Home Blog Page 334

View From Here

By David Mark Greaves

You Are Worthy

Senator Cory Booker. Thank you so much for giving voice to emotions and yearnings that Africans who were enslaved, could not. Who had to stand and watch the women be beaten and raped by men of the same mind as those on display by Republicans at the hearing on the nomination of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court.

The behavior of some of the Republicans toward this Black woman, was only an update of what civil rights icon Fannie Lou Hamer had to go through, when, while returning from a voting registration workshop in South Carolina, she was arrested in Winona, Mississippi.  The Equal Justice Initiative writes, “At the county jail, white jailers forced two African American prisoners to savagely beat Ms. Hamer with loaded Blackjacks and she was nearly killed. As she regained consciousness, she overheard one of the white officers propose, “We could put them SOBs in [the] Big Black [River] and nobody would ever find them.”

These are the kinds of white men our incredibly strong sister had to face. If those two African American prisoners forced to do the beating could hear Cory Booker’s words, they would hug and thank him, as the elder custodian that the senator spoke about overcome by just seeing Booker in that position.

The prisoners and the enslaved men forced to watch their women violated, would see Sen. Cory Booker as the man they were meant to be, able to tell their jailers and enslavers to go to hell. They would watch him through teared eyes while he returned their fire and rained support on the woman in the arena, as she fought with her brilliance and her God as her sword and shield.

“You are worthy,” Senator Booker said, telling her to ignore those others. They were like the “mad and hungry barking dogs” Claude McKay spoke of in his poem “If We Must Die.”  It was Booker who got to live McKay’s words, “Like men, we’ll face the murderous, cowardly pack, pressed to the wall, dying, but fighting back.”  But Senator Booker was far from dying.  He was in command of the moment, telling Judge Jackson, “I’m not letting anybody in the senate steal my joy,” because, “I just look at you, and I start getting filled with emotion… …I know what it’s taken for you to sit in that seat.” 

Senator Booker gave Judge Jackson a timeout from the assault, a safe space for her to release her emotions and wipe away a tear. “You have five more folks to go through.  It’s not going to stop.  They’re going to accuse you of this and that, heck, in honor of someone who shares your birthday, you might be called a Communist.  But don’t worry, my sister.  Don’t worry.  God has got you. And how do I know that?  Because you’re here.”

The senator reminded us of two other great women, Judge Constance Baker Motley, a former civil rights attorney and the first Black woman appointed to the federal judiciary and the legendary Underground Railroad conductor, Harriet Tubman.  He said Tubman had been beaten almost to the point of death, chased by dogs and yet when she escaped, she kept going back to save others. 

Because Tubman traveled mostly by night, she had learned to read the sky for directions and found the North Star.  And Booker said that guided by that star, a “harbinger of hope” she kept moving forward despite it all. 

Booker told Judge Jackson that for him, she was that star. And that “the greatest country in the world, the United States of America will be better because of you.”

Black Women Under Attack 

By Dr. Julianne Malveaux |

OPINION (TriceEdneyWire.com) – Chris Rock crossed the line when he ridiculed Jada Pinkett Smith for her alopecia in his mediocre Oscar performance last week. But I fell off the Chris Rock bandwagon years ago. His “humor” is too often misogynistic. He sometimes laughs so hard at his jokes that the rest of us can’t hear them. His Oscar-losing reference to a more than 20-year-old movie, GI Jane, was cringingly yawn-worthy, and it was unnecessary. Jada didn’t like it. She sat in the audience, in her glorious baldness, and rolled her eyes, which was all the response Rock deserved.

Will Smith took it to another level, charging the stage and slapping the spit out of Rock, finishing with a profanity-laced rant. No, Smith had no business striking Rock, and now he has had to pick up the pieces. At the same time, part of me cheered him because only infrequently does anyone stand up for Black women. We stand up for ourselves.

In 1991, as members of the United States Senate were attacking Anita Hill, sixteen hundred of us, including my Mom and my three sisters, all signed the proclamation published in the New York Times and other major newspapers. We called ourselves African American Women in Defense of Ourselves, declaring that “no one will speak for us but ourselves.”  We wrote, “In 1991, we cannot tolerate this type of dismissal of anyone Black woman’s experience or this attack upon our collective character without protest, outrage, and resistance.”

Fast forward thirty years or so. Now another Black woman, Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson, sits before the Senate Judiciary Committee, and a whole bunch of white Republican men (and a few women) have viciously attacked her. Texas Ted Cruz insultingly asked if she was “soft” on child pornography. Actually, he didn’t ask, he ranted and raved and wouldn’t let her finish a sentence. It was a horrible display of his bullying, but it was also a reminder that no matter how far Black women have come, we have so much work to do so that our daughters, perhaps, won’t have to experience these kinds of biases.

I have developed the rather unfortunate and time-consuming habit of reading the comments posted online after some articles.

There are three or four times (or more) comments about Chris Rock and the slap than about Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson and her abuse from Ted Cruz and his cronies. And despite Judge Jackson’s composure and amazing grace, there were too few who had her back.

So while Ketanji is no Jada Smith, nor vice versa, these are two Black women who have experienced violent attacks in the last several weeks. And while it is not helpful in a civilized society to talk about slapping or fisticuffs, some of Cruz’s antics are enough to make one forget her religion and resort to extreme measures. Between Jada Smith and Ketanji Brown Jackson, we are all reminded that no matter what you have achieved as a Black woman, you can still be torn down by the hateful words and deeds of misogynistic men, regardless of race.

