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Supreme Court to rehear case over Louisiana's second majority-Black district
Supreme Court to rehear case over Louisiana's second majority-Black district

Washington Post

timea day ago

  • Politics
  • Washington Post

Supreme Court to rehear case over Louisiana's second majority-Black district

The Supreme Court on Friday put off deciding whether to uphold a Louisiana map that added a second majority-Black congressional district in the state, saying it would rehear the case in its next term. States must thread a needle when drawing electoral districts. The landmark Voting Rights Act allows states to consider race as a means to redress discriminatory electoral practices. But maps that are explicitly based on race violate the 14th Amendment's Equal Protection Clause, which requires all people to be treated equally.

‘Barely hanging on' Joy Reid's damning assessment of Democrats: ‘Give me Jasmine Crockett'
‘Barely hanging on' Joy Reid's damning assessment of Democrats: ‘Give me Jasmine Crockett'

The Independent

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • The Independent

‘Barely hanging on' Joy Reid's damning assessment of Democrats: ‘Give me Jasmine Crockett'

Former MSNBC host Joy Reid appeared on The Breakfast Club on Tuesday, saying that while she has been a lifelong Democrat, she's 'barely hanging on.' Reid defended those, such as former Joe Biden-era White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre, who have departed from the party. Discussing her departure from MSNBC following the February cancellation of her show and her lack of faith in the current Democratic Party, the former host of ReidOut said Democrats have become too worried about disappointing party leaders rather than elevating members like Texas Rep. Jasmine Crockett to effectively take on the 'fascism' of President Donald Trump. 'I've been a Democrat since I was old enough to vote, but I'm barely hanging on, honestly, because at this point the party is not bigger than the future of my kids,' Reid said. 'I have a daughter and two sons that have to live in this country as Black people. And fascism don't work for me, you know?' she added. 'And I'm not willing to cede the country to Trumpism and MAGA simply because I'm clinging to this party.' Reid criticized those blasting Jean-Pierre for leaving the party, saying, 'I'm mad at that because … at this point … who cares what the party label is? Give me an effective fighter.' She went on to argue that progressives such as Crockett are the most effective fighters in today's Democratic Party, but noted that the party's mainstream is neglecting them. Crockett ended her bid this week to become the ranking member on the House Oversight Committee. 'It was clear by the numbers that my style of leadership is not exactly what they were looking for, and so I didn't think that it was fair for me to then push forward and try to rebuke that,' Crockett told reporters. During her Breakfast Club appearance on Tuesday, Reid said Democrats should prioritize effective leadership above everything else. 'If Jasmine Crockett is the most effective fighter, give me Jasmine Crockett,' she said. 'And I really don't care what you have to move around or who you have to disappoint in order to give me her. Just give me her because we need a leader.' Reid suggested that it's possible that Democrats are too 'orderly' to put up a proper opposition to the Trump administration. 'They prioritize whose turn it is. Like, Democrats are very orderly,' Reid said. 'They're almost too orderly for fascism. In fascism, you can't be orderly, because the other side is messy.'

Census Bureau: Baltimore gains Hispanic residents, continues to lose Black population
Census Bureau: Baltimore gains Hispanic residents, continues to lose Black population

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Census Bureau: Baltimore gains Hispanic residents, continues to lose Black population

