Wednesday, August 3, 2016

10 Shades of Fucked Up

      Facebook... the wonderful, convenient, frustrating, annoying cyber community where people post whatever nonsense they desire for the world to see. The beautiful thing about it is that it allows you to weed out the people you thought were good apples once they start posting poisonous information. I opened my browser to see what people were up to one day when I saw one of thee most disgusting and offensive posts of the century. Someone who used to be my close friend thought it was a great idea to share this image:
      Instant anger flared from ears and trickled into my throat, oozing its way into my heart. How dare someone call my people “pussies”???? Because I love to have facts to back up my arguments, it took me less than two minutes to disprove this audacious meme. A great article I read is called “Debunking the Imagery of the 'Irish slaves' Meme” by librarian and historian Liam Hogan. He sums up the situation perfectly by explaining: “Their belief is that non-whites can’t move on due to racial inferiority or social pathology. So through false equivalence and erasure, they attempt to remove history as a determinant so that they can claim the current socioeconomic position and mass incarceration of black people in the U.S. is due to racial inferiority.”
      I'm going to be real: I went in on my “friend”. On her post. In front of all her family and friends and acquaintances and people who met her at a party once. I was a bit mean about it, though. I commented something along the lines of her not taking the time to read an informative article before she blindly shares ignorant shit. I posted two links to scholars disproving this outrageous claim and insinuated she wouldn't read them because they just might go against her archaic ideology. I then got a message from a mutual:
      The next day I woke up and she had deleted the post as well as sent me a long text about how hurt she was that I called her stupid. As a friend, she is correct. I shouldn't have name-called and low-blowed. My anger flared from ears and trickled into my throat, oozing its way into my heart. I was acting out of emotion. I decided to educate her instead of degrade her. Here's the lesson...

