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"For the first time in decades, public health data shows a sudden and hopeful drop in drug overdose deaths across the U.S.
"This is exciting," said Dr. Nora Volkow, head of the National Institute On Drug Abuse [NIDA], the federal laboratory charged with studying addiction. "This looks real. This looks very, very real."
National surveys compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention already show an unprecedented decline in drug deaths of roughly 10.6 percent. That's a huge reversal from recent years when fatal overdoses regularly increased by double-digit percentages.
Some researchers believe the data will show an even larger decline in drug deaths when federal surveys are updated to reflect improvements being seen at the state level, especially in the eastern U.S.
"In the states that have the most rapid data collection systems, weâre seeing declines of twenty percent, thirty percent," said Dr. Nabarun Dasgupta, an expert on street drugs at the University of North Carolina.
According to Dasgupta's analysis, which has sparked discussion among addiction and drug policy experts, the drop in state-level mortality numbers corresponds with similar steep declines in emergency room visits linked to overdoses.
Dasgupta was one of the first researchers to detect the trend. He believes the national decline in street drug deaths is now at least 15 percent and could mean as many as 20,000 fewer fatalities per year.
"Today, I have so much hope"
After years of wrenching drug deaths that seemed all but unstoppable, some researchers, front-line addiction workers, members of law enforcement, and people using street drugs voiced caution about the apparent trend.
Roughly 100,000 deaths are still occurring per year. Street drug cocktails including fentanyl, methamphetamines, xylazine and other synthetic chemicals are more poisonous than ever.
"I think we have to be careful when we get optimistic and see a slight drop in overdose deaths," said Dan Salter, who heads a federal drug interdiction program in the Atlanta-Carolinas region. "The last thing we want to do is spike the ball."
But most public health experts and some people living with addiction told NPR they believe catastrophic increases in drug deaths, which began in 2019, have ended, at least for now. Many said a widespread, meaningful shift appears underway.
"Some of us have learned to deal with the overdoses a lot better," said Kevin Donaldson, who uses fentanyl and xylazine on the street in Burlington, Vermont.
According to Donaldson, many people using fentanyl now carry naloxone, a medication that reverses most opioid overdoses. He said his friends also use street drugs with others nearby, ready to offer aid and support when overdoses occur.
He believes these changes - a response to the increasingly toxic street drug supply - mean more people like himself are surviving.
"For a while we were hearing about [drug deaths] every other day. When was the last one we heard about? Maybe two weeks ago? That's pretty few and far between," he said.
His experience is reflected in data from the Vermont Department of Health, which shows a 22 percent decline in drug deaths in 2024.
"The trends are definitely positive," said Dr. Keith Humphreys, a nationally respected drug policy researcher at Stanford University. "This is going to be the best year we've had since all of this started."
"A year ago when overdose deaths continued to rise, I was really struggling with hope," said Brad Finegood, who directs the overdose crisis response in Seattle.
Deaths in King County, Washington, linked to all drugs have dropped by 15 percent in the first half of 2024. Fatal overdoses caused by street fentanyl have dropped by 20 percent.
"Today, I have so much hope," Finegood said.
-via NPR, September 18, 2024. Article continues below with an exploration of the whys (mostly unknown) and some absolutely fucking incredible statistics.
Why the sudden and hopeful shift? Most experts say it's a mystery
While many people offered theories about why the drop in deaths is happening at unprecedented speed, most experts agreed that the data doesn't yet provide clear answers.
Some pointed to rapid improvements in the availability and affordability of medical treatments for fentanyl addiction. "Expansion of naloxone and medications for opioid use disorder â these strategies worked," said Dr. Volkow at NIDA.
"We've almost tripled the amount of naloxone out in the community," said Finegood. He noted that one survey in the Seattle area found 85 percent of high-risk drug users now carry the overdose-reversal medication.
Dr. Rahul Gupta, the White House drug czar, said the drop in drug deaths shows a path forward.
"This is the largest decrease on record and the fifth consecutive month of recorded decreases," he said.
Gupta called for more funding for addiction treatment and healthcare services, especially in Black and Native American communities where overdose deaths remain catastrophically high.
"There is no way we're going to beat this epidemic by not focusing on communities that are often marginalized, underserved and communities of color," Gupta said.
"Overdose deaths in Ohio are down 31 percent"
Indeed, in many states in the eastern and central U.S. where improvements are largest, the sudden drop in drug deaths stunned some observers who lived through the darkest days of the fentanyl overdose crisis.
"This year overdose deaths [in Ohio] are down 31 percent," said Dennis Couchon, a harm reduction activist. "The deaths were just plummeting. The data has never moved like this."
