Articles Feature

Nation of Islam Joins Anti-Vaxxers

Newspaper Decries Government’s ‘Treachery’
Who Knew? In November, White Voters Went MAGA
How the N.Y. Times Went From ‘Negro’ to ‘Black’
Aguilar Sworn In as First Latina SPJ President
‘Word in Black’ Collaboration Nets 1,200 Subscribers

Journalist Groups Offer Tips for 9/11 Anniversary
Hannah-Jones Starts After-School Literacy Program
Hugh Wyatt, N.Y. Daily News Pioneer, Dies at 78
Latin American Journalists, in U.S., Sound Alarm
Nominate a J-Educator Who Promotes Diversity

Short Takes: José Díaz-Balart and Joshua Johnson; Roland Martin; Josh Capers; FEMA and Black families; Sierra Club resignation; Texas abortion law vs. Fugitive Slave Acts; live audio access at Supreme Court; Lonnie Wong; FCC broadcast ownership rules; Blacks and internet access; young people hosting weekly radio show; Black Film Archive; Asian, Black and Hispanic giving to social justice causes; need for funding of Asian American history documentaries; News Literacy Project; diversity among college newspaper editors; Journal-isms position open; U.N. legal training to protect Somali journalists; stepping up journalism training for Blacks in Brazil

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Minister Louis Farrakhan says, “Don’t Let Them Vaccinate You! With Their Treachery, Through Vaccines, Through Medication. . . .

Newspaper Decries Government’s ‘Treachery’

The Nation of Islam and its newspaper, the Final Call, are promoting the Ivermectin medication intended for livestock as a remedy for COVID-19, spurning the vaccines approved by the medical community and the federal government.

The Final Call’s Aug. 30 edition reports on “a special virtual event sponsored by the Nation of Islam Online Study Group” on Aug. 27 attended by 3,000 people, the article says, describing it as a “historic seminar.

It was a brilliant demonstration to overcome the false propaganda that the only response to the virus are the deadly vaccines being deployed by the U.S. Government,” Charlene Muhammad wrote. The panel proved that ‘unvaccinated’ in no way means ‘unprotected.’ They went beyond how to respond to an infectious disease and offered keys to a healthy life.”

The article continued, “Before concluding the power-packed session, Minister Ava Muhammad presented several astounding videos. One was the Founding Physicians of the Frontline COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance’s video summary of what Ivermectin is, where it came from, what it does, and a web link to help prepare in advance. The Final Call publishes the website where one can learn about and obtain Ivermectin each week in this section of the newspaper.

“Another powerful demonstration of the actual impact of Ivermectin was a graph showing how the Delta variant, which first appeared in and ravaged India, underwent a steep decline to almost zero presence, after government officials began to disperse Ivermectin treatment kits to its citizens. Mexico City, Mexico experienced a similar decrease, Minister Ava Muhammad pointed out.”

On Friday, the Food and Drug Administration issued a release headlined, “Why You Should Not Use Ivermectin to Treat or Prevent COVID-19.”

Dr. Kizzmekia Corbett, right, a researcher at the National Institutes of Health who helped to develop COVID-19 vaccines in record time, welcomed President Joe Biden to the NIH’s Dale and Betty Bumpers Vaccine Research Center on Feb. 11. With them is Dr. Anthony Fauci, left, director of NIH’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and Dr. Francis Collins, HIH director, center. “The first thing you might want to say to my African American brothers and sisters is that the vaccine that you’re going to be taking was developed by an African American woman,” Fauci said in December. “And that is just a fact.” (Credit: NIH)

“Never use medications intended for animals on yourself or other people,” the FDA warned. “Animal ivermectin products are very different from those approved for humans. Use of animal ivermectin for the prevention or treatment of COVID-19 in humans is dangerous.”

The agency also said, “The FDA has not authorized or approved ivermectin for the treatment or prevention of COVID-19 in people or animals. Ivermectin has not been shown to be safe or effective for these indications.”

Last month, the Kaiser Family Foundation reported, “Black people have received smaller shares of vaccinations compared to their shares of cases and the total population in about half of states reporting data. . . . For example, in the District of Columbia, Black people have received 43% of vaccinations, while they make up 56% of cases, 71% of deaths, and 46% of the total population.”

Although the Nation of Islam is contending that Black people cannot trust the government, the National Medical Association, an organization of African American medical professionals marking its 125th anniversary, approved of the vaccines last December.

