05-04-2024  2:33 am   •   PDX and SEA Weather
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NORTHWEST NEWS

Police Detain Driver Who Accelerated Toward Protesters at Portland State University in Oregon

The Portland Police Bureau said in a written statement late Thursday afternoon that the man was taken to a hospital on a police mental health hold. They did not release his name. The vehicle appeared to accelerate from a stop toward the crowd but braked before it reached anyone. 

Portland Government Will Change On Jan. 1. The City’s Transition Team Explains What We Can Expect.

‘It’s a learning curve that everyone has to be intentional about‘

What Marijuana Reclassification Means for the United States

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration is moving toward reclassifying marijuana as a less dangerous drug. The Justice Department proposal would recognize the medical uses of cannabis but wouldn’t legalize it for recreational use. Some advocates for legalized weed say the move doesn't go far enough, while opponents say it goes too far.

US Long-Term Care Costs Are Sky-High, but Washington State’s New Way to Help Pay for Them Could Be Nixed

A group funded by hedge fund executive Brian Heywood is attempting to undermine the financial stability of Washington state's new long-term care social insurance program.

NEWS BRIEFS

April 30 is the Registration Deadline for the May Primary Election

Voters can register or update their registration online at OregonVotes.gov until 11:59 p.m. on April 30. ...

Chair Jessica Vega Pederson Releases $3.96 Billion Executive Budget for Fiscal Year 2024-2025

Investments will boost shelter and homeless services, tackle the fentanyl crisis, strengthen the safety net and support a...

New Funding Will Invest in Promising Oregon Technology and Science Startups

Today Business Oregon and its Oregon Innovation Council announced a million award to the Portland Seed Fund that will...

Unity in Prayer: Interfaith Vigil and Memorial Service Honoring Youth Affected by Violence

As part of the 2024 National Youth Violence Prevention Week, the Multnomah County Prevention and Health Promotion Community Adolescent...

Safety lapses contributed to patient assaults at Oregon State Hospital, federal report says

Safety lapses at the Oregon State Hospital contributed to recent patient-on-patient assaults, a federal report on the state's most secure inpatient psychiatric facility has found. The investigation by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services found that staff didn't always...

Democratic officials criticize Meta ad policy, saying it amplifies lies about 2020 election

ATLANTA (AP) — Several Democrats serving as their state's top election officials have sent a letter to the parent company of Facebook, asking it to stop allowing ads that claim the 2020 presidential election was stolen. In the letter addressed to Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, the...

The Bo Nix era begins in Denver, and the Broncos also drafted his top target at Oregon

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — For the first time in his 17 seasons as a coach, Sean Payton has a rookie quarterback to nurture. Payton's Denver Broncos took Bo Nix in the first round of the NFL draft. The coach then helped out both himself and Nix by moving up to draft his new QB's top...

Elliss, Jenkins, McCaffrey join Harrison and Alt in following their fathers into the NFL

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — Marvin Harrison Jr., Joe Alt, Kris Jenkins, Jonah Ellis and Luke McCaffrey have turned the NFL draft into a family affair. The sons of former pro football stars, they've followed their fathers' formidable footsteps into the league. Elliss was...

OPINION

New White House Plan Could Reduce or Eliminate Accumulated Interest for 30 Million Student Loan Borrowers

Multiple recent announcements from the Biden administration offer new hope for the 43.2 million borrowers hoping to get relief from the onerous burden of a collective

Op-Ed: Why MAGA Policies Are Detrimental to Black Communities

NNPA NEWSWIRE – MAGA proponents peddle baseless claims of widespread voter fraud to justify voter suppression tactics that disproportionately target Black voters. From restrictive voter ID laws to purging voter rolls to limiting early voting hours, these...

Loving and Embracing the Differences in Our Youngest Learners

Yet our responsibility to all parents and society at large means we must do more to share insights, especially with underserved and under-resourced communities. ...

Gallup Finds Black Generational Divide on Affirmative Action

Each spring, many aspiring students and their families begin receiving college acceptance letters and offers of financial aid packages. This year’s college decisions will add yet another consideration: the effects of a 2023 Supreme Court, 6-3 ruling that...