      In 1619, slaves were brought to the United States to be forced into labor with tobacco and cotton farming. Throughout the 1700s, 6 to 7 million slaves were brought to the U.S. The European settlers in what is now the United States of America would travel to Africa, invade tribes, handcuff men, women, and children, and put them on a boat where they were chained to one another. No showers were available. They had to piss and shit next to each other and eat there too, if they were given food.
             Slaves were considered "property". They had to work out in the sun day-in and day-out, and if they didn't perform their duties to their master's standards, they would be whipped. Bare-backed with their hands tied around a post or tree, they could receive 30 to 100 lashes. It would open the skin, resulting in deep lesions. Women were expected to have sex with their masters and if they resisted, they were whipped.
      Then there's a term called "buck breaking". If a Black male caused trouble, he would be whipped until he was weak and bloody. Then he would be stripped naked and tied bent over a tree. The master would rape him in front of his wife, children, and the whole plantation. This was to show complete dominance and to scare the young boys to not revolt. They could also be strung up and hanged for no reason. They were property. This lasted for 250 years.
      1865: Slavery is abolished. Millions of Black people are released to a new world. (By the way, slave masters were paid reparation money for their lost "property" after slavery was abolished; Black people received no compensation.) They didn't know how to read or write. They could only get jobs as cooks, maids, butlers, or cleaners. White people still terrified black people by killing them for nothing, or for almost nothing, and no white judge or jury in the South would send any white man to jail for killing a black man. Black people accused of crimes were often killed without a trial, by lynching. A new set of laws called the Black Codes emerged to criminalize legal activity for African Americans. Through the enforcement of these laws, acts such as standing in one area of town or walking at night, for example, became the criminal acts of “loitering” or “breaking curfew,” for which African-Americans were imprisoned. Jim Crow laws came into effect around this era. Black people weren't allowed in white schools. Similarly, "Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857) was a landmark decision of the US Supreme Court in which the Court held that the US Constitution was not meant to include American citizenship for black people, regardless of whether they were enslaved or free, and so the rights and privileges that the Constitution confers upon American citizens could not apply to them. (John E. Nowak & Ronald D. Rotunda)"
      "'Virtually from the moment the Civil War ended,' writes historian Eric Foner, 'the search began for legal means of subordinating a volatile black population that regarded economic independence as a corollary of freedom and the old labor discipline as a badge of slavery.' Hence, the Reconstruction-era legislation known as the Black Codes was born. In Mississippi, being Black and not having written proof that you were employed was now illegal. In South Carolina, being Black and having a job other than servant or farmer was illegal unless you paid an annual tax of up to $100. Being in a traveling circus or an acting troupe? Illegal. In Virginia, asking for pay beyond the 'usual and common wages given to other laborers' was illegal. In some areas, fishing and hunting, or even owning guns, were now banned, as these activities could lessen Black dependence on White people for employment. And who would enforce these new laws? The police. In some cases, Foner writes, these newly deputized men wore their old Confederate uniforms as they patrolled Black homesteads, seizing weapons and arresting people for labor violations. (Josie Duffy Rice, Vanity Fair: "Abolition's Promise", September 2020)"
      "Remember the grandfather's clause of the early 1900s? Black people had to take literacy tests to vote, but the problem was: some white people couldn't read. So they were like, 'Man... we're now disenfranchising white people. We gotta fix that. Here's what we'll do: we'll create the grandfather's clause. If your grandparents could vote, now you can vote... Black people and white people, ya'll were getting too equal.' (Emmanuel Acho, The Oprah Conversation: Episode 1 Uncomfortable Conversations With a Black Man: Part 1, 2020)" This is a crucial historical aspect, because as long as eligible United States citizens were voting to keep violent racists (mostly men) in positions of power and authority, Black bodies would continue to be seen as lesser than and, consequently, disposable. November 2, 1920, a Black man attempted to vote in Florida and the KKK responded with a rampage that led to the exile or death of every Black person that lived there; The Ocoee Massacre.
      Now I want to tell you a story about a 14-year-old boy named Emmett Till. He was visiting family in Mississippi summer 1955. He supposedly whistled at a white woman so her husband and brother-in-law kidnapped him and beat and mutilated him before shooting him and sinking his body in the Tallahatchie River. He was found 3 days later. On September 23, the all-white jury acquitted both defendants after a 67-minute deliberation. Due to the double jeopardy procedural defense, after they were let off, the two accusers admitted to killing young Emmett. His mother wanted an open-casket funeral to show the true depths of racism in America.

      The KKK emerged as slavery was abolished, which consisted of previous slave-owners and citizens who believed Black people were lesser than. This organization believes whites are the dominant race and all others should leave or should be killed, even though they either brought us here or took over our land. It has risen and fallen over the years but in the 50's they were very prominent in most southern cities. Caucasian men in hoods would take Black people and hang them for no other reason than for being Black. Police would not intervene or stop the violence from ensuing; some police officers were members of the KKK. 
      The 1960s is when the Civil Rights Movement emerged. Amazing and brave advocates like Malcolm X, Martin Luther King Jr, Rosa Parks, Dick Gregory, Angela Davis, Nina Simone, and so many others wanted to end the lynchings, systematic disenfranchisement, and segregation.
      The Black Panthers, an all-African-American organization, was created to help Black people learn how to defend themselves, get an education, acquire food, have community clinics, and embrace their culture, instead of being ashamed of it like white society tried to drill into their psyche for so long. Federal Bureau of Investigation Director J. Edgar Hoover called the party "the greatest threat to the internal security of the country", and he supervised an extensive program (COINTELPRO) of surveillance, infiltration, perjury, police harassment, and many other tactics designed to undermine Panther leadership, incriminate party members, discredit and criminalize the Party, and drain the organization of resources and manpower. It was disbanded by the U.S. government in 1982.
      March 1991: Rodney King and a couple friends were drunk driving in California and led the police on a high-speed chase. When he finally stopped, King got out of the car. He was tased twice. He tried to run and was tased again. (He was unarmed, by the way.) He was hit with batons 33 times and kicked 6 times. All four officers were charged with excessive force and all four were found not guilty; despite having it on tape.
      "But he was breaking the law!" Yeah, so was James Holmes in 2012 when he murdered 12 people and injured 70 in Aurora, Colorado. He was escorted out of the theater in a bulletproof vest.
      Now for the 21st century: 12-year-old Tamir Rice was playing with his toy gun in 2014 when he was shot and killed by a police officer. It was on video. The police officer was found not guilty of any charges.

