Mark Anthony Neal's Blog, page 170
September 14, 2021
Virginia Voters’ Choice: Forward with Voting Rights Champ for Governor or Backward With Team Trump by Ben Jealous

Virginia Voters’ Choice: Forward with Voting Rights Champ for Governor or Backward With Team Trump
by Ben Jealous | @BenJealous | special to NewBlackMan (in Exile)
Virginia’s voters will pick the state’s next governor in November. The choice couldn’t be clearer, and neither could the national implications of this race in a bellwether state. Not only is the Virginia election a curtain-raiser for the midterm elections of 2022, it’s also the biggest test so far of whether the Trumpified GOP can win major races.
The Democratic candidate, Terry McAuliffe, had a successful term as governor. The Republican candidate, Glenn Youngkin, is a super-wealthy businessman trying to buy his way into power. (Sound familiar?) On one issue after another, voters can contrast Youngkin’s unproven claims with McAuliffe’s proven record.
Take voting rights. During his 2014-2018 term, McAuliffe overcame Republican resistance and Jim Crow-era voting laws to restore voting rights to 173,000 Virginians.
What about Youngkin? He refused to acknowledge the legitimacy of President Joe Biden’s victory for months—until after he won the GOP nomination—and has helped promote false right-wing claims about voter fraud that are being used by Republican legislators to justify restrictive voting laws around the country. Just last month, Youngkin spoke at an “election integrity” rally organized by a Trump supporter who was outside the Capitol during the Jan. 6 insurrection. No wonder Trump has so enthusiastically endorsed Youngkin.
Youngkin promotes himself as if Virginia needs him as some kind of savior to pull the state out of the “ditch” he claimsit is in. The Washington Post’s editorial board said Youngkin’s claim is “flatly contradicted by a tsunami of evidence to the contrary.” That sounds like a polite way of saying Youngkin is lying. The state has a budget surplus, lower-than-average unemployment, and a AAA bond rating. This summer CNBC declared Virginia the top state in the country for business.
The real danger of the state dropping into a ditch comes from Youngkin himself. His desire to abolish the state’s income tax would slash the state’s ability to provide services to its residents.
When McAuliffe was governor, he was so successful at attracting economic development and generating new jobs that he was named “Public Official of the Year” by “Governing” magazine in 2017. The magazine honored McAuliffe “based on his success navigating an opposition legislature, creating new jobs, and persevering in restoring the civil rights of more than 168,000 Virginians.” McAuliffe credited his team for helping him “build a stronger, more inclusive Virginia.”
In his previous term as governor, McAuliffe also oversaw record spending on education and created the country’s first workforce training program to help people without a college education get access to jobs in high demand. He is pledging to build on that track record by raising teacher pay above the national average, expanding access to preschool, and getting all students online.
Meanwhile, Youngkin’s search for ways to fire up right-wing voters has led him down another divisive road paved by Trump. Youngkin has joined Trump, Fox News, and right-wing activists who are trying to stop schools from having honest conversations about racism in our history, culture, and institutions. They’re hoping to inflame conservative white voters to drive up turnout, and Youngkin has made it the centerpiece of his campaign.
His dishonest comments about Virginia schools show us that he will say or do anything to get into power, no matter how much damage he does along the way. lYoungkin fails another test that is of vital importance to Virginians’ health and economic future: dealing responsibly with the COVID-19 pandemic. Youngkin opposes vaccine mandates and doesn’t think schools should require students to wear masks. He said he would follow the lead of Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, whose irresponsible policies have encouraged an upsurge in hospitalizations and deaths. McAuliffe knows that you can’t rebuild the economy if the pandemic is allowed to ravage the workforce and disrupt our lives and jobs.
Virginia voters rejected Donald Trump twice and I believe they will reject Trump’s pick for governor. McAuliffe, whose successful record as governor reflects his commitment to a Virginia that works better for everyone, deserves Virginians’ votes, and the nation will be watching.
***
Ben Jealous serves as president of People For the American Way. 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.
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Millennials Are Killing Capitalism: Rinaldo Walcott On Black Freedom And The Abolition Of Property