The NMA is part of a group that includes Charles Drew University, Howard University, Meharry Medical College, the Morehouse School of Medicine, the National Black Nurses Association, the Cobb Institute and blackdoctor.org. They joined the National Urban League in December to write a “love letter” to the Black public about COVID-19.

The NMA said separately that month that its “task force reviewed the clinical trial data in search of differences in health outcomes that would place the Black community at higher risk of unfavorable outcomes from the vaccine and determined the following:

“Ten percent of people who enrolled in both the Pfizer and Moderna clinical trials were Black, equaling more than 4,400 and 3,000 people, respectively.

Both the percentage and number of Black people enrolled are sufficient to have confidence in health outcomes of the clinical trials.

“Persons receiving the vaccine were > 94% less likely to develop COVID-19 infection as compared to the placebo group.

“Efficacy and safety were observed and consistent across age, gender, race, ethnicity and adults over 65 years of age.”

In January, Dr. Anthony Fauci, head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes of Health, gave a shout-out to 34-year-old Dr. Kizzmekia Corbett.

The first thing you might want to say to my African American brothers and sisters is that the vaccine that you’re going to be taking was developed by an African American woman,” Fauci said in December. “And that is just a fact.

“I felt like it was necessary to be seen and to not be a hidden figure so to speak,” Corbett said. “I felt that it was important to do that because the level of visibility that it would have to younger scientists and also to people of color who have often worked behind the scenes and essentially [who have] done the dirty work for these large efforts toward a vaccine.

“This person who looks like you has been working on this for several years and I also wanted it to be visible because I wanted people to understand that I stood by the work that I’d done for so long as well,” Corbett said.

Fauci told the National Association of Black Journalists last month, “I am so impressed, having been in this for so many decades, that the best way to counter misinformation and disinformation is to flood the system with correct information, and that’s what I really would like to see Black journalists do and continue to do. You know, just be an expression of the integrity of your profession, ’cause journalism is such an important part of everything we do. I mean it’s the foundation of a democracy, I believe, to get the truth out there, and the journalists are the ones that can do that, so we really need you.”

The influence of the Nation is not easy to determine and is not necessarily related to the size of its membership. Minister Louis Farrakhan, its leader, can still generate headlines. Karl Evanzz, who has written books about the Nation, messaged Journal-isms, “I don’t think anyone knows the number of current members of the Nation of Islam but I think it’s fair to say that membership outside of penal institutions is likely less than 7000. It’s tough to gauge due to the high rate of attrition. . . . People join the NOI in prison the way others join gangs and other organizations, for protection. Most quit the group soon after being released.”

On CNN’s “Reliable Sources” on Sunday, substitute host John Avlon, discussing an upcoming Ken Burns documentary on Muhammad Ali, described the Nation as a group “which really had very little to do with Islam but really was a black supremacist or separatist cult at the time.” Evanzz said, “I don’t think they are so much a supremacist sect as they are a separatist sect.”

Who Knew? In November, White Voters Went MAGA

The twice-impeached former president Donald Trump is said to be held in disgrace and is the subject of multiple investigations, including determining his role in inciting the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol insurrection. He was ranked near the bottom by historians in an assessment of U.S. presidents.

One might never guess that a majority of white voters cast their ballots for Trump in November.

That’s right. Were it not for the votes of people of color in the last election, Trump might still be president, at least if the popular vote prevailed.

The Pew Research Center provided a new analysis of validated 2020 voters from its American Trends Panel on June 30, then referred to it last week when it analyzed the vote by religious preference. That analysis concluded that “Trump continued to garner strong support from White evangelical Protestants, while Black Protestants and the religiously unaffiliated backed the Democratic candidate and eventual winner, President Joe Biden.

Overall, as CNN summarized, “White voters went for Trump by a 12-point margin, Pew found, while Biden won Hispanic voters by 21 points, Asian voters by 44 points and Black voters by 84 points.”

Yet this is not the way the election results have been framed in media reporting. Ian Haney Lopez (pictured), a law professor at UC Berkeley who wrote “Dog Whistle Politics” in 2013 and followed that in 2019 with “Merge Left: Fusing Race and Class, Winning Elections, and Saving America,” gave this explanation in a message to Journal-isms:

“From the point of view of covering Trump and the modern GOP, the issue is not racial diversity in the newsroom per se, so much as racial expertise among reporters. Having people of color in a newsroom is helpful because — in addition to serving the values of justice and equality — journalists of color are more likely than white journalists to have thought deeply about and perhaps even formally studied racial dynamics.

