SB American News Week Ending 8/28

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Vol. 50 No. 18

August 22, 2019 - August 28, 2019

Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will. Find out just what people will submit to and you have found out the exact amount of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them and these will continue till they have resisted either with words or blows or words or with both. The limits of tyrants are prescribed by the endurance of those whom they suppress. —Fredrick Douglass (1849)

After Five Years, NY Police Officer Who Chokes Eric Garner to Death on Video is Finally Fired

Publisher’s Corner Email: sbamericannews@gmail.com Clifton Harris Editor in Chief Publisher of The San Bernardino AMERICAN News

AFROBlack Congressional Leadership Grills JUUL Executives By Afro Staff

By Lauren Victoria Burke, NNPA Newswire Contributor

Please go to our website sb-american.com to view On August 19, New York City Police Commissioner James O’Neill announced the firing of Officer Daniel Pantaleo. Pantaleo. Pantaleo choked Eric Garner, 43, to death on a sidewalk in Staten Island New York on July 17, 2014, after Pantaleo stopped Garner for selling loose cigarettes. The video of Garner begging for his life and repeating the words “I can’t breathe” eleven times, catapulted the case into the

national spotlight and made it an often-mentioned example of police brutality. Pantaleo was later assigned to desk duty and had his salary raised. Five months after the Garner killing, a Staten Island grand jury declined to indict Pantaleo. Then-District Attorney Dan Donovan made the decision and was later elected to Congress. In his August 19 announcement, NYPD

Stacey Abrams Says She’d Serve as Vice President

Commissioner James O’Neill said he expects rank and file officers to be upset with him for firing Pantaleo. “If I was still a cop, I would probably be mad at me.” Police in New York have long been accustomed to winning political battles in public and rarely does the Commissioner admit mistakes by individual officers. “In this case, the unintended consequence of Mr. Garner’s

death must have a consequence of its own,” O’Neill stated. “There are absolutely no victors here today,” he added. “After five long years, justice finally breathes. But firing this guy is just the beginning,” wrote Professor Ibram Kendi of American University moments after the news was released. The head of the Police union in New York had another view. “He will lose his police department,” said Patrick Lynch, president of the city’s Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association. Eric Garner’s death on video at the hands of Pantaleo occurred less than a month before the shooting death of unarmed teenager Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo. by police Officer Darren Wilson. Lauren Victoria Burke is an independent journalist and writer for NNPA as well as a political analyst and strategist as Principal of Win Digital Media LLC. She may be contacted at LBurke007@gmail.com and on twitter at @LVBurke

Massive hemp farm — up to 1,280 acres — could rise in San Bernardino County’s Mojave Desert...continued

NNPA NEWSWIRE — “I’ve just come to the decision that my best value add, the strongest contribution I can give to this primary, would be to make sure our nominee is coming into an environment where there are strong voter protections in place,” Abrams told the New York Times. By Stacy M. Brown, NNPA Newswire Correspondent @StacyBrownMedia an environment where there are strong voter protections in place,” Abrams told the Times. “I would not have publicly raised the possibility if it was not a legitimate thought,” Abrams said. She said the current field, which “I would not have publicly raised includes former Vice President Joe the possibility if it was not a Biden; Calif. Sen. Kamala Harris; legitimate thought,” Abrams said New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker; The overcrowded Democratic and Vermont Sen. Bernie presidential field has a record six Sanders, is talented. women seeking the nomination. Earlier this year when Biden But one prominent individual entered the race, he was who isn’t running for the top job reportedly considering Abrams as has thrown her hat into the ring a running mate. for vice president. YAHOO! Newsreported that Former Georgia Gubernatorial Abrams dismissed those rumors, Candidate Stacey Abrams said noting that at the time, Abrams she would be delighted to serve was considering a run for under one of the 22 candidates. president. “I would be honored to be Earlier this year, Booker said he considered by any nominee,” believed that a woman should be Abrams told The New York on the ticket. Timeson Wednesday, Aug. 14. Another candidate, former “I’ve just come to the decision Texas Rep. Beto O’Rourke, said that my best value add, the he would find it “very difficult not strongest contribution I can give to select a woman” as his running to this primary, would be to make mate. sure our nominee is coming into

Massive hemp farm — up to 1,280 acres — could rise in San Bernardino County’s Mojave Desert By SANDRA EMERSON | semerson@scng.com | PUBLISHED: August 19, 2019 at 7:00 am | UPDATED: August 20, 2019 at 1:33 pm The company behind a controversial water pumping project is adding hemp to its farming operations in the Mojave Desert.

Cadiz Inc., which owns about 35,000 acres of land with water rights in San Bernardino County, has partnered with Glass House (continued in next 2 columns)

Los Angeles-based Cadiz Inc. has partnered with Long Beach-based Glass House Farms to plant five acres of hemp on Cadiz’s agricultural property in San Bernardino County. (Courtesy of Cadiz Inc.)

