09-11-2024  3:04 am   •   PDX and SEA Weather

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NORTHWEST NEWS

With Drug Recriminalization, Addiction Recovery Advocates Warn of ‘Inequitable Patchwork’ of Services – And Greater Burden to Black Oregonians

Possession of small amounts of hard drugs is again a misdemeanor crime, as of last Sunday. Critics warn this will have a disproportionate impact on Black Oregonians. 

Police in Washington City Banned From Personalizing Equipment in Settlement Over Shooting Black Man

The city of Olympia, Washington, will pay 0,000 to the family of Timothy Green, a Black man shot and killed by police, in a settlement that also stipulates that officers will be barred from personalizing any work equipment.The settlement stops the display of symbols on equipment like the thin blue line on an American flag, which were displayed when Green was killed. The agreement also requires that members of the police department complete state training “on the historical intersection between race and policing.”

City Elections Officials Explain Ranked-Choice Voting

Portland voters will still vote by mail, but have a chance to vote on more candidates. 

PCC Celebrates Black Business Month

Streetwear brand Stackin Kickz and restaurant Norma Jean’s Soul Cuisine showcase the impact that PCC alums have in the North Portland community and beyond

NEWS BRIEFS

Candidates to Appear on Nov. 5 Ballot Certified

The list of candidates is organized by position for mayor, auditor, and city council. A total of 118 candidates...

Library Operations Center Wins Slot in 2024 Library Design Showcase

Located in East Portland, the building services are focused on patron support and sustainability ...

$12M in Grants for Five Communities to Make Local Roads Safer in Oregon

As students head back to school, new round of funding from President Biden’s infrastructure law will make America’s roads safer...

HUD Awards $31.7 Million to Support Fair Housing Organizations Nationwide

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) has awarded .7 million in grants to 75 fair housing organizations across...

Oregon Summer EBT Application Deadline Extended to Sept. 30

Thousands of families may be unaware that they qualify for this essential benefit. Families are urged to check their eligibility and...

'Hellish' scene unfolds as wildfire races toward California mountain community

TRABUCO CANYON, Calif. (AP) — Alex Luna, a 20-year-old missionary, saw the sky turn from a cherry red to black in about 90 minutes as an explosive wildfire raced toward the Southern California mountain community of Wrightwood and authorities implored residents to leave their belongings behind and...

Wildfires burn out of control in Southern California and more evacuations ordered

TRABUCO CANYON, Calif. (AP) — Apocalyptic-looking plumes of smoke filled skies east of Los Angeles on Tuesday as firefighters battled three major wildfires that erupted amid a blistering heat wave and threatened tens of thousands of homes and other structures. Evacuation orders...

AP Top 25 Reality Check: SEC takeover could last a while with few nonconference challenges left

The Southeastern Conference has taken over The Associated Press college football poll, grabbing six of the first seven spots. The 16-team SEC set a new standard for hoarding high AP Top 25 rankings, with Georgia at No. 1, No. 2 Texas, No. 4 Alabama, No. 5 Mississippi, No. 6 Missouri...

Cook runs for 2 TDs, Burden scores before leaving with illness as No. 9 Mizzou blanks Buffalo 38-0

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Most of the talk about Missouri in the offseason centered around quarterback Brady Cook and All-American wide receiver Luther Burden III, and the way the ninth-ranked Tigers' high-octane offense could put them in the College Football Playoff mix. It's been their...

OPINION

DOJ and State Attorneys General File Joint Consumer Lawsuit

In August, the Department of Justice and eight state Attorneys Generals filed a lawsuit charging RealPage Inc., a commercial revenue management software firm with providing apartment managers with illegal price fixing software data that violates...

America Needs Kamala Harris to Win

Because a 'House Divided Against Itself Cannot Stand' ...

Student Loan Debt Drops $10 Billion Due to Biden Administration Forgiveness; New Education Department Rules Hold Hope for 30 Million More Borrowers

As consumers struggle to cope with mounting debt, a new economic report from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York includes an unprecedented glimmer of hope. Although debt for mortgages, credit cards, auto loans and more increased by billions of...

