Volume 25 Issue 48

Page 1

December 20, 2020

GREATER HOUSTON EDITION

Vol. 25, Issue 48

“Our vote and our money are the two most powerful things we have. Be careful who you give them to.” - Roy Douglas Malonson

“Addressing Current & Historical Realties Affecting Our Community”

LONG OVERDUE! NEGRO LEAGUE PLAYERS ADDED TO MLB HISTORY

BLACKS THE FACE OF COVID-19 VACCINATIONS By: Roy Douglas Malonson

This week, the face of COVID-19 vaccinations has been Black ones, with African American health care professionals from various states serving as “the first” in their areas to get the vaccinated. While many gave rounds of applause, believing this is the “beginning of the end” of the pandemic, some say it is just a ploy to trick African Americans into be the first “guinea pigs” to test the vaccines. But is that mistrust

going too far? It could be. It could be just sheer coincidence that Black nurses were showcased on television as being the first brave and trusting souls to be vaccinated, or it could be a marketing tactic-rather than a ploy -- to encourage other Blacks to take the shots when they become available because of the distrust of the government and medical community many already have. COVID-19 has been killing our community!

The virus is impacting a disproportionate number of African Americans, in terms of hospitalizations and death. And unlike President Donald Trump who says he felt like Superman after being treated for COVID-19 at Walter Reed Medical Center, Blacks and Hispanics don’t have access to the resources the leader of the free world does. According to a Kaiser Family Foundation study, nearly a third of African Americans

are hesitant to get the vaccine. The majority say they are concerned about possible side effects, half are worried they will get the virus from taking the vaccine, and 48% say they just have a general distrust in vaccines altogether. But doctors are urging people to put those fears aside, warning that the vaccine won’t kill you, but COVID-19 can! The side effects are causing a few red flags,

Vaccines cont’d page 3

By: N.L. Preston

In an attempt to right the wrongs of past racial inequality, Major League Baseball (MLB) has added players from the Negro Leagues to its official records. This decision is long overdue and Black baseball players will finally get the “recorded” recognition they deserve, in comparison to white athletes who many of the Negro players top in statistics. It was announced Wednesday that more than 3,400 players from seven Negro leagues operating from 1920 to 1948 - when MLB didn’t allow Black play-

ers - will now be considered “major leaguers,” in a move that will shake up the record books. The group of seven Negro Leagues has already produced 35 Hall of Famers, including stars like Willie Mays, Larry Doby, Jackie Robinson, Josh Gibson and Oscar Charleston. For decades, the tales were told of their accomplishments, but these men were snubbed out of the national archives by their white counterparts.

League cont’d page 4


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Volume 25 Issue 48 by AFRAMNEWS.COM - Issuu