      2014, New York: Eric Garner was standing on the street when an officer approaches him and accused him of selling cigarettes on the street. Eric tells them: "I'm tired of you harassing me all the time. Leave me alone." He is then placed in a chokehold and killed on the spot. He was unarmed. His hands are open and visible. His last words were, "I can't breathe." IT IS ON VIDEO.
There are so so many more examples I can use:
Sandra Bland (28)
Oscar Grant (22)
Aiyana Stanley-Jones (7)
Michael Brown (18)
Walter Scott (50)
Trayvon Martin (17)
Tanisha Anderson (37)
Freddie Gray (25)
Alton Sterling (57)
Philando Castile (32)
Yvette Smith (47)
Laquan McDonald (17)
Akai Gurley (28)
Jerame Reid (36)
Natasha McKenna (37)
Ahmaud Arbery (25)
Botham Jean (26)
Atatiana Jefferson (28)
Amadou Diallo (23)
Terence Crutcher (40)
George Stinney Jr. (14)
Alton Sterling (37)
Bettie Jones (55) 
Natasha McKenna (37)
      These victims were doing absolutely nothing to deserve to be shot and killed. They were all unarmed. Not only were they needlessly murdered but their Caucasian perpetrators got away with it and were not punished. "The presumption of innocence is a right afforded to all Americans, but not generally Black and brown people," says Linsi Griffin. Due process is a luxury in this country; white people have historically been allowed to be the judge, jury, and executioner when it comes to altercations with people of color.
      This is what people mean when they say Black Lives Matter. For 400 years, African-Americans have been trying to prove their worth and be treated equal. A system that was not designed for you cannot protect you. I saw someone say, "Black people have the same opportunities as everyone else," but. they. don't. Black men have been imprisoned since they were let free, creating many single-mother households. The prison population consists of 67% people of color despite them only being 37% of the U.S. population (benjerry.com). When they're working and trying to support their kids, their kids run the street and fall prey to gang affiliations; the people who show them a means of survival tend to be drug dealers, pimps, and criminals. It's been a pattern for years: not being shown the value of education and only being seen as athletes or musicians. These events are intentional. It is the product of years and years of being told you are not worthy; your life is not valued. You can be hung/raped/shot and there will be no repercussions for it. I can Google "Black man lynched" and have pages of images.
      "[There was a] belief among White Chicagoans that the first Great Migration to the city was 'the worst calamity that had struck the city since the Great Fire' of 1871, which took hundreds of lives and burned out the heart of the city. The implications of this equation are haunting. Once a people become a 'calamity', all means of dealing with them are acceptable... The logic here is obvious. To plunder a people of everything, you must plunder their humanity first... And so it is with the children of the enslaved, regarded, to this very day, as a Great Fire consuming White maidenhood, immolating morality, and otherwise reducing great civilizations to ashes. (Ta-Nehisi Coates, Vanity Fair: "The Pyromancer's Dream", September 2020)" It's why 600 African-American men were coerced to participate in the Tuskegee Syphilis Study without informed consent. It's why the Tulsa race massacre ensued; extinguishing any trace of Black Wall Street. It's why the city of New York had zero hesitation to enforce eminent domain when demolishing Seneca Village. 
      Even though I am light-skinned and haven't faced the same hardships as my darker pigmented brothers and sisters, that doesn't mean I won't spend every ounce of energy I have to defend, protect, and advocate for them.
      "If you stick a knife nine inches into my back and pull it out three inches, that is not progress. Even if you pull it all the way out, that is not progress. Progress is healing the wound, and America hasn't even begun to pull out the knife." —Malcolm X