“It’s expertise in race that’s required from any reporter if they are to accurately explain to the public country-defining patterns, including especially the GOP’s purposeful exploitation of racial demagoguery.”

How the N.Y. Times Went From ‘Negro’ to ‘Black’

The acclaimed music documentary “Summer of Soul,” a condensation of the Harlem Cultural Festival held across six days in 1969, was one of the talkers of the summer of 2021. The film also contained a bit of Black journalism history. Veteran journalist Charlayne Hunter-Gault (pictured) briefly discusses how she persuaded The New York Times to get with contemporary Black folks and use “Black” instead of “Negro,” which was falling out of favor as Black consciousness rose.

“It was an 11 page memo I wrote after filing a story from Chicago using what had become a widespread demand from vocal Blacks, and so I used it throughout the piece ‘200 Black Women “Have Dialogue“, ‘ Hunter-Gault messaged Journal-isms, “and back then you dictated over the phone and it went to 11 editors.

“By the time I flew back to NY, the paper was out and I eagerly looked for my piece, only to find that while in the paper, everywhere I had written Black was changed to Negro. I was furious and sat in the airport and clearly my anger was apparent in the 11 page memo I wrote, not least my criticism of white editors from all white suburbs who know nothing of Black people and their aspirations…or something to that effect.

“In the end, Abe Rosenthal came to my desk and said he agreed and Negro would no longer be used.”

Aguilar Sworn In as First Latina SPJ President

Rebecca Aguilar became the first Latina national president of the Society of Professional Journalists in its 112-year history tonight,” the society announced Saturday. “She was sworn in by SPJ National President Matthew T. Hall at the President’s Awards Ceremony during the SPJ21 conference.

“Aguilar, who is celebrating 40 years as a journalist, is a freelance reporter based in Dallas. . . .”

Aguilar also chaired the SPJ Diversity and Inclusion Committee.

Ivette Davila-Richards, incumbent secretary-treasurer, freelance national assignment editor at Fox News Channel and vice chair of SPJ’s Diversity and Inclusion Committee, was re-elected over two opponents.  

Claire Regan, an SPJ board member who is a contributing writer to the Staten Island (N.Y.) Advance and an assistant professor of journalism at Wagner College, was chosen president-elect. Candidate profiles 

‘Word in Black’ Collaboration Nets 1,200 Subscribers

Nearly three months after its launch, a collaboration of 10 Black newspapers known as Word in Black has attracted 1,200 subscribers to its newsletter, according to Nick Charles, project manager for the Fund for Black Journalism and managing director of the collaboration.

Word In Black consists of a newsletter and website (wordinblack.com) that publishes content from the 10 participating newspapers, which include: New York Amsterdam News, The Atlanta Voice, Houston Defender Network, The Washington Informer, The Dallas Weekly, The Afro, Michigan Chronicle, The Seattle Medium, The Sacramento Observer and St. Louis American. It also publishes original content,” Evelyn Mateos wrote Friday in a widely circulated piece for Editor & Publisher.

“The initiative is part of the Fund for Black Journalism, founded last year by the Local Media Association (LMA) and the same 10 newspapers to support coverage and create solutions around issues that affect Black communities.”

Charles told E&P, “There [are] over 230 Black-owned newspapers still in this country — here we have 10 of them that still put out a hard copy every week — and what most of them need is a real smooth and efficient transition to digital products.”

“In addition to LMA and the Walton Family Foundation, the Facebook Journalism Project, Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, Google News Initiative and the Local Media Consortium have also funded the project,” Mateos continued.

At its launch, pegged to this year’s Juneteenth, Andrew Ramsammy (pictured), chief content and collaboration officer for the Local Media Association, wrote, “Each week the newsletter will feature stories that focus on solutions to racial inequities in America. Most weeks we’ll open the newsletter with a strong opinion article from one of the 10 publishers in the collaborative.

“This Black coalition of the willing has withstood the test of time, weathered the storms, and stands ready for what could be the intersectional crisis of our generation — combatting the tsunami of misinformation that disproportionately affects communities of color. . . . “

The Local Media Association is a trade group focused on the business side of local media.

The 10 newspapers announced in June 2020 that they had joined forces with Local Media Foundation to launch the Fund for Black Journalism – Race Crisis in America campaign. Charles (pictured) is a former editor in chief of AOL Black Voices and vice president for content at BET who has since freelanced and worked at digital news sites and nonprofits. He was named project manager a year ago.