'This episode of Millennials Are Killing Capitalism features Dr. Rinaldo Walcott, a Professor in the Women and Gender Studies Institute at the University of Toronto. Walcott is also the author of many books, including Black Like Who? Writing Black Canada, Queer Returns: Essays on Multiculturalism, Diaspora, and Black Studies, and the co-author of BlackLife: Post-BLM and the Struggle for Freedom. Walcott discusses his two most recent books, On Property: Policing, Prisons, and the Call for Abolition and The Long Emancipation: Moving Toward Black Freedom. In both works, and in this conversation Walcott affirms that what Black people have experienced globally is not yet Freedom, but is instead still within the confines of a process of emancipation defined by the legal system of European man and his descendants.'
Black & Highly Flavored: Black Smoke with Adrian Miller

'SoulPhoodies Tamara Celeste and Derek Kirk are joined by author Adrian Miller (@SoulFoodScholar) to discuss his recent book, Black Smoke, the definitive history of African-Americans' influence on barbecue culture.'
September 13, 2021
TheBlerdGurl Podcast with Karama Horne: Peter Ramsey was in the Game Long Before the Spiderverse

'The guest in this episode of TheBlerdGurl Podcast with Karama Horne is Academy-Award Winning director Peter Ramsey. Of course, everyone knows Peter Ramsey is one of the co-directors on Sony’s Spider-Man: Into the Spiderverse, which won the team an Oscar. This was a historic moment for Ramsey, who became the first African-American ever to be nominated for or win in the Animated feature category. But he’s actually been in the business a REALLY long time. One of his first gigs out of school was as the storyboard artist and second unit director for John Singleton’s Boyz ‘N the Hood.'
Creative Conversation: Jeff Daniels Explains the ‘Thrill of Working without a Net’

'In this episode of Creative Conversation with KC Ifeanyi, Jeff Daniels discusses his controlled free fall into creativity, his reprisal of Atticus Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird on Broadway, and his music career he doesn’t mind you not knowing about.'
How The 'Funhouse Mirror' Effect Of Zoom Impacts Our Perceived Self-Esteem

'Zoom dysmorphia, where people are fixated on perceived flaws they see in the image of themselves on scree,n isn’t a medical diagnosis but rather a term used according to Dr. Shadi Kourosh, to “describe certain conditions of life and work in the pandemic that could give rise or trigger aspects of body dysmorphic disorder or aspects of a dysmorphic view of our own appearance.” Kourosh and her dermatology colleagues have noticed a trend in the last year: People coming to them for concerns such as wrinkles around the eye and sagging in the lower face and neck. This can be related to people looking down at their phones more while on video, she says.' -- Here & Now
Ayana Elizabeth Johnson: Why The Strange and Wonderful Parrot Fish Is In Trouble

'Ayana Elizabeth Johnson is a marine biologist. She has founded or co-founded the following institutions and initiatives: Urban Ocean Lab, a think tank focused on coastal cities; Ocean Collectiv, a strategy consulting firm for conservation solutions; and The All We Can Save Project, a climate initiative. She is also the co-host of the podcast How to Save a Planet. Johnson is obsessed with one research subject — the parrot fish. She says there is urgent work to be done to save them and their home, the coral reefs.' -- TED Radio Hour
A Look at Police Violence Against Black Women and Queer People

'Amid all of the issues that exist in coverage and legal accountability when it comes to cases of police violence against Black people, separate hurdles remain when it comes to acknowledging the stories of Black women and queer people killed by the police. State violence against Black women, femmes, and queer folk is rarely at the center of mass mobilization and media attention. That’s despite the fact that Black women are overrepresented among the people shot and killed by the police. And also, the reality that transgender people are more than thee times as likely to experience police violence as cisgender people. The Takeaway's Melissa Harris-Perry speaks with Andrea Ritchie, a co-founder of Interrupting Criminalization, an initiative that aims to end the criminalization of women and LGBTQ people of color. She’s also the author of Invisible No More: Police Violence Against Black Women and Women of Color.'
The Attica Prison Uprising 50 Years Later

'WNYC's Race and Justice unit is looking back at the 1971 Attica Prison Uprising. Joseph Gedeon, reporter in WNYC's Race and Justice Unit, and Emily Lang, producer at WNYC, discuss their project and what's changed in New York's prison system five decades later.'
September 12, 2021
Little Women Remixed, But Not Reimagined

'When Bethany Morrow was asked to write a new take on the beloved classic, she agreed on one condition: The new March family would look nothing like the old. Morrow joins NPR Code Switch's Karen Grigsby Bates'
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