtain on an ugly period of rank injustice and usher in a new era of integrity and decency.

Accusations of conspiracy and corruption have surrounded Malcolm X’s assassination from the moment the bullets were fired. Earl Grant, a close associate, wrote of the immediate aftermath, “Here were New York City policemen, entering a room from which at least a dozen shots had been heard, and yet not one of them had his gun out! As a matter of absolute fact, some of them even had their hands in their pockets."

Two of the men who were convicted of the murder, Muhammad A. Aziz and Khalil Islam, were exonerated last year after an investigation by the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office determined that the NYPD and FBI withheld key evidence that likely would have led to their acquittal.

Mujahid Abdul Halim, who confessed to the murder at trial, has always insisted Aziz and Islam were innocent. He initially declined to name his co-conspirators but later identified them as Leon Davis, Benjamin Thomas, and two men whose full names he did not know, “William X” and “Wilbur or Kinly.”

The Manhattan D.A.’s investigation did not confirm the guilt of those men or outline a conspiracy among local and federal agencies.  But the lawsuit claims the reason Malcolm X was denied entry into France 12 days before his assassination was that French authorities had learned of a CIA plot to murder him and feared he would be “liquidated” on French soil.

The CIA’s unofficial motto is the Biblical verse "And ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free.” Until these agencies acknowledge the truth surrounding Malcolm X’s assassination, we cannot truly claim to be free.

The Real Story of Juneteenth Must be Told, Historians and Educators Say By Hazel Trice Edney 

June 16, 2023

Editors and Publishers, this article was actually first posted on Juneteenth last year. Given the rich history of Juneteenth as given by Dr. Frank Smith, we thought the story to be worth repeating this year.

FrankSmithatAACivilWarMuseum

Dr. Frank Smith, president/CEO of the African American Civil War Museum and Memorial, spends Juneteenth telling the heroic story of how 200,000 Black soldiers helped to win the Civil War for America, a story that he says is not told enoughPhoto/Courtesy, Dr. Frank Smith

(Trice Edney Wire) – When President Joe Biden signed into law the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act two years ago, making Juneteenth a federal holiday, he and Vice President Kamala Harris envisioned it as a holiday mostly for the celebration of freedom. 

“We are gathered here in a house built by enslaved people. We are footsteps away from where President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation,” said Harris at the White House signing ceremony alongside Black Caucus members on June 17, 2021. “We have come far, and we have far to go. But today is a day of celebration. It is not only a day of pride. It’s also a day for us to reaffirm and rededicate ourselves to action.” 

But, a year later, based on interviews with historians and educators around the nation, this year’s Juneteenth public holiday, Monday, June 20, 2022, will likely turn out to be mostly a day to turn up the struggle for freedom, justice and equality that have yet to be attained. 

“I had to warm up to this day like everybody else because it wasn’t on my radar as a significant holiday until Congress passed the bill,” said Dr. Frank Smith, president/CEO of the Washington, D.C.-based African American Civil War Museum and Memorial which will spend Juneteenth correcting a wrong. “We will be lifting up the names of those 200,000 Black troops” who helped defeat the Confederate Army in the Civil War,” Smith said, a story that is so often untold. 

The overwhelming bipartisanship support for the Juneteenth federal holiday came last year amidst widespread protests as millions of people took to the streets against police violence in the aftermath of the murder of George Floyd and other racial traumas and inequities. It was the first federal holiday attained since Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day was established in 1983. But, African-Americans and several states had celebrated Juneteenth for decades as the day they’d been freed. 

However, given the nearly 4,000 lynchings of Black people across the U. S since the end of slavery; given the August 28,1955 killing of Emmett Till; the massacre of nine Black people by Dylann Roof at a Bible study in 2016, the horrific public murder of George Floyd by police only two years ago, and the shocking murders of 10 people in a racist rampage at a grocery store in Buffalo, N.Y. on May 14 this year, many think they’d best spend Juneteenth continuing to work for freedom instead of just celebrating it. 

Caroline Brewer, the author of 13 children’s books, agrees. She pointed out that Black people have long commemorated Juneteenth. Therefore, she has noticed that during the official holiday, her associates are leaning toward continuing their work to build up the Black community as she is attempting to do with Black children.  

“I think with any holiday, and when it comes to Black history, where most people that I know are and where I am is that I am celebrating Black history every day. I am doing something for the liberation of our people every day. So, I am focused on promoting my children’s books,” one of which is going to be published in August.  

The new book is titled, “Say Their Names”, Brewer said. “We’re having conversations about the trauma that we’ve experienced as Black people as a result of police violence and racial violence.” 

The story of Juneteenth is quite simple. President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation on Jan. 1, 1863. It declared a formal end to slavery in the United States. But word was slow getting to Galveston, Texas. The slaves in Galveston didn’t know that they were free until almost two and a half years later, on June 19, 1865. It was on that day that they got the news from Union army troops, including 6,000 Black soldiers who helped to inform them that the war was over and “slavery no longer existed in America,” Smith recounted. The next year, the freed slaves of Galveston commemorated that day as Juneteenth, a celebration of freedom. Such unofficial annual celebrations had occurred across the U. S. ever since until President Biden has now made the holiday official. 

But America must be careful to focus on the real story, Smith said. Many of those “seasoned veteran” Black soldiers had helped to chase away defeated General Robert E. Lee after he surrendered in Richmond, Va., the former Confederate capital, Smith stressed. Actually, those solders were sent to Galveston in order to keep them from participating in the Grand Review Parade down Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C., celebrating the defeat of the Confederacy. 

“They actually sent them out of town, so they’d have an excuse to not let America see that it took two hundred thousand African-American soldiers in the Union Army to help the Army win this war…If we don’t tell that story, nobody else is going to tell it,” Smith said. 

Black Press historian A. Peter Bailey agrees that the heroism of those Black soldiers is practically the only reason to celebrate Juneteenth.  

“What I think we could use it for if we’re going to do something serious about it is to make it a day to celebrate the major contribution that Black soldiers made to the Union victory in the Civil War. This is something that to me is not nearly stressed enough.” 

Brewer concludes, “So we will continue to participate in Juneteenth celebrations and appreciate the holiday. But we know that our work is three-sixty-five, twenty-four seven…It just doesn’t end for us. And I don’t know that that has really come across in some of the major media conversations about Juneteenth. For a lot of people who may cover the White House, it’s just another holiday with symbolism. But for us, it’s about celebrating the progress we’ve made and the work that still needs to be done.” 

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