"While the mortality data for 2024 is incomplete and subject to change, Ohio is now in the ninth consecutive month of a historic and unexpected drop in overdose deaths," said the organization Harm Reduction Ohio in a statement.
Missouri is seeing a similar trend that appears to be accelerating. After dropping by 10 percent last year, preliminary data shows drug deaths in the state have now fallen roughly 34 percent in the second quarter of 2024.
"It absolutely seems things are going in the right direction, and it's something we should feel pleased about," said Dr. Rachel Winograd, director of addiction science at the University of Missouri St. Louis, who also noted that drug deaths remain too high.
"It feels wonderful and great," said Dr. Mark Levine, head of the Vermont Health Department. "We need encouraging data like this and it will help sustain all of us who are actively involved in trying to have an impact here."
Levine, too, said there's still "plenty of work left to do."" ...
Dasgupta, the researcher at the University of North Carolina, agreed more needs to be done to help people in addiction recover when they're ready.
But he said keeping more people alive is a crucial first step that seemed impossible only a year ago.
"A fifteen or twenty percent [drop in deaths] is a really big number, an enormous impact," he said, calling for more research to determine how to keep the trend going.
"If interventions are what's driving this decline, then let's double down on those interventions."
-article via NPR, September 18, 2024
#some of these statistics are so good I could cry#finally we might have turned the corner#finally we might be able to have the end of this epidemic in sight#cw drugs#cw addiction#substance use#opioid use#naloxone#narcan#addiction#public health#opioid epidemic#united states#north america#fentanyl#harm reduction#good news#hope#opiods#opiod crisis#overdose#tw overdose#drug overdose
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Morehouse College is a private historically Black men's liberal arts college in Atlanta, Georgia. Anchored by its main campus of 61 acres (25 ha) near downtown Atlanta, the college has a variety of residential dorms and academic buildings east of Ashview Heights. Along with Spelman College, Clark Atlanta University, and the Morehouse School of Medicine, the college is a member of the Atlanta University Center consortium. Founded by William Jefferson White in 1867 in response to the liberation of enslaved African-Americans following the American Civil War, Morehouse adopted a seminary university model and stressed religious instruction in the Baptist tradition. Throughout the late 1800s and early 1900s, the college experienced rapid, albeit financially unstable, institutional growth by establishing a liberal arts curriculum. The three-decade tenure of Benjamin Mays during the mid-20th century led to strengthened finances, an enrollment boom, and increased academic competitiveness. The college has played a key role in the development of the civil rights movement and racial equality in the United States.
#morehouse college#black history#black literature#black tumblr#black excellence#black community#civil rights#black history is american history#american history#history#world history
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vimeo
âBecause the US government was not acting on mass shootings, we directly attacked a trait Americans are most known for: their pride in their country. Change the Ref created the Shamecards, a postcard collection designed to demand gun law reform from Congress. Subverting the traditional greeting cards that depict each cityâs landmarks, ours show what cities are becoming known for.â
shamecards.org
There is 54 cards total representing:
Annapolis â Maryland: Capital Gazette Shooting
Atlanta â Georgia: Day Trading Firm Shootings
Benton â Kentucky: Marshall County High School Shooting
Bethel â Alaska: Regional High School Shooting
Binghamton â New York: Binghamton Shooting
Blacksburg â Virginia: Virginia Tech Massacre
Camden â New Jersey: Walk of Death Massacre
Charleston â South Carolina: Charleston Church Shooting
Charlotte â North Carolina: 2019 University Shooting
Cheyenne â Wyoming: Senior Home Shooting
Chicago â Illinois: Medical Center Shooting
Clovis â New Mexico: Clovis Library Shooting
Columbine â Colorado: Columbine
Dayton â Ohio: Dayton Shooting
Edmond â Oklahoma: Post Office Shooting
El Paso â Texas: El Paso Shooting
Ennis â Montana: Madison County Shooting
Essex Junction â Vermont: Essex Elementary School Shooting
Geneva â Alabama: Geneva County Massacre.