Baltimore's slight population increase last year was driven by Hispanic residents, whose population increased by about 2,200, according to Census Bureau estimates released Thursday. The city is also estimated to have overall gained 700 Asian residents and about 500 people of two or more races. Baltimore's Black population continued its yearslong decline, however. While Baltimore gained 754 residents overall from July 2023 to July 2024, the number of Black residents fell by 0.8%, representing a 5% decline since the 2020 census. Prince George's, Talbot County and Worcester counties were the only other Maryland jurisdictions whose Black populations decreased. Baltimore's white population was virtually unchanged from last year, declining by 63 people, though it's down 4.4% since the 2020 census. Baltimore's overall population of 568,271 residents is down almost 3% since 2020. The latest estimates say the city is 59% Black, 27% white, 9% Hispanic, 3% Asian and 2% people of two or more races. The decrease in the Black population in Baltimore City is likely due to people leaving the city for suburban areas and natural population decline, or more deaths than births, said Michael Bader, the Director of the 21st Century Cities Initiative at Johns Hopkins University. Baltimore County's number of Black residents increased by 1.4% between July 2023 and July 2024. The county overall had the Baltimore region's largest increase in the proportion of residents who are nonwhite or Hispanic during that period, rising 0.87 percentage points to 49.5%. Conversely, Baltimore City had the state's smallest increase in the share of its population that's nonwhite, inching up 0.05 percentage points to 73.5%. Bader said that the increase in the Hispanic population in Baltimore City is likely due to immigration. 'People tend to move when they're younger, and when they're younger, they are also at ages where they have children,' Bader said. 'The combination of folks moving to economic centers in Baltimore and then having kids is probably what's leading to the growth of the Hispanic population in Baltimore.' With a median age of 39.7, Maryland skews older than the U.S. as a whole, which had a median age of 39.1, a record high. The country's median age has increased, University of Maryland Public Health Assistant Professor Hector Alcala said, due to increased improved life expectancies and people having fewer children. Bader said that many young people are unable to move to or stay in Maryland due to high costs of living and the state's housing shortage, which also may have contributed to the state's high median age. Baltimore City had the second-youngest median age of Maryland's 24 jurisdictions, at 36.5 years old. Most of the oldest counties by median age were on the Eastern Shore, with Worcester and Talbot County topping the list with a median age of more than 50 years. Children, under 18 years old, still outnumber older adults in Maryland, 65 years or older, despite the opposite being true for 11 states in 2024. Talbot County has the highest share of their population being older adults of any county, at 30.6%. Statewide, around 17.6% of the population was over 65. Most counties with high median ages were in Maryland's Eastern Shore, which Johns Hopkins Professor Odis Johnson says is because these areas are typically more affordable for people on retirement salaries. Trump administration policies are likely to affect the size and makeup of Maryland populations in the next few years, Bader and Alcala said. The Hispanic population, Bader said, may decrease due to immigration laws and ICE crackdowns making even authorized immigrants choosing not to move to Maryland. 'For a long time, the only reason that the state has not lost a whole bunch of people has been because of migration from people born outside the United States to the state,' Bader said. 'That's going to be a problem … the economic consequences of the policies of the federal government are going to hit Maryland pretty hard.' Alcala pointed to the cuts to the federal workforce, which he predicts will lead residents of counties surrounding Washington, D.C., and Baltimore to move to more affordable areas or leave altogether. Have a news tip? Contact Katharine Wilson at kwilson@

‘A dog cemetery would not be treated like this': the fight to preserve Black burial grounds in the US
‘A dog cemetery would not be treated like this': the fight to preserve Black burial grounds in the US

The Guardian

time3 days ago

  • General
  • The Guardian

‘A dog cemetery would not be treated like this': the fight to preserve Black burial grounds in the US