Accusing someone of being “soft” on child pornography or terrorism is serious. Making such false accusations in belligerent and blustering tones is bullying. Maintaining poise and dignity makes Justice Ketanji a hero and role model and makes Ted Cruz and Lindsey Graham look like babbling idiots. The same is true of Chris Rock, who may not have known about Jada’s alopecia. It’s a condition that affects millions of women, and they, like Jada, weren’t laughing.

The Supreme Court confirmation is exponentially more important than the slap. And the abuse of Black women in this country is disgusting. Let’s focus more on the former than the latter and focus on rooting out the verbal and physical abuse of Black women. It isn’t funny.

“Anti-lynching legislation was reintroduced in the U.S. Congress by leaders who understood that our past must not and cannot be forgotten. That the truth must be spoken no matter how difficult it is to speak, and certainly no matter how difficult it is to hear.”

She praised Sen. Cory Booker (D-New Jersey), and Congressman Bobby Rush (D-Illinois) for their role in seeing the bill through to passage.

Harris also shouted out Republican South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott for supporting the effort.

“The people of our nation deserve the protection of this anti-lynching law,” Harris demanded. “I believe so often, and it has been said, the victims of lynching were targeted because they were working to build a better America,” she stated.

“That’s what they were doing, and it was in everyone’s best interest. But unfortunately, the cowards couldn’t see and couldn’t understand. “So, today, we recognize them, our history, and let us recommit ourselves to that unfinished business as well to continue to fight for freedom, opportunity, and justice for all.”

You Are Worthy!

View From Here
By David Mark Greaves
Senator Cory Booker. Thank you so much for giving voice to emotions and yearnings that Africans who were enslaved, could not. Who had to stand and watch the women be beaten and raped by men of the same mind as those on display by Republicans at the hearing on the nomination of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court.

Senator Cory Booker


The behavior of some of the Republicans toward this Black woman, was only an update of what civil rights icon Fannie Lou Hamer had to go through, when, while returning from a voting registration workshop in South Carolina, she was arrested in Winona, Mississippi. The Equal Justice Initiative writes, “At the county jail, white jailers forced two African American prisoners to savagely beat Ms. Hamer with loaded Blackjacks and she was nearly killed. As she regained consciousness, she overheard one of the white officers propose, “We could put them SOBs in [the] Big Black [River] and nobody would ever find them.”


These are the kinds of white men our incredibly strong sister, Judge Jackson, had to face. If those two African American prisoners forced to do the beating could hear Cory Booker’s words, they would hug and thank him, as did the elder Capitol night worker that the senator spoke about being overcome by just seeing Booker in that position.
The prisoners and the enslaved men forced to watch their women violated, would see Sen. Cory Booker as the man they were meant to be, able to tell their jailers and enslavers to go to hell. They would watch him through teared eyes while he returned their fire and rained support on the woman in the arena, as she fought with her brilliance and her God as her sword and shield.


“You are worthy,” Senator Booker said, telling her to ignore those others. He was in command of the moment, telling Judge Jackson, “I’m not letting anybody in the senate steal my joy,” because, “I just look at you, and I start getting filled with emotion… …I know what it’s taken for you to sit in that seat.”


Senator Booker gave Judge Jackson a timeout from the assault, a safe space for her to release her emotions and wipe away a tear. “You have five more folks to go through. It’s not going to stop. They’re going to accuse you of this and that, heck, in honor of someone who shares your birthday, you might be called a Communist. But don’t worry, my sister. Don’t worry. God has got you. And how do I know that? Because you’re here.”


The senator reminded us of two other great women, Judge Constance Baker Motley, a former civil rights attorney and the first Black woman appointed to the federal judiciary and the legendary Underground Railroad conductor, Harriet Tubman. He said Tubman had been beaten almost to the point of death, chased by dogs and yet when she escaped, she kept going back to save others.


Because Tubman traveled mostly by night, she had learned to read the sky for directions and found the North Star. And Booker said that guided by that star, a “harbinger of hope” she kept moving forward despite it all.


Booker told Judge Jackson that for him, she was that star. And that “the greatest country in the world, the United States of America will be better because of you.”

U.S. approves second Covid-19 booster for people 50 and older

By Andrew Joseph statnews.com
The Food and Drug Administration on Tuesday authorized second Covid-19 boosters for people 50 years and older.
People 50 and older are now eligible for another shot of either the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna mRNA vaccines four months after their last dose, the FDA said.


Health officials cited data from Israel showing that second boosters increased antibody levels, while other studies from Israel have shown that the shots increased protection against death during the country’s Omicron wave. Much of that data is considered preliminary, and it’s only been a few months since those doses started going into arms. Pfizer and BioNTech also said they submitted data to the FDA showing some waning of effectiveness three to six months out from the first booster shots.


“Current evidence suggests some waning of protection over time against serious outcomes from Covid-19 in older and immunocompromised individuals,” Peter Marks, the director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, said in a statement. “Based on an analysis of emerging data, a second booster dose of either the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna Covid-19 vaccine could help increase protection levels for these higher-risk individuals.”

California reparations to be limited to descendants of enslaved people, taskforce decides

Landmark group votes to base compensation plan on lineage rather than race after day of debate

By Guardian staff and agencies
California’s first-in-the-nation taskforce on reparations for African Americans has voted to direct state compensation to the descendants of enslaved and free Black people who were in the US in the 19th century.


The group said that a compensation and restitution plan based on lineage – as opposed to one based on race, which would have opened the possibility of reparations to a broader group – had the best chance of surviving a legal challenge. They also said that Black immigrants who had chosen to migrate to the US in the 20th and 21st centuries did not share the trauma of people who had been kidnapped and enslaved.
They also opened eligibility to free Black people who migrated to the country in the 19th century, given possible difficulties in documenting genealogy and the risk at the time of becoming enslaved.

To Read More