Tuesday, March 22, 2016

An UnAmerican Essay

Do We Keep Lincoln’s Promise to Our Veterans and Their Families?
            Realistically, the United States of America has not kept Lincoln’s promise he made during his second inaugural address on Saturday, March 4, 1865. The United States hasn’t been in a justified war since World War II when it was antagonized into participation by the Pearl Harbor bombing on December 7, 1941. Not only did we have no true reason to invade Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan, but we have not upheld President Lincoln’s assurance “to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow, and his orphan.”
            I will begin with a brief analysis on the Vietnam War. The United States of America deployed soldiers to North Vietnam in order to prevent the spread of communism. This era is, in my opinion, when the United States took upon themselves to become the “world police”. We invaded North Vietnam unjustly and caused unnecessary casualties and injuries. The only reason the American people realized this was a needless cause was due to the unprecedented media coverage of monks self-emolliating, young children running ablaze from a napalm bomb, and wounded soldiers dying in their fellow brothers’ arms. All of this can be credited to the U.S. government thinking they needed to intervene in a situation that had nothing to do with them. And for what? We lost the war. History.com reveals, “More than 3 million people, including 58,000 Americans, were killed in the conflict.” North Vietnam still has a communist government today, which shows we really socked it to them back in the day. Furthermore, when U.S. soldiers returned home, they were shown disdain. Even though they fought in a battle they didn’t believe in and watched their friends die in a muddy jungle, they were the ones who were treated like trash. History.com reports: “According to a survey by the Veterans Administration, some 500,000 of the 3 million troops who served in Vietnam suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, and rates of divorce, suicide, alcoholism and drug addiction were markedly higher among veterans.” Is this taking care of our vets? Is this helping the widows and children who lost a parent in the war? Nixon was an idiot, the president at the time, and we fell right along with Saigon.
            There’s an article by CNN titled “September 11th Hijackers Fast Facts” that discloses the 19 assailants were from Saudi Arabia, Egypt, United Arab Emirates, and Lebanon. The Encyclopedia Britannica Online explains, “Afghanistan War, Afghanistan: anti-Taliban fighters international conflict in Afghanistan beginning in 2001 that was triggered by the September 11 attacks and consisted of three phases. The first phase—toppling the Taliban (the ultraconservative political and religious faction that ruled Afghanistan and provided sanctuary for al-Qaeda, perpetrators of the September 11 attacks)—was brief, lasting just two months...” None of the people involved were from Afghanistan or Iraq, but that’s where we ended up. Thanks, Bush! The first sentence of a Huffington Post article reads: “Ten years after the U.S. first invaded Iraq, returning troops are filing for disability benefits, seeking education and employment assistance and struggling with combat trauma.” It continues on to say, “While the VA is working to improve its mental health services, suicide and PTSD rates remain alarmingly high. About 22 veterans committed suicide each day in 2010 and 228,875 troops who served in Iraq or Afghanistan returned with PTSD as of 2012, a crippling condition some experts say close relatives can contract.” Similarly, a late September 2015 Washington Post piece tells, “Despite promises for widespread reform, nearly 900,000 military veterans have pending applications to access health care from the Department of Veterans Affairs…” Need I say more?
            In conclusion, when President Lincoln promised “to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow, and his orphan”, he was mostly referring to the Civil War era, because since then, the United States of America has not supported our vets the way we should.
Works Cited
  • "September 11th Hijackers Fast Facts." CNN.com. 24 Aug. 2015. Web. 22 Mar. 2016.
  • Goldberg, Eleanor. "5 Growing Problems Iraq, Afghanistan Wars Veterans Face (And What’s Being Done)." HuffingtonPost.com. 9 Sept. 2013. Web. 22 Mar. 2016.
  • "Vietnam War History." History.com. A&E Networks, 2009. Web. 22 Mar. 2016.
  • Wax-Thibodeaux, Emily. "Nearly 1 Million Veterans Have Pending Applications for Health Care at VA — and a Third May Already Be Dead." WashingtonPost.com. 3 Sept. 2015. Web. 22 Mar. 2016.
  • "Vietnam War." Wikipedia.org. 2016. Web. 22 Mar. 2016.
  • Witte, Griff. "Afghanistan War." Encyclopedia Britannica Online. 2016. Web. 22 Mar. 2016.