Group, a Long Beach-based cannabis and hemp company, to find out how well the newly legalized crop grows in the desert. Hemp is related to marijuana, but doesn’t get you high and can be used to make textiles, clothing and body care products. Once planted, Cadiz officials say the farm would be the largest in San Bernardino County and potentially the state. In July, the companies, which formed SoCal Hemp Co., planted five acres of hemp on Cadiz’s 9,600-acre farm in Cadiz Valley, about 60 miles northeast of Twentynine Palms. The goal: figure out what works, what doesn’t and ultimately expand to 1,280 acres by the end of 2020. “We really liked (hemp) for a number of reasons,” said Scott Slater, CEO and president of Los Angeles-based Cadiz Inc. “The first reason, and the most important reason, is we think it’s a long-term sustainable crop that’s compatible with the desert environment.” Los Angeles-based Cadiz Inc. has partnered with Long Beachbased Glass House Farms to plant five acres of hemp on Cadiz’s agricultural property in San

Bernardino County. (Courtesy of Cadiz Inc.) Cadiz, which is facing a new hurdle from the state on its proposed Cadiz Valley Water Conservation, Recovery and Storage Project in the same area, has held agricultural permits for about 9,600 acres since 1993. It has grown organic grapes, citrus and seasonal crops relying on groundwater for irrigation. Today, the main crop is lemons, including pink lemons. The hemp will be organic and sun-grown on property surrounded by vacant federal land. This eliminates the concern of offending neighbors with the plant’s odor or the risk of pesticide overspray from surrounding agricultural farms, Slater said. The plants also use 20% of the water needed to water a lemon tree and there’s fewer pests in the desert, he said.

Carol McGruder and Dr. Valerie Yerger representing AATCLC at the 2 part-hearing “We are as committed, as ever, to combating youth usage, but don’t take our word for it, look at our actions,” JUUL Labs said in a statement. “We are looking at your actions, and they are deeply troubling,” Cummings told James Monsees, the billionaire cofounder and product officer of JUUL Labs. “Kids are especially attracted to flavored tobacco products,” Cummings continued. Federal and local regulations have attempted to curb youth usage, primarily focusing on policing retailers for sales to minors and proscribing flavors and formulas particularly appealing or solely appealing to children. When the FDA announced that new products entering the market would be subject to additional scrutiny, products already at market were given amnesty through a grandfather date. Questions remain unanswered by JUUL about what was the business’s mindset when a wide variety of JUUL products flooded the market just before the grandfather date elapsed. “What’s very disturbing about this, and problematic, is that it seems that you were looking to circumvent FDA regulation,” Representative Ayanna Pressley (MA-D) told James Monsees, the billionaire co-founder and product officer of JUUL Labs. “And that’s what’s troublesome about this paper trail and what

you’re corroborating here, today.” Pressley’s questioning centered on whether or not JUUL juices and vaping paraphernalia were “rushed,” as Pressley put it, to market in order to avoid tightening regulations on a rapidly expanding nicotine delivery market. “Because JUUL did not want to quote ‘imply that they are going away,’ the next line acknowledges that many may not be available by the end of this year,” Pressley continued, questioning whether JUUL Labs was pushing a wide variety of flavors and nicotine concentrations on retailers, knowing ahead of time some such products were doomed to fail. Congressional Oversight is calling the rise in youth nicotine use an “epidemic,” and activists like The African American Tobacco Control Leadership Council (AATCLC) are applauding industry leaders coming under heightened scrutiny. “JUUL has been making power plays all over the country to engage top Black leaders and lobbyists to clear JUUL’s path to Black nicotine addicted smokers,” AATCLC said in a press release finding Cummings “standing strong for public health policy that protects Black folks too.” This article originally appeared in The Afro.

Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc. Celebrating 100 Years With Historic $100k Scholarship Community Education News

Zeta’s International Centennial, President,Valerie Hollingsworth Baker

Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Incorporated, an international

women's service organization with a focus on education, will celebrate its centennial year in January 2020 by awarding a historical $100,000 scholarship to a deserving young woman. Eligible students are encouraged to apply by January 16, 2020; a link to the application and detailed instructions can be found here: https:// zphib1920.org/eblast/2019/april/ Founders-CentennialScholarship-packet.pdf.

Our Values, Mission, & Vision Statement Our Values: Treat all people with care, respect, honor, and dignity. Tell it as it is with love, truth and integrity. Promote the interests of advertisers and sponsors along their strategic interest for the betterment of the community and beyond. Speak truth to power. Our Mission: To continuously improve communication between all people of the world. Our Vision: To be the best community newspaper in our region and the nation. Provider of: A voice for the poor, the underserved, those that are marginalized, Positive and edifying news about people, places and businesses. Keep San Bernardino, Riverside, and Los Angeles Counties informed about global trends while retaining the consciousness of local events and processes. Memberships and Associations: The San Bernardino American Newspaper is a member of the California Newspaper Publishers Association, National Newspaper Association and addociated with California Black Media.


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