Carolyn Leonard - Community Leader Until The End, But How Do We Remember Her?

That was Carolyn. Always thinking about what else she could do for the community, even as she herself lay dying in bed. A celebration of Carolyn Leonard’s life will be held on August 17. ...

AFRICAN AMERICANS IN THE NEWS

To pumped-up Democrats, Harris was everything Biden was not in confronting Trump in debate

WASHINGTON (AP) — To many Democrats, Kamala Harris was everything Joe Biden was not in confronting Donald Trump on the debate stage: forceful, fleet of foot, relentless in going after her opponent. In a pivot from Biden's debate meltdown in June, Democrats who gathered in bars,...

Harris addresses Trump’s false claims about her race and his history of racial division

For the first time since she became the Democratic nominee for president, Kamala Harris addressed head-on the false claims made by Donald Trump about her racial identity, as well as the former president's history of racial division throughout his public life. During Tuesday night’s...

Ohio is sending troopers and [scripts/homepage/home.php].5 million to a city that has seen an influx of Haitian migrants

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The governor of Ohio will send law enforcement and millions of dollars in healthcare resources to the city of Springfield as it faces a surge in temporary Haitian migrants that has landed it in the national spotlight. Republican Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine said...

ENTERTAINMENT

Music Review: Belarusian post-punk band Molchat Doma serves up good gloom on moody 'Belaya Polosa'

Belarusian post-punk band Molchat Doma was a world away from Minsk when they finished writing their fourth album “Belaya Polosa.” The view from Los Angeles may have been sunnier, but the brooding trio maintained the dark reflections of challenging times in their homeland for the release. ...

‘Fake heiress’ Anna Sorokin will compete on ‘Dancing With the Stars’ amid deportation battle

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Anna Sorokin, the con artist who was convicted of swindling banks, hotels and friends in 2019 after falsely building a reputation as a wealthy German heiress named Anna Delvey, has found her newest venture: “Dancing With the Stars.” Described as the...

Pro-Palestinian protesters disrupt opening night of Toronto Film Festival

TORONTO (AP) — Pro-Palestinian protesters disrupted an opening night screening at the Toronto International Film Festival, chanting “Stop the genocide!" during opening remarks. At the screening for the David Gordon Green comedy “Nutcrackers" on Thursday evening, four protesters...

U.S. & WORLD NEWS

Pope lands in economic power Singapore after a joyous visit to impoverished, devout East Timor

SINGAPORE (AP) — Pope Francis flew to Singapore on Wednesday for the final leg of his trip through Asia,...

Kamala Harris gives abortion rights advocates the debate answer they've longed for in Philadelphia

WASHINGTON (AP) — When President Joe Biden gave bumbling remarks about abortion on the debate stage this summer,...

The US-Russia battle for influence in Africa plays out in Central African Republic

BANGUI, Central African Republic (AP) — Hours after Russian mercenary leader Yevgeny Prigozhin rebelled against...

Takeaways from AP's report on Russian and U.S. influence in Central African Republic

BANGUI, Central African Republic (AP) — In the wake of Russian mercenary leaderYevgeny Prigozhin’s rebellion,...

New president of UN General Assembly calls for unity to tackle borderless issues

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Cameroon’s former prime minister took over the presidency of the U.N. General Assembly...

Flights grounded at Kenya's main airport as workers protest against Adani deal

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Hundreds of workers at Kenya's main international airport demonstrated on Wednesday...

By Taressa Stovall Special to the NNPA from Thedefendersonline.com

Like an embattled boxer returning to the ring, the question of whether the nation's first Black biracial president will pardon the first Black heavyweight champion for the crime of interracial dating is back for another round.

Media outlets from ABC News to ESPN to the Taiwan News are speculating about the continuing quest of two Republican boxing enthusiasts—New York Rep. Peter King and Arizona Sen. John McCain—and their supporters to reintroduce a congressional resolution urging a pardon for Jack Johnson, who held the heavyweight champion title from 1908 to 1915.