AFRICAN AMERICANS IN THE NEWS

The Kentucky Derby is turning 150 years old. It's survived world wars and controversies of all kinds

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — As a record crowd cheered, American Pharoah rallied from behind and took aim at his remaining two rivals in the stretch. The bay colt and jockey Victor Espinoza surged to the lead with a furlong to go and thundered across the finish line a length ahead in the 2015 Kentucky...

Congressman praises heckling of war protesters, including 1 who made monkey gestures at Black woman

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Israel-Hamas war demonstrations at the University of Mississippi turned ugly this week when one counter-protester appeared to make monkey noises and gestures at a Black student in a raucous gathering that was endorsed by a far-right congressman from Georgia. ...

Biden awards the Medal of Freedom to Nancy Pelosi, Medgar Evers, Michelle Yeoh and 15 others

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden on Friday bestowed the Presidential Medal of Freedom on 19 people, including civil rights icons such as the late Medgar Evers, prominent political leaders such as former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Rep. James Clyburn, and actor Michelle Yeoh. ...

ENTERTAINMENT

Celebrity birthdays for the week of May 5-11

Celebrity birthdays for the week of May 5-11: May 5: Actor Michael Murphy is 86. Actor Lance Henriksen (“Millennium,” ″Aliens”) is 84. Comedian-actor Michael Palin (Monty Python) is 81. Actor John Rhys-Davies (“Lord of the Rings,” ″Raiders of the Lost Ark”) is 80....

Select list of nominees for 2024 Tony Awards

NEW YORK (AP) — Select nominations for the 2024 Tony Awards, announced Tuesday. Best Musical: “Hell's Kitchen'': ”Illinoise"; “The Outsiders”; “Suffs”; “Water for Elephants” Best Play: “Jaja’s African Hair Braiding”; “Mary Jane”; “Mother...

Book Review: 'Crow Talk' provides a path for healing in a meditative and hopeful novel on grief

Crows have long been associated with death, but Eileen Garvin’s novel “Crow Talk” offers a fresh perspective; creepy, dark and morbid becomes beautiful, wondrous and transformative. “Crow Talk” provides a path for healing in a meditative and hopeful novel on grief, largely...

U.S. & WORLD NEWS

United Methodist delegates repeal their church’s ban on its clergy celebrating same-sex marriages

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — `United Methodist delegates on Friday repealed their church’s longstanding ban on the...

An AI-controlled fighter jet took the Air Force leader for a historic ride. What that means for war

EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP) — With the midday sun blazing, an experimental orange and white F-16 fighter...

Democratic US Rep. Henry Cuellar of Texas and his wife are indicted over ties to Azerbaijan

WASHINGTON (AP) — Democratic U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar of Texas and his wife were indicted on conspiracy and...

Self-exiled Chinese businessman's chief of staff pleads guilty weeks before trial

NEW YORK (AP) — The chief of staff of a Chinese businessman sought by the government of China pleaded guilty to...

Southern Brazil has been hit by the worst floods in more than 80 years. At least 39 people have died

SAO PAULO (AP) — Heavy rains in the southern Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul killed 39 people, with another...

Bomb kills at least 12 people, including children, at two displacement camps in eastern Congo

GOMA, Congo (AP) — Attacks on two camps for displaced people in eastern Congo's North Kivu province on Friday...