Grand Forks â North Dakota: Grand Forks Shooting
Hesston â Kansas: Hesston Shooting
Honolulu â Hawaii: First Hawaiian Mass Shooting
Huntington â West Virginia: New Year's Eve Shooting
Indianapolis â Indiana: Hamilton Avenue Murders
Iowa City â Iowa: University Shooting
Jonesboro â Arkansas: Middle School Massacre
Kalamazoo â Michigan: Kalamazoo Shooting
Lafayette â Louisana: Lafayette Shooting
Las Vegas â Nevada: Las Vegas Strip Shooting
Madison â Maine: Madison Rampage
Meridian â Mississippi: Meridian Company Shooting
Moscow â Idaho: Moscow Rampage
Nashville â Tennessee: Nashville Waffle House shooting
Newtown â Connecticut: Sandy Hook Elementary School Shooting
Omaha â Nebraska: Westroads Mall shooting
Orlando â Florida: Pulse Nightclub Shooting
Parkland â Florida: Parkland School Shooting
Pelham â New Hampshire: Wedding Shooting
Pittsburgh â Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh Synagogue Shooting
Prices Corner â Delaware: Delaware Shooting
Red Lake â Minnesota: Indian Reservation Shooting
Roseburg â Oregon: Umpqua Community Collage Shooting
Salt Lake City â Utah: Salt Lake City Mall Shooting
San Diego â California: San Ysidro Massacre
Santa Fe â Texas: Santa Fe School Shooting
Schofield â Wisconsin: Marathon County Shooting
Seattle â Washington: Capitol Hill Massacre
Sisseton â South Dakota: Sisseton Massacre
St. Louis â Missouri: Power Plant Shooting
Sutherland Springs â Texas: Sutherland Springs Church Shooting
Tucson â Arizona: Tocson Shooting
Wakefield â Massachusetts: Tech Company Massacre
Washington â D.C.: Navy Yard Shooting
Westerly â Rhode Island: Assisted-Living Complex Rampage
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Gladys West
Overcoming racial and gender barriers, she charted a course that led her to become a âhidden figureâ behind the ubiquitous Global Positioning System (GPS). Westâs work has had a profound impact on how we navigate the world today. Her story illuminates often-overlooked contributions of diverse voices in scientific progress. So, how's her work connected to the present?
Gladys West was born in 1930 in rural Sutherland, Virginia. Her family was an Black farming family and she spent much of her childhood working on the farm, surrounded by sharecroppers. Despite the challenges, she excelled in school and was determined to get an education. West's childhood on a farm instilled in her a deep understanding of precision and calculation. Despite limited resources and societal constraints, she excelled in academics, graduating with a mathematics degree from Virginia State University and went on to earn two master's degrees and a PhD. Her talent propelled her to the Naval Surface Warfare Center, where she embarked on a remarkable 42-year career. It was also there she met her husband, Ira, married in 1957, and had 3 children. She was the 2nd Black woman ever hired, and 1 of 4 Black employees, her husband included.
There, with the backdrop of Cold War tensions and burgeoning space exploration, West tackled complex mathematical problems related to satellite geodesy. This specialized field, equivalent to deciphering Earth's celestial fingerprint, held the key to precisely pinpointing locations in space. West's meticulous calculations, particularly for the groundbreaking Seasat and GEOSAT satellites, became the invisible scaffolding upon which the modern GPS system was built.
For decades, her contributions remained largely unacknowledged due to her race and gender. Yet, the accuracy and efficiency of her work spoke volumes. The precise models she developed for Earth's gravitational field and its subtle variations due to tides and other forces became the bedrock of GPS calculations. Today, whether navigating city streets or pinpointing remote wilderness locations, we unknowingly benefit from West's invisible hand.
Recognition finally arrived later in life. In 2018, the Air Force Space and Missile Pioneers Hall of Fame inducted West, acknowledging her transformative impact. That same year, the BBC included West among its "100 Women," recognizing her groundbreaking contributions. Just three years later, the Royal Academy of Engineering in the UK bestowed upon her their highest individual honor, the Prince Philip Medal, cementing her place as a pioneer in her field. But her legacy extends far beyond accolades. Gladys West stands as a beacon of inspiration, not just for aspiring mathematicians, but for anyone facing systemic barriers. Her story reminds us that the path to groundbreaking discoveries is often paved by those who defy expectations and chart their own unique course.
youtube
Photo Source: Wikimedia Source: Wikipedia Source: BBC Source: Britannica Source:Â Atlanta Black Star
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"
The negligible acts of property damage were not, of course, what was being policed. Nor was the holding of campus space; students have done this before in recent decades without their university administrators inviting the force of militarized police.
Instead, it was the protestersâ message that was being handcuffed â the condemnation of Israel and the calls for a free Palestine â and young peoplesâ commitment to it.
I have been reporting on political dissent and violent policing for 15 years, particularly in New York City. Compared to Tuesday night, I have never witnessed, at the scene of a protest, the use of police power so disproportionate to the type of demonstration taking place.
Make no mistake: This is an authoritarian escalation."
....
The âOutside Agitatorâ Myth
The crackdown on campuses offered a grim continuity: Police and other officials churned out all the same old excuses for quashing resistance. Most notably, their rhetoric relied on the predictable canard of the âoutside agitator.â
New York Mayor Eric Adams trotted it out as grounds for sending in an army of baton-wielding cops against the cityâs students. And Deputy Police Commissioner Tarik Sheppard went even further on MSNBC Wednesday morning, brandishing an unremarkable chain lock â the sort of which Iâve seen on bikes everywhere â as proof that âprofessionals,â not students themselves, had carried out the takeover of the Columbia building.