Tuesday, March 15, 2016

Ashamed Modernist Activist

            I just finished the first book I've read in a long time and I'm fired up. I would get weird looks when people read the cover, and felt their laser eyes burn tiny holes into my skin. They expected an explanation. They would say it when singing along to an explicit rap song, of course, even though it's socially unsanctioned; but the autobiography of comedian and political activist Dick Gregory would invoke discomfort and curiosity in anyone who glanced at it. In white cursive, it clearly reads: nigger.
            I was standing in my brother's kitchen in Fort Collins, Colorado, talking to his roommate when I saw the roommate's girlfriend giggle and nudge her brother. I continued attentively talking to my friend, though it didn't stop me from noticing her pointing at my book sitting on the kitchen table. I felt the need to educate these white people, since they obviously hadn't ever encountered a radical Black person. I spoke up, “That book is about a comedian and political activist, Dick Gregory. The back is funny. ” I read it out loud to them. 
Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. I understand there are a good many Southerners in the room tonight. I know the South very well. I spent twenty years there one night...
Last time I was down South I walked into this restaurant, and this white waitress came up to me and said: “We don't serve colored people here.”
I said: “That's all right, I don't eat colored people. Bring me a whole fried chicken.”
About that time these three cousins come in, you know the ones I mean, Klu, Kluck, and Klan, and they say: “Boy, we're givin' you fair warnin'. Anything you do to that chicken, we're gonna do to you.” About then the waitress brought me my chicken. 
“Remember, boy, anything you do to that chicken, we're gonna do to you.” So I put down my knife and fork, and I picked up that chicken, and I kissed it.
            I met them halfway. If you're going laugh at my culture, at least laugh at content that's genuinely humorous and not at the dismal plight African-Americans have been enduring since we were dragged to this continent 400 plus years ago. I told my brother about how upset I was at his roommate's girlfriend and her brother chuckling at my book cover. 
            “That's nothing to get mad about,” he negated. I just stared at him in confusion. I know we're only a quarter Black and I know our skin is only tanned so we are often presumed to be Mexican (which we are also a quarter of) and I know that we can't know the true struggle that dark-skinned Black people face. These facts shouldn't exclude us from feeling baffled when two ignorant people who live in the year 2016 still find it acceptable to jeer at a book's cover without inquiring about its contents. 
            I haven't read something that has provoked such a response in me for a long time. Maybe it's not even entirely the book that's stirring me. Maybe I've learned a thing or two since my last read. Maybe the world has shown its true colors and I have a glimpse of an underbelly I didn't want to see. When there are people in the United States of America in 2016 who support Donald J. Trump, I identify now more than ever with Mr. Dick Gregory. I though his marching in Selma, Jackson, Washington, and Birmingham would help civil rights divert Americans from racism, but it seemed to only encourage them to masquerade it. At one point in his book, he explains: “I never learned hate at home, or shame. I had to go to school for that.”
            Similarly, one learns this sort of intolerance from media. When Fox News declares Donald Trump as being honest, this distorts reality. If I learned anything from my logic class, it's that one persons truth isn't always another's truth. When Donald Trump declares an ‘extremely credible source’ has told him that Barack Obama’s birth certificate is a fraud, yeah, perhaps someone did make that call, which would make it true. But the content of what he says not only ignorant, but it's also ridiculous. It's literally a constitutional rule that immigrants don't qualify for presidency, yet we made an exception for someone a large majority of the country (though obviously not thee largest ;] ) doesn't like? Yeah... keep dreaming, Mr. Drumpf.
            I read an article in USA Today a couple weeks ago with a headline reading:
No Donald, We Black Folks Don't Love You
by David Person
            Trump blew it when Jake Tapper of CNN tossed him the biggest, fattest of all softball questions on Sunday’s State of the Union broadcast: “Will you unequivocally condemn David Duke and say that you don’t want his vote or that of other white supremacists in this election?”
"I have to look at the group,” Trump replied. “I mean, I don't know what group you're talking about. You wouldn't want me to condemn a group that I know nothing about.”
            Repeating Duke’s name back to Tapper, he went on to claim he knew nothing about the former KKK leader or white supremacists, a strange stance since he had curtly disavowed Duke after the Thursday night GOP debate and again Friday at a news conference with New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie.
            Later on Sunday, apparently attempting damage-control, Trump took to Twitter to echo his earlier disavowals of Duke. By Monday, he was playing the technology card, blaming his strikeout on a bad earpiece.
            Whatever.
            Trump at one time was very clear about who Duke was and what Duke believed. “This is not company I wish to keep,” he said of Duke in 2000.The whole sequence stretches credulity.
            One problem is that Trump seems to believe that celebrity and ratings will equate to votes. And that could be the case with that white, right-wing voting bloc looking for alternatives to the Republican status quo.
            But surely he knows he lost Democrats long ago, thanks to his birther antics during the last campaign cycle. And African Americans make up a significant percentage of the Democratic vote — 23% in 2014, according to House exit polls. The best current estimates are that black support for Trump is as low as 4% and no higher than 12%.
Many African Americans apparently enjoyed Trump, the brash, tough TV boss on The Apprentice. But we black folks know the difference between a reality show and a presidential campaign.
            So here I am, a couple hours after I finished my book and I'm just plotting how I can revolutionize the U.S. of A. from a tiny, conservative town in northeastern Colorado whose population literally doesn't exceed 250 people. I'm 22. I'm going to graduate in May with an associates degree in psychology. What the hell do I know about civil rights protesting and large-city racial inequality? Furthermore, how do I find a national platform like Dick Gregory did back in the 1960's? I'm stewing and strategizing on how I make a difference in the world and make people more tolerant and open-minded... just like Mr. Gregory did 50 years ago. I'm so glad times have changed.
Works Cited
• Gregory, Dick, and Robert Lipsyte. Nigger: An Autobiography. New York: Washington Square, Pub. by Pocket, 1986. Print.
• Person, David. "Message to Donald, Blacks Don't Love You." USA Today. 29 Feb. 2016. Web. 15 Mar. 2016.