The resolution was first introduced in April, 2009. Two months later, after gaining Senate approval, the Congress sent the President a formal request to pardon a man who is a powerful and still-controversial symbol of the clash of racial, sexual, athletic and political dynamics that permeate America as deeply today as they did in Johnson's heyday.

Three years after beating a White boxer in the "Fight of the Century," on July 4, 1910, Johnson was convicted under the Mann Act, which made it illegal to transport women across state lines for "immoral" purposes, but was often used to punish interracial couples.

As Lee A. Daniels wrote for TheDefendersOnline "once Jack Johnson won the heavyweight title, he was persecuted by no less than the Justice Department for his "unforgivable" relationships with white women until he was falsely charged and convicted of luring white women into prostitution, and stripped of his title." Johnson left the country for several years, returning seven years after the conviction to serve a year and a day in the federal penitentiary at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.

While the Republican senators have recently taken up the cause, some of Johnson's descendants have sought the presidential pardon for more than a decade. It has been written that the 2005 Ken Burns documentary, "Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson," is credited with bringing Johnson's tale—and this cause—to public attention.

President Bush twice refused to act on similar Congressional resolutions.

"It's an injustice that shouldn't fall through the cracks, and it looks like that's exactly what happened here," Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., told ESPN.Go.Com.

Rangel said he plans to discuss the pardon with William Daley, Obama's chief of staff, and Attorney General Eric Holder.

Opinions are peppering the blogosphere. "The pardon seems safe and innocuous enough, at least on the surface," writes Earl Ofari Hutchinson on TheGrio.com

"But there's my mystery as to why Obama remains cautious about Johnson. It's an old racial wrong that was marred with controversy. And, that's always fraught with risk for a president that has had to walk a fine line on racial matters in the White House."

Tim Dahlberg of The Associated Press opined that, "President Barack Obama had the perfect chance to give Johnson a posthumous pardon last July 4, 100 years to the date after his win over Jim Jeffries … [the president] could take care of it all with a stroke of his pen … Why Obama didn't act last year is unclear, particularly since there seems to be little political risk associated with a posthumous pardon. Johnson was a victim of his times, and clearing his name in the history books isn't a notion that is terribly controversial. It's nearly 100 years late. And it can't come soon enough."

Joe Markman wrote in the Los Angeles Times during the 2009 pardoning round that, "The president has largely sought to avoid directly addressing racial issues. And critics add that posthumous pardons—used only twice in presidential history—consume precious time and resources from the president and Justice Department that could instead be focused on wading through thousands of clemency requests for people still living."

What all this macho speculation seems to miss is the poetic justice of a man with a Black father and White mother—whose union would have been illegal in some of these United States not so long before his birth—being pressured to "forgive" a high-profile Black athlete for liking White women.

Nor has anyone mentioned the irony of one uppity Black man being lobbied to grant a pardon to another uppity Black man, one whose achievement was as historic and significant as Obama's own, and who was just as impervious to criticism and other people's rules as the man who currently rules the land.

They miss the most crucial point: the truly urgent matters facing Black Americans right now—from escalating poverty and joblessness to the cradle-to-prison pipeline, to continuing inequities in everything from education to health care to you-name-it. Are those lobbying for Johnson's pardon thinking that it would have the symbolic weight of somehow lessening these injustices or the endless string of suffering they cause?

Are they seeing it as a form of psychological reparations? I believe most of us would much rather have the president focused on these urgent, tangible matters affecting millions of lives and devastating not just Black communities, but our entire nation.

Have they considered that pardoning Jack Johnson for interracial relationships is validating the notion that such unions are inherently so problematic that they require a presidential policy to undo? Are they expressing remorse and shame for the Mann Act?

Is there a single interracial couple in America—or the world today—who feels invested in the passage of this policy by a man who could have been Jack Johnson's son?

Perhaps the greatest irony of all is that the two senators pressuring and criticizing President Obama on this matter have yet to forgive him for having been elected and therefore facing this dilemma in the first place. Their move to force his hand is no less racist than the Mann Act itself.



TaRessa Stovall is Managing Editor of TheDefendersOnline