An excerpt from Time -
Search This Blog
Monday, August 19, 2024
Time Magazine's 2024 Kid of the Year
Facts About the US Black Population
An excerpt from Face2Face Africa -
8 facts about the U.S. Black population you should know
BY Kofi Oppong Kyekyeku
Facts about Black people in U.S. - Original photo credits: Pew Research Center and ABC News |
Population
The U.S. Black population in 2022 can be categorized into four distinct groups:
- The total U.S. Black population
- Single-race, non-Hispanic Black people
- Multiracial, non-Hispanic Black people
- Black Hispanic people
Daddies and Daughters
An excerpt from The Daily Beast -
Why Every Father Needs to Watch the Netflix Film ‘Daughters’
The new documentary is about a father-daughter dance at a prison. As one dad of two girls writes, it’s a must-see film that brings all of parenthood into perspective.
By Andrew Crump
Reams of data exist that highlight the range of effects a father’s absence can have on his daughters. They’re likely to struggle with trust issues. Their confidence might flag. They may wrestle with feelings of abandonment, low self-esteem, and rejection, or develop aggressive or otherwise antisocial behaviors, or risk-taking behaviors; they may become depressed, detached, or anxious. Fathers shape their daughters’ relational lives—the foundation and maintenance of meaningful relationships, with family, with friends, with romantic partners, with communities—and spur their creativity.
Angela Patton and Natalie Rae’s Daughters, the Festival Favorite and Audience Choice: U.S. Documentary Competition winner at this year’s Sundance Film Festival—now available to watch on Netflix—side steps statistical analysis and instead strives for emotional impact.
I have two daughters myself. For their privacy’s sake, I’ll refer to them by their nicknames: Brontosaurus, my eldest, and Elephant, my youngest. I love them more than anything I’ve loved in my forty years on this Earth.
On behalf of that, I intentionally avoided Daughters in my remote coverage of Sundance, knowing full well a movie with that title, focused on the subject of barriers forced between young girls and their incarcerated dads, would likely break me in two; the idea of being separated from my girls is the stuff of my nightmares, as unlikely as it is that we’ll ever be separated. (Sending them off to summer camp and, soon, back to school is hard enough.) I am not a statistic. Brownie and Elephant aren’t, either. All the same, my reality didn’t blunt Daughters’ effect on me.
This is not a film about the numbers: How many girls grow up fatherless in the U.S.; how many of those girls end up in bad partnerships; how many of them become teen mothers; how many are burdened by mental health problems; how many attempt suicide. Frankly, that wouldn’t be a film at all, had Patton and Rae chosen these details as their subject. It would be an academic paper instead, dry and sans any human sensation.
Sensation is what Daughters is all about, of course, a front row seat to an overwhelming reconnection between a cadre of girls and their fathers, each behind bars for reasons Patton and Rae refuse to detail. (Those reasons are neither our business nor relevant to the film’s thesis.). At the same time, it’s an elegant condemnation of America’s love affair with crime and punishment, exhibited through varied atrocities carried out within its prison system.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/obsessed/netflixs-daughters-the-movie-every-father-needs-to-watch
Sunday, August 11, 2024
August 13 is Left Handers Day!
Celebrate the lefties in your world!
Did you guess? I'm a lefty, too!
Who Decides Who's Black Enough?
An excerpt from the LA Times -
Opinion: Denigrating Drake, and Kamala Harris, as ‘Not Like Us’
By Michael Eric Dyson
Ironically, that cosmopolitan vision of Blackness is at the heart of the Lamar and Drake dustup. Their kerfuffle — playing out fiercely this spring in a series of releases — is a battle over cultural cachet, racial authenticity and group pride. And it exposes a provincialism that undercuts the global currents of hip-hop.