A large puddle of water and thickets of weeds cover a vacant lot in Bethesda, Maryland. A towering apartment complex overshadows the cracked asphalt, but Marsha Coleman-Adebayo is most concerned about what – and who – lies beneath. The nearly two-acre site in the Washington DC suburb covers the historic Moses Macedonia African Cemetery and another burial ground for enslaved people, with the oldest portion dating back to at least the mid-1800s. Hundreds of bones found there may be the remains of enslaved people and their descendants, while more bodies may lie under the parking lot of the Westwood Tower apartment complex. But like many resting grounds for Black Americans, its preservation is jeopardized by loss of its original community through gentrification and, now, encroaching development. And despite a recent federal law to protect Black cemeteries, they are vulnerable to neglect and eventual destruction. Coleman-Adebayo is the president of the Bethesda African Cemetery Coalition (Bacc), which since 2016 has aimed to save the site from further development and return the land to the descendant community. It plans to eventually erect a museum or monument there. She first learned about the cemetery a year earlier, when she attended a joint county park and planning commission meeting where she met a longtime resident who recalled playing in the long-forgotten cemetery as a child. Every week, Bacc members stage a protest at the McDonald's parking lot next door. Separated into several parcels, the portion of the burial ground that was leveled for Westwood Tower's parking lot in the 1960s is now owned by the housing opportunities commission of Montgomery county (HOC), which provides low-income housing. Another part of the cemetery, owned by the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission, is overgrown with vegetation. A third section, held by the self-storage developer 1784 Capital Holdings, has incited ongoing Bacc protests since construction for a storage facility began in 2017. The burial site has turned into a legal battleground as the coalition has spent several years in court fighting the HOC. The dispute at Moses Macedonia African Cemetery serves to 'open up the conversation about what a major problem that African Americans are having at these sites,' said Michael Blakey, a National Endowment for the Humanities professor of anthropology, Africana studies and American studies at the College of William and Mary. For over a decade beginning in the 1990s, Blakey directed the African Burial Ground Project at Howard University, where he and a team of researchers analyzed more than 400 skeletal remains of enslaved and free Africans interred in New York City in the 17th and 18th centuries. His work was guided by the descendants' questions about their ancestors. 'Even when they assert their rights as a descendent community, it's a wrestling match with bureaucracies, sometimes even anthropologists,' he said. Burial rites reveal a society's values in life and in death, Blakey added. 'The desecration of Black cemeteries is a reflection, whether in slavery or in current development projects … of the lack of empathy with African Americans as complete human beings,' he said. 'And African Americans, from slavery to the present, have defended those cemeteries with sure knowledge of their full humanity and an insistence upon their dignity.' The Moses Macedonia African Cemetery in Bethesda; the Evergreen Cemetery in St Petersburg, Florida; and the Buena Vista plantation's burial ground in St James parish, Louisiana, demonstrate ongoing fights to preserve Black burial sites in the face of development throughout the US. Amid the scant oversight of Black cemeteries, a growing movement of descendant communities and their allies are protecting the grounds by documenting their existence, protesting development and performing genealogical research on the buried. On a rainy May evening, Coleman-Adebayo held a large white sign listing violations of what she considers a sacred space. 'Even a dog cemetery would not be treated like this,' she told the Guardian. As an Environmental Protection Agency whistleblower who sounded the alarm on US vanadium mining in South Africa in the 1990s, Coleman-Adebayo has a long history of activism. She also helped spearhead the No Fear Act, which discourages retaliation and discrimination in the federal government. Bacc contends that, during a 2020 excavation, a dump truck took earth from the cemetery to a landfill. Members followed and say they found 30 funerary objects including pieces of cloth, a hair pick and a tombstone. They have also demanded the return of 200 bones held by a consulting firm in a Gainesville, Virginia, warehouse to no avail. In August, a circuit court will hear a case in which Bacc and several other plaintiffs are requesting $40m in compensation from the HOC for emotional damage and to build a museum. Coleman-Adebayo looked somberly at the scaffolding erected by self-storage developer 1784 Capital Holdings. 'Look what they're building here on the bodies of African people,' Coleman-Adebayo said. 'How did they die? How did they live? What happened to them? And the county could care less because they're Black.' The HOC and 1784 Capital Holdings did not respond to requests for comment by publication date. The River Road community, an African American enclave linked to the cemetery, was a once bustling district with Black land ownership, a school and the Macedonia Baptist church, which opened in 1920. By the 1950s and 1960s, the area was zoned for commercial use. Now, Coleman-Adebayo's husband, the Rev Olusegun Adebayo, chairs Bacc's board and pastors the church, the only surviving institution of the historically Black community. Black cemeteries have long been threatened. In the 18th century, Blakey said, Black cemeteries were also used to dump waste from pottery factories and tanneries. Historian and anthropologist Lynn Rainville, who has researched Black cemeteries for 20 years, noted that Black bodies were dug up to use as cadavers for 19th-century medical research. But robbers rarely disinterred Black bodies to steal objects or jewelry, as they frequently did to Indigenous burial grounds. After the civil war, Black cemeteries were usually placed in areas with cheaper property values, which later became prime real estate for developers. Some Black cemeteries were also neglected following the great migration of the early 20th century, when 6 million Black people moved from the south to other parts of the US for economic opportunity and to escape racism. As a result, many Black people moved away from their ancestors' graves. 'The Black living communities have long since been forced out of there because of high taxes, high property values,' Rainville said. 