PRESORTED STANDARD U.S. POSTAGE
60
th
PAID
Anniversary
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| Thursday, | Thursday Vol.Vol. 60 57 No.No. 3835 September August 31, 17, 2017 2020
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✓ COVID-19 VOTE?
Serving Serving San Diego SanCounty’s Diego County’s African & African AfricanAmerican & African Communities American57Communities Years 60 Years
READY TO
CALIFORNIA ALL‑MAIL ELECTION EXPLAINED PART 2
SAN YSIDRO HEALTH FRONT-LINE STAFF RECEIVE DONATIONS – see page 7
LINKED TO
BIDEN, TRUMP AND
Birdie Addison, 18, of Germantown, Md., left, registers to vote for the first time while being helped by Kysten Thomas, of Washington, ahead of a march from the National Museum of African American History and Culture to the Lincoln Memorial, in Washington on Friday, June 19, 2020, to mark Juneteenth, the holiday celebrating the day in 1865 that enslaved Black people in Galveston, Texas, learned they had been freed from bondage, more than two years after the Emancipation Proclamation. (AP
Publisher
We know that in the 2016 election for President of the United States, Hillary Clinton got three million more votes than Donald Trump and, still, he became President. What most Americans did not know and still too many today do not know is that the Presidency is determined by a process that contains individuals known as “electors,” whose numbers in each state are equal to the number of congressional representatives in that state, and that those persons who total 535 in number are the ones who actually elect the president when they meet and vote in See ELECTORAL page 2
COVID-19’S ECONOMIC IMPACT IN SAN DIEGO:
Senior Fellow with the Center for Responsible Lending
ON PAGE 10
COVID-19 CASES IN SOUTHEAST 1,508 1,340
926
92105
92102 1,582
92115
1,246
92114
92113
697
92139
By Rev. Dr. John E. Warren
Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
By Charlene Crowell
UPDATES
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SEGREGATED THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE HOUSING Black Households Earned 61 Cents for Every Dollar of White Median Incomes
SEE LOCAL
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– see centerspread
POLICE VIOLENCE
Cannot be Heard”
Source: County of San Diego a/o 9/15/20
Will California’s
Elected Officials
Take the Emmett Till
Pledge? Black Dems prod politicians to stand against racism
Black and Hispanic Communities Hardest Hit
The August 23 police shooting of an unarmed Black man in Kenosha, WI, triggered yet another round of community protests and national news coverage of a Black man. A series of multiple gunshots fired by a local police officer, were not fatal for 29-year old Jacob Blake; but may have permanently paralyzed him from the waist down. Days later on August 28, the National Action Network served as a major organizer for a Commitment March, rededicating the yet unaddressed dreams of the historic 1963 March on Washington. Assembled again at Washington’s Lincoln Memorial, the day’s speakers spanned nationally-known leaders like Rev. Al Sharpton, Martin Luther King III, and Attorney Ben Crump to the family members of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Jacob Blake and others. The irony is that despite the passage of nearly 60 years between the original march and its 2020 recommitment, many of the issues that have plagued Black America remain the same. Black America and other people of color still cry for justice, equality, and freedom. Yet noticeably, what formerly focused national attention on events in Selma, Montgomery, and Birmingham have now emanated from Ferguson, to Kenosha, Minneapolis, Portland and other locales.
All communities in San Diego have been severely impacted by the pandemic and subsequent economic crisis. It is the Black and Hispanic communities that have been disproportionately impacted by COVID-19 and have been the hardest hit, in sharp contrast to White and Asian communities where, respectively, only 14% and 24% live in high unemployment and COVID-19 case areas.
IMPACTS BY ETHNICITY AND ZIP CODE
View the chart on the right, released by SANDAG in August 2020, to get a sobering snapshot of the economic impact of COVID-19 by ethnicity and zip code here in the San Diego region.
SOURCE: SANDAG
PUSH TO RESTORE VOTING RIGHTS FOR
California’s Parolees Kicks Off By Quinci LeGardye California Black Media
On Aug. 17, the “Yes On Prop 17” campaign held its Official Proposition 17 Campaign Virtual Kick-Off on Facebook Live. The event featured testimony from previously incarcerated persons on why more than 50,000 parolees in California deserve the right to vote.
Why measurable forward strides in policing, or economic progress have remained elusive after decades of calls for reforms may partly be explained by the findings of a new policy analysis by the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank in St. Louis. Using U.S. Census Bureau See VIOLENCE page 2
See PAROLEES page 2
FROM THE DESK OF THE EDITOR w/Rev. Dr. John E. Warren TUNE IN WED., SEPT. 23RD FOR NEXT WEEK’S GUEST: Taisha Brown Vice Chairwoman of the African American Caucus of the California Democratic Party
By Tanu Henry California Black Media
The California Democratic Party African American Caucus (CDPAAC) is calling on all elected officials in California at the local, state and national levels to take a firm stand against racism. See PLEDGE page 2