What's Going On

WHAT’S GOING ON

NEW YORK, NEW YORK 

At press time, it was speculated that another government shutdown would be averted.

New York is back in crazy mode. One group is taking credit for scuttling the Amazon campus and 25,000 jobs after the Washington Post, Jeff Bezos’ newspaper, indicated that Amazon was reconsidering its New York campus in Queens. Was that a trial balloon or what? A new group of supporters has emerged apropos of the proposed Amazon/NY campus. Subject group looked like and sounded like some of the residents of the Queensbridge Houses, a 26-building complex, part of the NYC Housing Authority (NYCHA). They say that Amazon naysayers do not live in the affected neighborhood. They plan counter-demonstrations showing support. P.S.–Regional NJ/NY HUD Director Lynne Patton moved into a Bronx NYCHA building on 2/11.  

Jeff Bezos, Amazon owner and the world’s richest man, has a well-oiled business machine which has been attentive to making campaign donations to most of the elected NY congressmen and City Council members who represent the Amazon campus area. According to a 2/12 Siena poll, most NYC residents support an Amazon presence. What New Yorkers did not support was the absence of transparency by Governor Cuomo and Mayor de Blasio in negotiating the billion-dollar tax break for Apple. State and city legislators should have been consulted. Mr. Bezos has other distractions like a fight with the National Enquirer, which has published damaging pictures of him and his girlfriend, then advised him in print to meet with certain demands lest it publish more of Bezos pictures, some of them in the altogether.

NYC is also getting ready for the February 26 Public Advocate Special Primary. With Tish James gone, there is no Black elected official in NYC government. Blacks enjoy leadership roles in Albany but not downstate. City Councilman Jumaane Williams, Assemblyman Michael Blake and Attorney Dawn Smalls are African-American contenders for Public Advocate.

Advertisement

Two weeks ago, Councilman Bill Perkins was the center of a NYC media storm about erratic behavior. This week, Councilman Ruben Diaz, Sr., 75, father of Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz and an ordained minister, is the subject of a media circus. On a Spanish language radio show, Councilman Ruben Diaz, Sr. said, “The NYC Council is run by the homosexual community. The outrage was fast and furious from NYC Council Speaker Cory Johnson, who is gay, and the LGBTQ community, who have been demanding an apology. One group even discussed impeachment. Councilman Diaz said that the only people empowered to impeach him are the Bronx residents of his council district. NYC is not a good city for homophobes, especially if one’s son is a 2021 mayoral hopeful.

THE USA

Justin Fairfax

Virginia’s three top Democrats are embroiled in scandal. Governor Ralph Northam liked to moonwalk in blackface when he was in college in the 80s. Lieutenant Governor African-American Justin Fairfax, an attorney, has been accused by two women of sexual assault, which he denied. Attorney General Mark Herring admitted to wearing a blackface in college. Initially, Virginians wanted the governor to step down. Hopes ran high for a Fairfax succession for a nanosecond until stories broke about his alleged sexual behavior. Governor Northam says that he is not resigning, nor is the Attorney General. Virginia legislators are clamoring for a Justin Fairfax resignation while the cloud hangs over him. If SCOTUS nominee Brett Kavanaugh had his day in court, why can’t Justin Fairfax? Mr. Fairfax denies these sex allegations. Next week will include a follow-up. I need time to research Governor Northam’s record vis-à-vis Black Virginia before passing judgment on his allegedly egregious college behavior.  

MEDIA NOTES

Elizabeth Alexander

Read the Feb. 18/Feb. 25 double issue of Time magazine’s Special Issue edited by Ava DuVernay and the cover story, “THE ART OF OPTIMISM: 34 People Change How We See Ourselves,” which is donned by grande dame Cecily Tyson, 94, awash in red. Bill Gates made the “List of Optimists” and so did about four generations of 17 Black people, which include Djeneba Aduayom, Ethiopian photographer; Elizabeth Alexander, poet, Mellon Foundation; Clay Benskin; painters Louis Delsart and Frank Bowling; Joy Buolamwini, computer scientist, founder of the Algorithmic Justice League; Laverne Cox, transgender actress/producer/activist;   Rhea Combs, curator, National Museum of African-American History and Culture; Jason Moran and Q-Tip; Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts; Chris Jackson, publisher, One World; Lena Waith, screenwriter/producer; Hank Willis Thomas, conceptual visual artist; Darren Walker, Ford Foundation; and Kevin Young, Schomburg. Article is a great idea. So many of these people dominate media pages and their works as bona fide optimists.    

 ARTS/CULTURE/HISTORY

The year 2019 is the 400th Anniversary of the Atlantic Slave Trade!

Advertisement

The Brooklyn Historical Society, located at 128 Pierrepont Street in Brooklyn, serving a rich menu of cultural conversations which highlight Black American history through 2/28, including “Black-Owned Businesses: A History of Enterprise and Community,” a book talk consisting of “Separate: The Story of Plessey vs. Ferguson” on 2/19, “Beauty, Media, Money and More: A Conversation with Tressie McMillian Cotton” on 2/25, “The Halls of Hope: Voices from Obama’s West Wing” on 2/28. [Visit brooklynhistory.org]

The New York Historical Society, in conjunction with its exhibition, “Black Citizenship in the Age of Jim Crow,” presents a talk with former Schomburg Director Dr. Khalil Gibran Muhammad, Professor of History, Race and Public Policy at Harvard’s Kennedy School and Suzanne Young Murray, Professor at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, on February 26, 6:30 pm. On March 9, from 9:30-11 am, the NYHS hosts a Saturday Breakfast Talk with Doug Jones, US Senator from Alabama, author of “The Birmingham Church Bombing That Changed the Course of Civil Rights,” moderated by Eddie S. Glaude, Jr., Princeton Professor and Chair of the Department of African-American Studies.

FINE ART: The new Dorsey Gallery Show, “The Reflections of Weusi II,” an exhibit and celebration of works by the Weusi Collective which has been at the vanguard of the NYC Black Arts Movement since 1965.   The exhibit runs through February 24 from 3-8 pm by appointment.   Dorsey is located at 553 Rogers Avenue, Brooklyn. [E-mail: lpdbrooklynarts@gmail.com]

                                                FEBRUARY NOTES

         REMINDERS: The Harlem Fine Arts Show opens on Thursday, February 14 at The Riverside Church, Harlem… ………. The NY Black and Puerto Rican Legislative Caucus Weekend convenes February 15-17 in Albany. [Call 518.455.5347 ……]

February 19:   Unlimited Contact’s Bob Tate and Dedra Tate host their monthly zodiac social celebrating Aquarian birthday natives at El San Juan Restaurant, located at 1429 Fifth Avenue at 117th Street, Harlem, on February 19 at 5-11 pm, which includes the Bob Tate Dinner Special at $14.95. For reservations, call 917.217.2222.

Advertisement

 

 

 

Exit mobile version