Wednesday, February 24, 2016

To Pimp A System

Happy Black History Month ❤

Neil deGrasse Tyson the Great

Happy Black History Month ❤

Neil deGrasse Tyson (born October 5, 1958)
Early Life
One of America's best-known scientists, astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson has spent much of his career sharing his knowledge with others. He has a great talent for presenting complex concepts in a clear and accessible manner.
Tyson grew up in New York City. When he was nine, he took a trip to the Hayden Planetarium at the Museum of Natural History where he got his first taste of star-gazing. Tyson later took classes at the Planetarium and got his own telescope. As a teenager, he would watch the skies from the roof of his apartment building.
An excellent student, Tyson graduated from the Bronx High School of Science in 1976. He then earned a bachelor's degree in Physics from Harvard University and a doctorate in astrophysics from Columbia University in 1991. After spending a few years doing post-doctorate work at Princeton University, Tyson landed a job at the Hayden Planetarium.
Career Highlights
Tyson eventually became the director of the Planetarium and worked on an extensive renovation of the facility, from assisting with its design to helping raise the necessary funds. This $210 million project was completed in 2000, and the revamped site offered visitors a cutting-edge look at astronomy. One of Tyson's most controversial decisions at the time was the removal of Pluto from the display of planets. He classified Pluto as a dwarf planet, which invoked a strong response from some visitors. While some asked for the planet Pluto back, the International Astronomical Union followed Tyson's lead in 2006. The organization officially labeled Pluto as a dwarf planet.
In addition to his work at the planetarium, Tyson has found other ways of improving the nation's scientific literacy. "One of my goals is to bring the universe down to Earth in a way that further excites the audience to want more," he once said. To this end, Tyson has written several books for the general public, including Death by Black Hole and Other Cosmic Quandaries and The Pluto Files: The Rise and Fall of America's Favorite Planet. He has taken his message to the airwaves as well, serving as the host of PBS's NOVA ScienceNow documentary series from 2006 to 2011. In addition to breaking down barriers between scientists and the general public, Tyson has brought diversity to astrophysics. He is one of the few African Americans in his field.
Tyson has also served as a presidential advisor. In 2001, President George W. Bush appointed him to a commission on the future of the aerospace industry. He also served another commission three years later to examine U.S. policy on space exploration.
These days, Tyson is one of the most in-demand science experts. He gives talks across the country and is a media favorite whenever there is an important science issue making news. Tyson is known for his ability to make difficult concepts accessible to every audience, his oratory skills and his sense of humor, which has led to appearances on such shows as Real Time with Bill Maher, The Colbert Report and The Daily Show. He also hosts his own podcast StarTalk Radio, a science-based talk show that features comedic co-hosts.
In 2014, Tyson hosted and was the executive editor of a 13-episode television series entitled COSMOS: A Space-Time Odyssey. The series reboots the classic science documentary, Cosmos. The original version featured Carl Sagan as host and provided a general audience with a greater understanding of the origin of life and our universe.