The fund is designed to support coverage and develop solutions for issues surrounding police brutality and disparities in education, health, employment and income,” the 10 newspapers said then.

The 2019 HBO documentary, “What Happened on September 11,” is an introduction to the events of Sept. 11, 2001, for a young audience.

Journalist Groups Offer Tips for 9/11 Anniversary

As the nation prepares to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the Arab and Middle Eastern Journalists Association, the Asian American Journalists Association, the National Association of Black Journalists and the South Asian Journalists Association have issued “guidance to help journalists and newsrooms more accurately and critically cover the commemoration, impacted communities, and policies that resulted from 9/11.”

Under “story tips,” the groups said:

  • “Broaden story angles beyond the national security lens. Be specific and descriptive when referring to surveillance, detention, criminalization, violence, discrimination, and hate crimes in the post-9/11 era targeting AMEMSA [Arab, Middle Eastern, Muslim and South Asian] communities in the United States.
  • “Be aware that multiple communities were impacted and traumatized by 9/11 and post-9/11 policies, in the U.S. and abroad. In addition to the nearly 3,000 people who died on Sept. 11, 2001, approximately 801,000 people [PDF] have been killed directly in the violence of the subsequent wars in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Syria, Yemen and elsewhere. Several times as many civilians have died due to the reverberating effects of these wars. The Costs of War data shows the United States conducted counterterrorism operations in 85 countries from 2018 through 2020, and is still aggressively pursuing counterterrorism activities.
  • “Islamophobia and anti-Muslim bigotry affect Muslims in the U.S. as well as those who are erroneously perceived as Muslim. As a point of reference, the first deadly hate crime after 9/11 was the murder of a Sikh man, Balbir Singh Sodhi, on September 15, in Mesa, Arizona.
  • “Rather than using euphemisms like ‘anti-Muslim sentiment,’ assess whether it is more accurate to use terms like ‘anti-Muslim bias,’ ‘Islamophobia,’ or ‘anti-Muslim bigotry.’ For more information, consult the Institute for Social Policy and Understanding’s guide on Islamophobia.
  • “Be careful about framing that creates a false binary between ‘the West” and ‘the Muslim World.’ There are nearly 3.5 million Muslims in the United States, and Pew has projected that by 2050, 10 percent of all Europeans will be Muslim. Include the broader context of how foreign policies and interventions tie into local events you are currently covering. . . .”

The groups also offered guidance on terminology, urged news media to diversify their sources and advised on “Reporting on Islam and Muslims.”

Joy Briscoe, Sheritta Stokes, Lori Dale, Sharina Sallis and Nikole Hannah-Jones, the leadership team of the 1619 Freedom School, in the space where they plan to host the 1619 Freedom School in Waterloo, Iowa. (Credit: Kelsey Kremer/Des Moines Register)

Hannah-Jones Starts After-School Literacy Program

A Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist known for her writing on race is joining with educators in Iowa to launch a free community-based after-school literacy program in her hometown,” the Associated Press reported Thursday.

Nikole Hannah-Jones said the 1619 Freedom School will hold a soft launch in October at the Dr. Walter Cunningham School for Excellence with a small number of students before opening the full program in January at the Masonic Temple in downtown Waterloo, the Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier reported.

“The program will serve fourth- and fifth-grade students in the Waterloo Community Schools.”

Hugh Wyatt, N.Y. Daily News Pioneer, Dies at 78

Hugh Wyatt (pictured), one of the first reporters of color at the Daily News in New York and author of “Sonny Rollins: Meditating on a Riff,” a “spiritual biography” of the tenor saxophonist, his friend of more than 50 years, died Aug. 12 in Manhattan, the Southampton Press on Long Island reported Aug. 16.

Wyatt was 78. His wife, Linda Edkins Wyatt, said that the cause was metastasized prostate cancer.

Wyatt was of Black and Cherokee ancestry. He was born in Atlanta, but moved to New York in 1965 after three years in the Army. He worked at the Daily News from 1965 to 1993 after starting out as a copy boy. He was a contemporary there of Black journalists Larry Hall, later a columnist at the Star-Ledger in Newark, N.J., and C. Gerald Fraser, who became a reporter at The New York Times.

While few mainstream newspapers in those days had a critical mass of journalists of color, the paucity of Black journalists at the News would lead to a successful lawsuit in which four Black Daily News journalists would settle for a reported $3.1 million in 1987.  