The bike-lock business quickly came in for rightly deserved mockery, but the âoutside agitatorâ myth is no joking matter.
In this current moment, the âoutside agitatorsâ conjured are both the perennial anarchist bogeymen or Islamist terror groups sending funds to keep student encampments flush with the cheapest tents available online.
The âoutside agitatorâ trope has a long, racist legacy, including use by the Ku Klux Klan. In the 1930s, the Klan issued flyers in Alabama claiming that âpaid organizers for the communists are only tryingâ to get Black people âin trouble.â The allegation does double rhetorical harm by denying the agency and commitment of organizers themselves and suggesting that âoutsideâ support from beyond a given locale or institution is somehow a bad thing.
More recently, the canard has been hauled out in defense of movement repression in Atlanta, against Stop Cop City protesters who had made a national call for backup. And it was a common refrain for politicians nationwide during the 2020 uprising, as well as discourse around the earlier Black Lives Matter protests in Ferguson after police killed Mike Brown.
Blaming outside agitators or interests always was a propaganda ploy and remains so now. The idea that Palestinian liberation struggle is a mere proxy for Iranian interests repeats the delegitimizing logic of the past.
In fact, the Gaza solidarity encampments on campuses are student-organized and led, with Palestinian students at front and center, and a disproportionately large presence of Jewish students too. It is students, over 1,000 of them, who have faced arrest.
#free palestine#american imperialism#police state#us politics#student activism#student protests#palestine#isreal#gaza#genocide#apartheid#colonization#settler colonialism#settler violence#authoritarianism
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Did not have the U.S. government holding hearings on previously classified information and lying making confirmations under oath that they are in possession of alien bodies and ufos in order to distract from the fact that covid-19 is still the leading cause of death in children, the cost of living is astronomical, cop city is well underway despite Atlanta residents overwhelmingly crying out against it, we are experiencing the hottest & deadliest temperatures on record, the state of Florida trying to rewrite history to say that slavery was just a mutually beneficial unpaid internship, trans lives and rights are under attack, anti drag laws, FLINT MICHIGAN STILL DOES NOT HAVE CLEAN DRINKING WATER, anti-discrimination laws being reversed, Supreme Court ruling against affirmative action, Roe v. Wade undone, universal free school lunches are on the ballot, ongoing mass shootings, climate change, big pharma killing off people by withholding live saving drugs at ungodly market prices, the erasure of separation of church and state, AI surveillance being implemented to detect fare evasion for increasingly costly public transport services, the rise of fascim, proud boys showing up with military grade weapons at libraries and day care centers, the permitted attempted coup of the capital, labor union strikes happening all over the country, people dying of heat in Texas because evil landlords want to cut off cooling over an unpaid $51 utility bill, train derailments causing toxic waste spills, corruption within the highest court in the land, homelessness rates the highest its ever been, migrants and asylum seekers being kicked out of temporary housing, the cost of food, book bans, Miranda Rights no longer being stated, mayors deciding to no longer publicly disclose how many people are dying pre-trial in detention facilities, federal minimum wage still $7.25, Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk, oil pipeline constructions on native lands, something like 30-50% of the nation's drinking water contaminated with forever chemicals, the rich remaining untaxed, biden going back on his campaign promises to forgive all student debt, still no free universal healthcare, ICE deportations increasing under biden admin, the u.s. yet maintaining colonies, teens and women getting jail time for miscarriages and abortions, 100 companies globally responsible for 70 or 80-something percent of all CO2 emissions, we are living in a police state, diseases resurfacing after years with no cases due to rising temps, death penalty, public services being defunded to increase military and police spending budgets, and abusers suing victims for defamation cases in court so that they legally cannot talk about it, and setting a dangerous precedent in the process in my 2023 bingo card but here we god damn are.
#2023 is a goddamn JOKE#aliens#us government#us govt#aliens and ufos#2023 bingo#land temp in spain was 140 degrees 2 days ago. owners r gonna have to start buying shoes for their pups out of obligation bc paws on fire.#i hate it here so bad#like can the aliens fix racism?
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Bell Building is being turned into a new GSU Student Success Center
Darin Givens | March 21, 2024
Exterior work is well underway on an adaptive-reuse project that will convert the Bell Building into a new Student Success Center for GSU! This is exciting to see. You can find information on the successful effort to preserve this structure at the https://savethebell.org site.
This has been a nice victory for historic preservation and for the urbanism of Downtown Atlanta!