“The good thing about science is that it's true whether or not you believe in it.” 

“For me, I am driven by two main philosophies: know more today about the world than I knew yesterday and lessen the suffering of others. You'd be surprised how far that gets you.” 

Source: Biography.com

The Tuskegee Syphilis Study Timeline


The Study Begins

In 1932, the Public Health Service, working with the Tuskegee Institute, began a study to record the natural history of syphilis in hopes of justifying treatment programs for blacks. It was called the "Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male."
The study initially involved 600 black men – 399 with syphilis, 201 who did not have the disease. The study was conducted without the benefit of patients' informed consent. Researchers told the men they were being treated for "bad blood," a local term used to describe several ailments, including syphilis, anemia, and fatigue. In truth, they did not receive the proper treatment needed to cure their illness. In exchange for taking part in the study, the men received free medical exams, free meals, and burial insurance. Although originally projected to last 6 months, the study actually went on for 40 years.
Doctor giving man a shot

What Went Wrong?

In July 1972, an Associated Press story about the Tuskegee Study caused a public outcry that led the Assistant Secretary for Health and Scientific Affairs to appoint an Ad Hoc Advisory Panel to review the study. The panel had nine members from the fields of medicine, law, religion, labor, education, health administration, and public affairs.
The panel found that the men had agreed freely to be examined and treated. However, there was no evidence that researchers had informed them of the study or its real purpose. In fact, the men had been misled and had not been given all the facts required to provide informed consent.
The men were never given adequate treatment for their disease. Even when penicillin became the drug of choice for syphilis in 1947, researchers did not offer it to the subjects. The advisory panel found nothing to show that subjects were ever given the choice of quitting the study, even when this new, highly effective treatment became widely used.
man walking down a dirt road

The Study Ends and Reparation Begins

The advisory panel concluded that the Tuskegee Study was "ethically unjustified"--the knowledge gained was sparse when compared with the risks the study posed for its subjects. In October 1972, the panel advised stopping the study at once. A month later, the Assistant Secretary for Health and Scientific Affairs announced the end of the Tuskegee Study.
In the summer of 1973, a class-action lawsuit was filed on behalf of the study participants and their families. In 1974, a $10 million out-of-court settlement was reached. As part of the settlement, the U.S. government promised to give lifetime medical benefits and burial services to all living participants. The Tuskegee Health Benefit Program (THBP) was established to provide these services. In 1975, wives, widows and offspring were added to the program. In 1995, the program was expanded to include health as well as medical benefits. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was given responsibility for the program, where it remains today in the National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention. The last study participant died in January 2004. The last widow receiving THBP benefits died in January 2009. There are 12 offspring currently receiving medical and health benefits.
Source: CDC.gov

The Queens of Sing

Happy Black History Month ❤

Whitney Elizabeth Houston (August 9, 1963 – February 11, 2012)

• Houston's rendition of "The Star Spangled Banner," performed by her at Super Bowl XXV in 1991, became certified platinum, and it raised money for the victims of 9/11.