“He was named health affairs editor in 1979, and later wrote a popular weekly music column, which became syndicated,” the Southampton paper said. “Mr. Wyatt’s wife Linda said that, with a series of articles for the Daily News, Mr. Wyatt was also instrumental in New York State’s establishing an official definition of death, among his many other achievements. (He wrote the liner notes for the 1984 recording, ‘New York Scene’ by Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers, which won a Grammy.)”

Wyatt was also a founding stockholder of the Inner City Broadcasting Corporation, which became a New York powerhouse, owning WBLS-FM radio and the Apollo Theatre in New York. He appeared in this column in 2010 when he sued Percy Sutton and other Inner City executives, saying they had looted the company. The court ruled against Wyatt, ruling that his complaints, as presented, were not a cause for action. In addition to the Sonny Rollins biography, Wyatt authored “Phoebe’s Fantasy: The Story of a Mafia Insider Who Helped Rescue Jazz,” about Phoebe Jacobs.

Latin American Journalists, in U.S., Sound Alarm

Journalism is not a crime,” Gwen Flanders wrote Sept. 1 for the National Press Club.

“That theme echoed through a panel discussion Tuesday at the National Press Club as Latin American journalists called attention to government repression of reporting in their countries.

“In the past 20 months, at least 27 journalists have been killed in Latin America, said panel moderator Dagmar Thiel, chief executive of Fundamedios, an organization that promotes free expression and human rights.

“Many more have been threatened, attacked or jailed for reporting not in line with their governments’ policies. . . .”

Flanders also wrote, “Univision correspondent Tifani Roberts said every journalist not aligned with the Nicaraguan government has been investigated and their families harassed, even having their children followed to school. Every one of them has an exit plan for when — ‘not if’ — they must leave the country for their safety. . . .

“The governments of Nicaragua, Venezuela and Cuba harass journalists with techniques from the same playbook, said Carlos Roa of the Association of Venezuelan Journalists Abroad. Thirteen of his fellow Venezuelan journalists are in prison or on probation, and one of them, Roland Carreno, is being denied urgent medical care. . . .”

Armando Chaguaceda of Cuba said the struggles in these countries should not be defined as left vs. right, but as autocracy vs. democracy. Self-censorship has become the rule. Luz Mely Reyes, co-founder of digital media franchise Efecto Cocuyo in Venezuela said some of her fellow journalists have waited for more than five years for asylum in the United States.

North American news organizations are being denied entry and COVID-19 is being used as a weapon, they said. Governments don’t want COVID written about and exercise their powers of intimidation over journalists who want to leave because of the disease.

 

Nominate a J-Educator Who Promotes Diversity

Mei-Ling Hopgood, 2020 recipient

Beginning in 1990, the Association of Opinion Journalists, now part of the News Leaders Association, annually granted a Barry Bingham Sr. Fellowship — actually an award — “in recognition of an educator’s outstanding efforts to encourage minority students in the field of journalism.”

Since 2000, the recipient has been awarded an honorarium of $1,000 to be used to “further work in progress or begin a new project.”

Past winners include James Hawkins, Florida A&M University (1990); Larry Kaggwa, Howard University (1992); Ben Holman, University of Maryland (1996); Linda Jones, Roosevelt University, Chicago (1998); Ramon Chavez, University of Colorado, Boulder (1999); Erna Smith, San Francisco State (2000); Joseph Selden, Penn State University (2001); Cheryl Smith, Paul Quinn College (2002); Rose Richard, Marquette University (2003).

Also, Leara D. Rhodes, University of Georgia (2004); Denny McAuliffe, University of Montana (2005); Pearl Stewart, Black College Wire (2006); Valerie White, Florida A&M University (2007); Phillip Dixon, Howard University (2008); Bruce DePyssler, North Carolina Central University (2009); Sree Sreenivasan, Columbia University (2010); Yvonne Latty, New York University (2011); Michelle Johnson, Boston University (2012); Vanessa Shelton, University of Iowa (2013); William Drummond, University of California at Berkeley (2014); Julian Rodriguez of the University of Texas at Arlington (2015) (video); David G. Armstrong, Georgia State University (2016) (video); Gerald Jordan, University of Arkansas (2017), Bill Celis, University of Southern California (2018); Laura Castañeda, University of Southern California (2019); and Mei-Ling Hopgood, Northwestern University (pictured) (2020).

Nominations may be emailed to Richard Prince, Opinion Journalism Committee, richardprince (at) hotmail.com. The deadline is Oct. 15. Please use that address only for NLA matters.

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