'The cemetery is the last of what's left, and then it is at greatest risk.' The development at the Moses Macedonia African Cemetery shows that American society values certain bodies over others, said Rainville: 'If 2,000 prominent, wealthy people in Bethesda, Maryland, came forward and said, 'Hey, these are my relatives,' it would have been stopped by now. No one's digging up Thomas Jefferson, for example. There is a hierarchy of what and when in American society is considered OK to move.' During his travels and work throughout the world, Blakey found that development is the paramount threat to Black cemeteries. He recalled discussing with a Howard University colleague in the 1970s about how Black internment sites, he said, 'were the places developers were said to be most fond of because they knew they could dispose of them with greater ease'. A federal law similar to the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), which requires institutions and federal agencies to return human remains and artifacts to their descendant Indigenous tribes, does not exist for Black Americans, said Rainville. Signed into law in the 1990s, the NAGPRA came after hundreds of years of the desecration of Native American graves. In recent years, a national movement has emerged to protect Black graves by creating a law that parallels the NAGPRA. Enacted into law in 2022, the African American Burial Grounds Preservation Act authorized the National Park Service to fund federal and state agencies, as well as non-profits' efforts, to research and preserve Black cemeteries. But the National Park Service told the Guardian that it has not awarded any grants so far, since Congress has not allocated money to the program. Seeing a need to prevent the erasure of African American burial grounds in her local community, University of South Florida anthropology chair and professor Antoinette Jackson created the Black Cemetery Network, a database of internment sites throughout the US. Of the 193 cemeteries listed on the site, Jackson said that up to 70% of them face preservation challenges, including threats from development, legal battles or lack of resources. A lack of Black political power in the early 20th century fueled neglect and subsequent loss of cemeteries through tax sales, she added. 'It was by design, because many of the ones that were lost were in what became a desirable area for that time,' Jackson said. 'Up until the 1965 Civil Rights Act, [Black political] representation wasn't there in many of these governmental agencies, committees and commissions. So, often, there was no one to defend them, and they were easily given away or changed hands without people really being aware.' She cites a 2021 Florida law that protects abandoned African American cemeteries as a potential model for other states. The law created a taskforce that identified and researched cemeteries, and led an advisory council that provides recommendations for their preservation. Research and academic institutions, non-profits and local governmental organizations may also apply for a grant of up to $50,000 to conduct historical and genealogical research, or to restore and maintain abandoned cemeteries. Jackson received that state grant to find the descendants of the Evergreen Cemetery – one of three graveyards buried under Interstate 175 and Tropicana Field, a St Petersburg stadium being considered for redevelopment. Through Jackson's work, St Petersburg city council member Corey Givens Jr learned that his great-great-great-uncle was buried in the historically Black cemetery. Givens wants the city to conduct a ground-penetrating radar survey of the site to see if any burials remain there. That was done for Oaklawn Cemetery, where mostly white people were interred and at least 10 possible graves were recently found. But the Florida department of transportation, which owns the property where Evergreen and another Black cemetery, Moffett, are located, has refused to allow a survey. Givens hopes that the descendants of people interred in Evergreen and Moffett will have a say in the future of the site. 'Do we just want to leave these bodies there? Or do we feel like we want to spend tax dollars and move these bodies elsewhere?' Givens told the Guardian. 'I really want the community to be in charge of this conversation. I want them to lead it because I don't trust the same governing body that said 'out of sight, out of mind'.' At the site of the Buena Vista plantation in St James parish, Louisiana, the Louisiana Bucket Brigade and Inclusive Louisiana environmental justice groups are using genealogical research of enslaved people buried on the land to fight the construction of a petrochemical facility. The Louisiana Bucket Brigade and Inclusive Louisiana learned through a public records request of the Louisiana division of archaeology's emails that a graveyard for enslaved Africans existed on the land where the Taiwanese company Formosa Plastics planned to construct a $9.4bn facility. Lenora Gobert, the Louisiana Bucket Brigade's genealogist, spent years researching the mortgage and conveyance records from plantation owner Benjamin Winchester to learn the names of the enslaved people buried there between 1820 and 1861. In 2024, the non-profit released a report detailing the lives of five enslaved people ages nine to 31. Among them was 18-year-old Betsy, who was buried on the plantation's edge and mortgaged by the Winchesters at least seven times in life and death. Anne Rolfes, the Louisiana Bucket Brigade's director, hopes that evidence of the graveyard will help further stall or cancel the development. She would like descendant communities to have a say in how the area is memorialized and programming that honors the area's history. 'How about we just stop all this petrochemical expansion? It destroys these really sacred places, and it's not economic development. It's destruction, massive disruption and illness,' Rolfes told the Guardian. 'So let's instead center this. That would preserve the communities. It would provide so many more jobs. It would be deeply meaningful. It would be a beacon to the rest of the country.' Meanwhile, in Bethesda, about 100 people attended Bacc's 'rebellion' on 19 June, Coleman-Adebayo said, during which the group featured poetry, dancing and speakers who talked about the struggle to protect the cemetery. Bacc also protested at the county's Juneteenth event on 21 June. At Bacc's Juneteenth event, member Joann SM Bagnerise received an award for her outstanding advocacy. Bagnerise, an 87-year-old from Dumfries, Virginia, has traveled over an hour each way to join the coalition's weekly protests for several years. During a recent May protest, she sat in a chair under an umbrella and said: 'The desecration of hallowed grounds is un-American.' The high-rise apartment at the center of the dispute towered behind her. 'There are young teenagers buried here,' she said. 'There are mothers and fathers.'