• The Preacher's Wife Original Soundtrack Album is the best-selling Gospel album of all time, with sales of over three million copies in the United States and six million copies worldwide.

• When the fourth single "Where Do Broken Hearts Go" from her second album, Whitney, reached the top of the Billboard Hot 100 Singles chart on April 23, 1988, Houston became the first female artist to achieve four No. 1 singles from one album.

• "I Will Always Love You" topped the Hot 100 for fourteen consecutive weeks from November 28, 1992 to February 27, 1993, making it the longest-running number one single ever by a female solo artist and from a soundtrack album.

• Houston became the first woman to place nine albums in the top 100 of the Billboard 200 chart at the same time, the issue dated March 17, 2012.

• "I Will Always Love You" topped the Hot 100 Single Sales chart for fourteen weeks, a record by a female artist, which she also shares with Mariah Carey. 


Mariah Carey (March 27, 1969) 

• Carey has sold more than 200 million albums, singles and videos worldwide, making her the best-selling female artist of all time. 

• Her voice has a five-octave vocal range.

• Has had 18 No. 1 hits, the most of any solo artist on Billboard's Hot 100 charts.

• Her song with Boyz II Men "One Sweet Day" holds the record for being the longest running number one song for being the longest running number one song in history after spending 16 weeks on the Billboard 100.

• She is the most successful selling female artist in music history and is the only female artist to have straight #1 singles and albums.

• With 18 Billboard Hot 100 chart-toppers, Mariah holds the record for the most No. 1s by a female artist • Mariah has a host of awards including 5 Grammy Awards, 18 World Music Awards, 10 American Music Awards, 32 Billboard Music Awards, and a star in the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Sources:

Wikipedia.org

CNN.com

Boomsbeat.com

Monday, February 15, 2016

About M.J. Jackson

Happy Black History Month ❤


Michael Joseph Jackson (August 29, 1958 – June 25, 2009) 


• Biggest Selling Album Of All Time - Guiness Book Of World Records: Michael Jackson's "Thriller" Album is the biggest selling album of all time, with over 50 million copies sold worldwide. Thriller is also the biggest selling U.S album with sales of 25 million copies.

• Most Grammy Awards - Guiness Book Of World Records: Michael won a record breaking 8 Grammy Awards in 1984, more than any other artist in one year.

• Greatest Audience - Guiness Book Of World Records: The highest-ever viewership was 133.4 million viewers watching the NBC transmission of Super Bowl XXVII on June 31, 1993. Michael was spotlighted during the half-time performance. 

• Billboard "Hot 100" Singles Chart: Most #1 Hits by Male Artist (13) 

• #1 On Charts: In 1983 Michael became the first artist to simultaneously hold the number one spots on Billboard's rock albums and rock singles charts, as well as the R&B albums and singles charts. 

• First Video: Michael Jackson was the first Black artist to have a video aired on MTV

 • Billboard Charts: Michael Jackson is the first person in the 37 year history of the chart to enter at # 1, with his single "You Are Not Alone". 

• Jackson was the first artist to chart seven Top 10 singles from one album (Thriller). 


• Jackson (aged 11 years, 5 months, and 2 days) is the youngest vocalist ever to top the Hot 100. As part of the Jackson 5, he topped the charts with "I Want You Back" on the week of January 31, 1970.

• With "Thriller"'s "Billie Jean", Jackson became the first to simultaneously have the number one album and number one single on Billboard's pop and R&B charts.

• Jackson holds the record of Longest Span of US top 40 singles with a span of 42 years and six months. He first charted on the Hot 100 with "Got to Be There" on November 6, 1971 and the last hit with "Love Never Felt So Good" on May 21, 2014. 


Sources:
www.allmichaeljackson.com

www.wikipedia.org

About Instagram Captions


Happy Black History Month ❤

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