By Kenneth J. Cooper

From his earliest experiences in a classroom, Tim Wise was primed to be a different kind of white guy. He attended a preschool in the South where almost everyone was black. The very idea of integrated schools was still being contested in courts when his mother made that unconventional choice, an unmistakable expression of her commitment to the ideals of the civil rights movement.  The Skanner News Video: Tim Wise
Four decades have passed since Wise received his early childhood education on the campus of Tennessee State University, a historically black school in his hometown of Nashville. From there, he moved through the city's desegregated public schools and then to New Orleans, where he attended Tulane University and joined other young activists trying to weaken the apartheid regime in South Africa.
Wise graduated to political campaigns to defeat David Duke in the former Ku Klux Klansman's polarizing bids to represent Louisiana as a senator and governor.
Those experiences have led Wise, 41, to pursue an unusual calling for the last 15 years. The author of five books on race in five years, a prolific producer of elaborately argued essays and a frequent campus speaker on the subject, he is among a small number of white "anti-racism" writers. The half-dozen others are professors whose audiences, for the most part, are confined to college campuses.
"Tim Wise is currently about the only white writer on anti-racism I know who regularly reaches the popular media and audiences," says Joe Feagin, one of those other writers and a senior sociologist at Texas A&M University. He dubs Wise, in part because of his wider reach, as "the very best" of the lot.
Within that general audience, Wise knows whom he is trying to reach with his dissection of white privilege and structural racism.
"My first and foremost obligation is to talk with and attempt to work with and challenge white people," he says. "We've got to have these conversations in white space."
His mission, Wise says, is "to express to those of us who are white the damage that racism does to not just people of color but the rest of us."
Try as he has, Wise's books, all issued in paperback by small publishing houses, have not achieved mass circulation among whites or other readers, even by his own count.
"White Like Me: Reflections from a Privileged Son," a 2005 memoir, has sold best, about 55,000 copies. His first book, on affirmative action, from academic publisher Routledge, has sold the fewest copies, not even one-tenth of the memoir. His latest, "Colorblind: The Rise of Post-Racial Politics and the Retreat from Racial Equity," was released in June by City Lights, the San Francisco publisher established by Beat poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti.
Wise's writings have earned him prominent black admirers in academia: Derrick Bell, the former Harvard law professor now at New York University; Molefi Asante of Temple University, the nation's leading Afrocentric scholar; and Michael Eric Dyson, a Georgetown University sociologist who is also a radio talk show host.
On the lecture circuit, Wise tends to draw white students. He gives about 100 speeches a year, primarily at colleges and schools, and estimates that his audiences of late are 70 percent white.
Of course, Wise has critics, white and black—and not only those of the literary variety.
Some conservative whites regard him as a "race traitor." A representative comment appeared last year on the blog of a black woman who calls herself Siddity: "Mr. Man" called Wise "a self-hater" whose "goal is an excuse to bash whites and promote minority racism and leftist notions of social justice."
Wise describes his politics as progressive and counts among his concerns how race and class harm whites and the nation's poor, most of whom, he notes, are white.
As the economy has weakened, Wise has emphasized that racism hurts whites in three ways. For one, systemic abuses, such as subprime lending, start in minority communities and spread to white ones. The social safety net, secondly, has wide gaps because the news media overstate how much welfare and similar federal programs benefit blacks and Hispanics. As a result, whites who lose jobs or homes to foreclosure find less government help available.
The other harm done, he says, is psychological. Because whites have a false sense of comfort that bad things won't happen to them, experiencing a reversal is often more shattering personally.
As for criticism from blacks, Wise encapsulates a common thrust as: "What the hell is this white boy going to tell me that I don't already know?" He says "it's a perfectly legitimate question to ask: Is he serious?" but rebuffs and mocks any suggestion that he's on his anti-racism crusade for the money.
"It's so utterly absurd to think any white person would grow up and say, 'How I'm going to get rich is I'm going to be an anti-racism activist,' " Wise says.
Wise maintains he is doing what Stokely Carmichael and H. Rap Brown urged when, in a watershed moment of the civil rights movement, they expelled whites from the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee in late 1966. "They said, 'We need you to work with your people,' " Wise says. "It was their idea."
Quoting African-Americans is a recurrent pattern—unusual for a white author—in Wise's speech and writing. He begins each chapter of his memoir, for example, with a James Baldwin quotation. None are the fiery writer's well-known, shopworn statements. Wise's references are all the more remarkable because, born in 1968, he is too young to have watched the civil rights movement unfold, even on television. "My mom was three months pregnant with me when Dr. (Martin Luther) King died," he says.
Lucinda Wise, her son says, chose a black preschool for him to make sure he wasn't educated in segregated schools as she had been. There he made his first black friends.
"I was being socialized in a nondominant setting," he says. "But I was also, and this is very important, being socialized in a setting where the authority figures were mostly African-American women, It meant that I didn't take white authority for granted, assuming that was what authority had to look like."
In submitting to black authority, a reversal of the historic roles of the races, Wise had as a preschooler an experience that most white Americans didn't know until Barack Obama became president.

The Skanner Foundation's 38th Annual MLK Breakfast