Volume 25 Issue 38

Page 1

October 18, 2020

GREATER HOUSTON EDITION

Vol. 25, Issue 38

EARLY VOTING MATTERS EVERY VOTE COUNTS

CLASSIFICATION OF THE NEGRO

By: N.L. Preston

You were born with a label that you take for granted these days. Today, you are “John’s son,” or “Ella’s daughter,” but for those who were born generations before you, many were born as “Property of slave owners.” It hurts- don’t it- when it is put in front of your face like that. For generations, AFRICANS – NEGROES – COLORED – BLACKS – AFRICAN AMERICANS, have been classified, re-classified AND re-classified in terms of “what to call them” and more disturbingly, “WHO they BE-

LONGED to.” It came down to skin color, blood and money. DID YOU KNOW? The American Constitution does not mention slavery until 1865, with the adoption of the Thirteenth Amendment, which abolished the institution. Yet the Constitution, written in 1787, is riddled with provisions tied to slavery which protected it without naming it. The colonial lawmakers had to develop rules to balance the tension between treating Africans and others as per-

sons held to labor and as property owned by other people. The first Africans in Virginia were treated as indentured servants, who worked for years before they were eligible for freedom. The earliest legal records of Virginia illustrate a confusing process. Some Africans were held in lifetime servitude; while others were set free. As time evolved, PURE GREED kicked in and slave owners were determined to keep those FREE LABOR slaves and BREED as many as possible to save money from having to buy

them and fulfill their lust of innocent African women. SLAVE WOMEN AND THEIR CHILDREN Virginia legislators began trying to determine how to classify the offspring of white men and African women. Under English common law a child, even one born out of wedlock, followed the status of the father. If this rule applied in the children of slaves, then the mixed-race children

Property cont’d page 4

HERE’S PROOF! By: Roy Douglas Malonson

We don’t think anyone will ever forget the panic many experienced after realizing that Real Estate Mogul and “The Apprentice” host, Donald Trump, beat out seasoned politician Hillary Clinton four years ago, becoming the next President of the United States. Social media was flooded with people posting ______of disbelief as they saw that BLUE LINE getting thinner and thinner, and there was no path to victory for Clinton. Then the blame game began, with people pointing out the fact that MANY DID NOT VOTE -- either because they were not “feeling” either candidate, too lazy to stand in line, or simply thought Clinton

would have an obvious victory. Well, we think everyone got the memo now -- EVERY VOTE COUNTS -and you better not even let a hurricane stop you from voting in this already historic election. But just in case some of you need a little more evidence, NPR showed this timeline of instances where elections were decided by just one -- or a few -- votes. Trump won the presidency -- despite losing the popular vote by almost 3 million votes — all because he squeezed ahead 70,000 out of 12 million votes in three states — to win the Electoral College. George W. Bush won Florida by a

Voting cont’d page 6


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