In 2015, Georgia State University announced it was going to raze historic Bell Building and replace it with surface parking lots. This struck me and other preservation-minded advocates as a horrible thing that needed to be fought -- especially since the demolition was going to be funded with a donation from the Woodruff Foundation, which also funds preservation work.
We went to work by creating the Save the Bell website & social media channels, by talking to media outlets, reaching out to GSU administration and the Board of Regents, and talking to local city leaders. We were even involved in co-writing a City Council resolution to establish this as a landmark structure, which would have protected it from demolition.
Luckily it worked! And within a year or two, GSU backed away from the demolition plan.
Then in 2021 the good news came: GSU would use a different Woodruff grant to help preserve the Bell and reuse it as a new student success building.
For some background on the history of the Bell, check out this page on the Save the Bell website. It's actually two buildings fused together, both built as a telephone exchange by the Southern Bell company in two stages, in 1907 and 1922.
I'm very grateful to have been part of this effort to prevent the demolition of a structure that was clearly a viable candidate for adaptive reuse. It's a shame that GSU leadership ever wanted to raze it, but I congratulate them on doing the right thing in the end.
And huge kudos to all the local preservation advocates who spoke up in 2015-16 about the need to save the Bell, and to all the local journalists who covered our cause. This will now stand as a reminder of a great group effort, and of the fact that minds can be changed when it comes to the way we treat our urban fabric.
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fic: Hunting Grounds
River/V, F/M, the slowest burn you'll ever know, rated E for graphic sexual content
After several weeks of toil, I have finally finished and uploaded chapter 10 of my River/V longfic, so I wanted to share it here as well because LOOK AT THIS BEAUTIFUL BANNER.
đ Read it on AO3 đ
Excerpt below the cut
Vâs game was all about becoming someone she wasnât for a night. When she was playing, or hunting as she and Johnny had come to refer to it, she was the empress of the whole world. She hadnât crawled up on the streets of Heywood like a stray dog, always searching for scraps, be it food, eddies, or shelter. She hadnât struggled her way to adulthood, always uncertain about what her future held, if her future even existed at all. She hadnât thoroughly lost herself in Atlanta just to come back to Night City, the inevitable center of her universe, with her tail between her legs. She hadnât turned to mercenary work as the only available option and she hadnât befriended Jackie and she hadnât followed him loyally into a death trap and she hadnât watched him slip away in the backseat. She hadnât. No. When V was hunting, she was the empress of the whole world and nothing bad had ever happened to her. Her head was high and her stride confident. She was a shimmering, glistening pearl in a world of neon and cheap plastic.
Credit to @lily-alphonse for being an absolute Real One and taking it upon herself to create this stunning banner for my fic. I can't stop looking at it. It's just so beautiful.
#cyberpunk 2077#writing#fic writing#fanfiction#ao3 writer#ao3 fanfic#river ward#oc#river ward x v#ao3#my writing#this fic is the love of my life#smut
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Walter Franklin Anderson
The grandson of formerly enslaved people, Walter Franklin Anderson, classical pianist, organist, composer, jazz musician, community activist, and academician, was born on May 12, 1915, in segregated Zanesville, Ohio. Walter was the sixth of nine children of humble beginnings.
Information regarding his parents is not available. Anderson, a child prodigy, began piano studies at age seven, and by 12, he was playing piano and organ professionally while still in elementary school. He was the only Black student to graduate from William D. Lash High School in Zanesville in 1932. Although a talented musician, Anderson was not a member of any of the schoolâs music ensembles, including the Glee Club or orchestra. Afterward, he enrolled in the Oberlin Conservatory of Music in Oberlin, Ohio, 100 miles north of his hometown, and received a Bachelor of Music in piano and organ in 1936. Anderson continued his studies at Berkshire (Tanglewood, the summer home of the Boston Symphony Orchestra) and the Cleveland Institute of Music in Cleveland, Ohio.
From 1939 to 1942, Anderson taught Applied Piano, Voice Pedagogy, and music theory at the Kentucky State College for Negroes (now Kentucky State University) in Frankfort. In 1943, Anderson married Dorothy Eleanor Ross (Cheeks) from Atlanta, Georgia. They parented two children, Sandra Elaine Anderson Mastin and David Ross Anderson, before the marriage ended in a divorce in 1945.
In 1946, Anderson was appointed the head of the music department at Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio, thus becoming the first African American named to chair a department outside of the nationâs historically black colleges. Two years later, Anderson was a Rosenwald Fellow in composition from 1948 to 1949, where his variations on the Negro Spiritual, âLord, Lord, Lord,â was performed by the Cleveland Orchestra. Moreover, John Sebastian, the conductor of the Orchestra, commissioned him to write âConcerto for Harmonica and Orchestraâ for a performance with the same orchestra. In 1950, Andersonâs composition, âD-Day Prayer Cantata,â for the sixth anniversary of the World War II invasion, was performed on a national CBS telecast. In 1952, Anderson received the equivalent of a doctoral degree as a fellow of the American Guild of Organists. He left his administrative post at Antioch College in 1965.