Amazon driver's racist tirade caught on camera after he's locked into apartment complex
Amazon driver's racist tirade caught on camera after he's locked into apartment complex

The Independent

time4 days ago

  • The Independent

Amazon driver's racist tirade caught on camera after he's locked into apartment complex

An Amazon driver in Los Angeles had a racist meltdown after he was locked behind a parking lot gate during his deliveries. The incident was captured on video. According to property manager Joel Estrada, an Amazon delivery worker followed another driver through a parking gate and into an apartment complex parking lot to drop off a delivery. On his way out, the gate refused to unlock, leaving him locked inside the parking lot, FOX LA reports. According to Estrada and surveillance video from the incident, the driver appears to direct his frustration towards a Black tenant who he mistakenly assumed was the property manager. In the video, the man can be heard hurling racist insults and threats at the Black resident, at one point warning them 'I swear to God, you better watch your f****** back.' A security camera captured his tirade as he stormed around the locked gate. 'You locking people in the gate. I ought to sue you. That's kidnapping,' the driver said. "'ou can not keep people hostage. I'm find you.' After learning about the incident, Estrada said he sent video of the event to Amazon and requested a response from the company about the driver. He says he never heard back. 'Amazon simply does not have an avenue where things like this can be reported in good faith by community residents. They just don't have an avenue to do so,' Estrada told FOX LA. 'Anytime their drivers are sending racist threats of violence against tenants, it's unacceptable. And the fact they have ignored meeting requests, they need to come forward and at least meet with us to hear our concerns.' Amazon provided the following statement in response to a media request concerning the video: 'The behavior exhibited in this video is unacceptable. Our team is investigating what occurred and will take appropriate action.'

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