In his hit “Not Like Us,” Lamar accuses Drake of being a “colonizer” because Drake supposedly “run[s]” to Atlanta to partner with some of the paragons of its trap music to bolster his Blackness. Lamar’s argument echoes long-standing criticisms that Drake’s biracial Canadian roots render him suspect as a bona fide Black artist. Drake’s artistic experimentation with different accents and musical genres has prompted many to claim, as Vance did with Harris, that Drake is a phony.
Lamar’s beef with Drake is rooted in a parochial, claustrophobic vision of Blackness.
Drake grew up in Toronto the son of a Jewish Canadian mother; he spent summers in Memphis, Tenn., with his Black American musician father. His artistic tastes were deeply influenced by a wide swath of the Black diaspora — Afro-Caribbeans, Londoners, American Southerners, especially Memphians, and Torontonians. The multicultural makeup of Toronto, with its sizable Italian, Portuguese, Jamaican and Filipino immigrant populations, also fed his musical appetite.
Comparing Crowd Size
Meanwhile at @realdonaldtrump’s rally... https://t.co/uZ73w1de7D pic.twitter.com/lhCZvG4KxF
— Kamala HQ (@KamalaHQ) August 10, 2024
Saturday, August 10, 2024
An Obamacare Convert
My apologies. I couldn't figure out how to post this other than just linking the page. I promise. It's worth the watch. It is one minute long.
A Teacher's Profound Impact on Her Student
@ms.e_hustla Teacher's life is saved by the very student she never gave up on#fy #cupcut #cupcuteditvideo❤️✨ #foryou #fypã‚·゚viral #fyppppppppppppppppppppppp #wow #fypã‚· #fypツ♡❦࿐foryoupageã‚·༄🖤💕💙stay #fypツ♡❦࿐foryoupageã‚·༄🖤 #yppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppã‚· #CapCut #husbandwife #trending #beautifull #new #viral #friends #viral_video #women ♬ Emotional - Bang Nono
Friday, August 9, 2024
THE Arizona Turnout for VP Harris & Gov Walz
I've been to dozens of campaign rallies this cycle: Trump, Biden, Haley, DeSantis, etc. This Harris rally in Glendale, AZ, is — by far — the biggest crowd (and biggest venue) I've seen. pic.twitter.com/o8r0tz9nb3
— Samuel Benson (@sambbenson) August 9, 2024
Thursday, August 8, 2024
Monday, August 5, 2024
Do you Know Your Salts?
An excerpt from ChowHound -
Table Salt Vs Sea Salt Vs Kosher Salt: When To Use Each Type In Your Kitchen
BY MATTHEW LEE
Westend61/Getty Images |
I'm a Republican, not a fool."
An excerpt from WeGotThisCovered -
‘I’m a Republican but not a fool’: If you think all GOPs are voting for Donald Trump, you might want to take a look at this
Who's gonna tell him?
By Nahila Bonfiglio
Meanwhile in Philly pic.twitter.com/4AxBd9sxzj
— Alex Cole (@acnewsitics) August 3, 2024
Mr. Harris
An excerpt from WeGotThisCovered -
Kamala Harris’ father Donald J. Harris’ ethnicity, confirmed
What is Kamala Harris' father's cultural background?
By Kevin Stewart
This is Kamala Harris, father Donald Harris, distinguished emeritus, professor of economics from Stanford University. Stanford called him their first Black tenured economics, professor.
— Mr. Reynolds (@MrReynolds52) August 2, 2024
pic.twitter.com/l1K2AztmAe
Donald J. Harris is an award-winning economist and professor emeritus at Stanford University and the father of Democratic Party Presidential candidate Kamala Harris, and her lawyer sister, Maya Harris.
In 1960, he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of London, and in 1966, he achieved a PhD from the University of California, Berkeley.
He is the author of several books and articles, including the 1978 monograph Capital Accumulation and Income Distribution and the 1993 article “Economic Growth and Equity: Complements or Opposites?” in The Review of Black Political Economy.
https://wegotthiscovered.com/politics/donald-j-harris-ethnicity-confirmed/