In 1969, Anderson was named director of music programs at the National Endowment for the Arts, where he created model funding guidelines and pioneered the concept of the challenge grant. In addition, he spearheaded numerous projects and developed ideas at the then-new agency for supporting music creation and performance, specifically for orchestras, operas, jazz, and choral ensembles and conservatories.
Anderson was the recipient of four honorary doctorates in music over his professional career, including one from Berea College in Berea, Kentucky, in 1970. He retired from NEA in 1983. During this period, he became a presidential fellow at the Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies and a recipient of the Cleveland Arts Prize for Distinguished Service to the Arts. In 1993, the American Symphony Orchestra League recognized Anderson as one of 50 people whose talents and efforts significantly touched the lives of numerous musicians and orchestras. He was also a member of the Advisory Council to the Institute of the Black World at the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Center.
https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/people-african-american-history/walter-franklin-anderson-1915-2003/
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George Chidi at The Guardian:
Atlanta is, from time to time, the center of the political universe. It is also home to all things evil and villainous, a festering cesspool of lurid crime, a âshooting galleryâ in the words of Donald Trump, spoken in the vile confines of a brand new college basketball arena amid the unspeakable horrors of a rapidly gentrifying neighborhood with a microbrewery. Conservatives stoking fear of big cities would be a joke, if not for the damage it does. In May, the FBI arrested Mark Adams Prieto, a 58-year-old gun show dealer from Prescott, Arizona, on firearms trafficking charges. Prieto had been on the way to Atlanta at the time, according to court documents, because he planned to kill as many Black people as he could at a Bad Bunny concert while planting Confederate flags and shouting white power slogans, to provoke a race war ahead of the 2024 election.
âThe reason I say Atlanta,â Prieto allegedly told an informant working with the FBI, âWhy, why is Georgia such a fucked-up state now? When I was a kid that was one of the most conservative states in the country. Why is it not now? Because as the crime got worse in LA, St Louis and all these other cities, all the n****** moved out of those [places] and moved to Atlanta.â Prieto is a product of decades of Republican fearmongering, not just about Atlanta, but about big cities across the country. This is the message that Tucker Carlson and other conservative pundits have been pushing for years about San Francisco, New York and Detroit â itâs exactly the same way conservatives amped up their rhetorical combat on Chicago in the wake of Barack Obamaâs ascension to the White House 16 years ago. Itâs not because of crime. Cities in every country have long had more crime than their suburban counterparts, simply because itâs easier to commit a crime in a city, and it has largely trended downward. Itâs because Democrats â often Black Democrats â control most big city governments, and they help national politicians win. Joe Biden won 85% of San Franciscoâs votes in 2020. He also won 83% of Chicago, 77% of Los Angeles and 76% of New York City.
As a result, conservative state governments are cauterizing upstart municipalities, burning any pretense of respect for small-D democracy at the local level in the process. They fear those blue dots will bleed enough Black political power into red states to turn them purple and cost them the White House, not just in 2024, but permanently. Race is at the center of the fear. âAny mayor, county judge that was dumb-ass enough to come meet with me, I told them with great clarity, my goal is for this to be the worst session in the history of the legislature for cities and counties.â Thatâs former Texas House speaker Dennis Bonnen, in a conversation recorded with another legislator leaked to the Texas Tribune in 2019. In response to Austin legislation requiring water breaks for construction workers in the punishing Texas heat, the Republican-controlled legislature in 2023 passed what progressives call the âDeath Starâ bill. The law in effect ends the practice of home rule in Texas governments â a legal principle enshrined in the Texas constitution and that of many states â giving cities broad autonomy to create local laws, as long as those laws do not conflict with state or federal law.
House Bill 2127 takes that power away from cities in a swath of policy areas, from managing climate change to labor law. The law is in legal limbo today. But the damage is already being done to municipal leaders, who are frozen in place waiting for the case to be resolved. This story is playing out across the country, with red state governments seeing big blue cities as launching places for progressive ideas. In the wake of the deadly police beating of Tyre Nichols in Memphis, the city government created a police review board. Tennesseeâs conservative legislature promptly passed a law banning such boards. Nashvilleâs response to the Covenant school shooting led to protesters in and outside the state capitol. The legislature responded with an attempt to cut Nashvilleâs elected metro council in half and threatened takeovers of the cityâs sports and airport authority boards. Florida has blocked its cities from passing LGBTQ+ nondiscrimination ordinances, from regulating pit bulls, from making socially conscious investments, and from passing local zoning laws around âmissing middleâ housing and building construction. Floridaâs famous âdonât say gayâ bill mandates local school boards to provide politically vetted instructional materials.
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Why would Trump trash a city like Milwaukee â or Atlanta, for that matter â in a swing state in an election year? Because those cities cost him those states in 2020. On the podium on a fateful 6 January 2021, speaking to a group of supporters who would eventually become a riot storming the Capitol, Trump intoned a litany of grievances with no regard for evidence and repeating debunked claims from these cities. Trump said Fulton county in Georgia was âcorruptâ and had stuffed machines with fake votes. Detroit had â139%â turnout â a lie â after canvassers were âre-scanning batches of ballots over and over againâ â another lie. The grievance lives on. When Trump was speaking in Atlantaâs Summerhill neighborhood in August, he described Atlanta as âlike a killing fieldâ, referencing a recent high-profile murder downtown. When Congressman John Lewis refused to attend Trumpâs inauguration in 2017, Trump suggested by tweet that the city was âcrime infestedâ and that Lewis âshould spend more time on fixing and helping his district, which is in horrible shape and falling apartâ.
Trump refused to observe Lewisâs death with dignity as a revered civil rights icon. He instead attacked Lewisâs legacy, telling a reporter he âcouldnât say one way or anotherâ whether Lewis was worthy of praise, complaining again about being snubbed at the inauguration and musing about how the Civil Rights Act had âworked outâ for Black voters. Atlantans have not forgotten these insults. Fulton and DeKalb counties â Atlantaâs core â delivered a net gain of about 140,000 votes for Biden in 2020. Overall turnout in Georgia increased by about 20% four years ago; in these counties, Democratic turnout increased by about 32%. Lewisâs name was on their lips as they stood in line to vote. The Trump campaign had been trying to coax Black voters into their camp, with events like the launch of his Black voter coalition group at a historically Black church in Detroit in June. Even then, in an audience packed with almost exclusively white supporters, he once again railed against cities and crime. âLook, the crime is most rampant right here and in African American communities,â Trump said at 180 Church in Detroit. âMore people see me and they say, âSir, we want protection. We want police to protect us. We donât want to get robbed and mugged and beat up or killed.ââ Between the rise of Kamala Harris after Bidenâs withdrawal and the pratfall of comments about âBlack jobsâ, in front of a group of Black journalists, Trump has begun abandoning the pretense of cross-racial outreach in favor of railing against âsanctuary citiesâ. Over the last few weeks, he has made a tour of sundown towns â communities that would terrorize Black people caught within the city limits after sundown â on the campaign trail.
Why are Republicans stoking fears of big cities, especially big cities in red states? Itâs because those cities are Black-majority and are heavily Democratic.
#Crime#Cities#Racism#Classism#Mark Adams Prieto#Home Rule#Texas HB2127#Texas#Florida#Georgia#Tennessee#Donald Trump
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Georgia MAGA
Aloha kÄkou. Georgia on my mine today. President Trump is holding a massive rally at the State University Convocation Center in Atlanta, Georgia. Itâs a multi-purpose 8,000-seat indoor arena, but it looks like thereâs more than 8,000 people. The crowd outside was also about 8,000 people that couldnât get in. Itâs amazing because there was no entertainer warming up the crowd. Just JD Vance, and aâŚ
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Excerpt from this Op-Ed by Jeff Goodell published in the New York Times:
On a recent Thursday evening, a freakish windstorm called a derecho (Spanish for âstraight aheadâ) hit Houston, a city of more than two million people that also happens to be the epicenter of the fossil fuel industry in America.
In a matter of minutes, winds of up to 100 miles per hour blew out windows on office buildings, uprooted trees and toppled electric poles and transmission towers. Nearly a million households lost power. Which meant that not only was there no light, but there was no air-conditioning. The damage from the storm was so extensive that, five days later, more than 100,000 homes and businesses were still marooned in the heat and darkness.
Luckily, the day the derecho blew in, the temperature in Houston, a city infamous for its swampy summers, was in the low to mid-80s. Hot, to be sure, but for most healthy people, not life-threatening. Of the at least eight deaths reported as a result of the storm, none were from heat exposure.
But if this storm had arrived several days later, perhaps over the Memorial Day weekend, when the temperature in Houston hit 96 degrees, with a heat index as high as 115, it might have been a very different story. âThe Hurricane Katrina of extreme heat,â is how Mikhail Chester, director of the Metis Center for Infrastructure and Sustainable Engineering at Arizona State University, once put it to me, echoing the memory of the catastrophic 2005 hurricane that struck Louisiana, devastated New Orleans and killed more than 1,300 people.
What if, instead, the electricity goes out for several days during a blistering summer heat wave in a city that depends on air-conditioning in those months?
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In Dr. Chesterâs scenario, a compounding crisis of extreme heat and a power failure in a major city like Houston could lead to a series of cascading failures, exposing vulnerabilities in the regionâs infrastructure that are difficult to foresee and could result in thousands, or even tens of thousands, of deaths from heat exposure in a matter of days. The risk to people in cities would be higher because all the concrete and asphalt amplifies the heat, pushing temperatures as much as 15 degrees to 20 degrees in the midafternoon above surrounding vegetated areas.
The derecho that hit Houston was a warning of just how quickly risks are multiplying in our rapidly warming world. As if to prove this point, some 10 days after the Houston blackout, another windstorm knocked out power to hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses in and around Dallas.
One of the most dangerous illusions of the climate crisis is that the technology of modern life makes us invincible. Humans are smart. We have tools. Yeah, it will cost money. But we can adapt to whatever comes our way. As for the coral reefs that bleach in the hot oceans and the howler monkeys that fell dead out of trees during a recent heat wave in Mexico, well, thatâs sad but life goes on.
Last year, researchers at Georgia Institute of Technology, Arizona State University and the University of Michigan published a study looking at the consequences of a major blackout during an extreme heat wave in three cities: Phoenix, Detroit and Atlanta. In the study, the cause of the blackout was unspecified.
âIt doesnât really matter if the blackout is the result of a cyberattack or a hurricane,â Brian Stone, the director of the Urban Climate Lab at Georgia Tech and the lead author on the study, told me. âFor the purposes of our research, the effect is the same.â Whatever the cause, the study noted that the number of major blackouts in U.S. more than doubled between 2015-16 and 2020-21.
Dr. Stone and his colleagues focused on those three American cities because they have different demographics, climates and dependence on air-conditioning. In Detroit, 53 percent of buildings have central air-conditioning; in Atlanta, 94 percent; in Phoenix, 99 percent. The researchers modeled the health consequences for residents in a two-day, citywide blackout during a heat wave, with electricity gradually restored over the next three days.
The results were shocking: in Phoenix, about 800,000 people â roughly half the population â would need emergency medical treatment for heat stroke and other illnesses. The flood of people seeking care would overwhelm the cityâs hospitals. More than 13,000 people would die.
Under the same scenario in Atlanta, researchers found there would be 12,540 visits to emergency rooms. Six people would die. In Detroit, which has a higher percentage of older residents and a higher poverty rate than those other cities, 221 people would die.
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Speaker at Trump Atlanta Rally Ends Kamala Harrisâs Career with One Question About Willie Brown (VIDEO)
Trump took the stage to thunderous applause at the Georgia State University Convocation Center. Trump held a massive MAGA rally in Atlanta
#Speaker#michaelahmontgomery#Michaelah Montgomery#TrumpAtlantaRally#atlantarally#donald trump#donaldtrump#trump 2024#trump2024
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Lucy Craft Laney (April 13, 1854 - October 23, 1923) educator, school founder, and civil rights activist was born in Macon, Georgia to free parents Louisa and David Laney. David Laney, a Presbyterian minister and skilled carpenter, had purchased his freedom approximately twenty years before her birth. He purchased Louisaâs freedom after they were married. She learned to read and write by the age of four, and by the time she was twelve, she was able to translate difficult passages in Latin, including Julius Caesarâs Commentaries on the Gallic War.
She joined Atlanta Universityâs first class, she graduated from the teacherâs training program. After teaching for ten years in Macon, Savannah, Milledgeville, and Augusta, she opened her school in the basement of Christ Presbyterian Church in Augusta in 1883. Originally intended only for girls, when several boys appeared, she accepted them as pupils as well. By the end of the second year, over 200 African American children were pupils at her school. Three years after the founding of the school, the state-licensed it as Haines Normal and Industrial Institute. The school was named after Francine E.H. Haines, a lifetime benefactor of the school who donated $10,000 to establish the institute. In the 1890s, the Haines Institute was the first school to offer a kindergarten class for African American children in Georgia. By 1912 it employed thirty-four teachers and had over nine hundred students enrolled. The most prominent graduate of Haines Institute was Frank Yerby, the noted author.
She helped to found the Augusta branch of the NAACP. She was active in the Interracial Commission, the National Association of Colored Women, and the Niagara Movement. She helped to integrate the community work of the YMCA and YWCA. She served as the director of the cultural center for Augustaâs African American community.
She was one of the first African Americans to have her portrait displayed in the Georgia state capital in Atlanta. #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence
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