Shaniya Davis: McNeill Admits He Took The Little Girl From The Trailer Park on The First Day of Trial, and Other News
• April 8, 2013 • 5 CommentsPosted in Alcoholism/Drug Abuse, American Politics, Black People, Class, Crime, Cultural History, Drug Culture/Industry, Facebook, Health, Journalism and Ethics, Love, Mental Health/Psychology, Murder/Manslaughter, National Issues, Pedophilia/Child Kidnapping, Race, Rape, Rape/Sex Crimes, Sexuality, The Mainstream Media (MSM), Women
Tags: Alabama, Associated Press, Bradley Lockhart, Child Abuse, Child Sexual Abuse, Davis, Facebook, Fayetteville Observer, Felon, Felony Child Abuse, Harnett County North Carolina, HLN, Lockhart, Mario Andrette McNeill, Mario McNeill, McNeill, Motherhood, Nancy Grace, Nicole Davis, Shaniya, Shaniya Davis, Today, United States Virgin Islands, Virgin Islands
For Recy Taylor, An Apology Is Not Enough
• March 23, 2011 • Comments Off on For Recy Taylor, An Apology Is Not EnoughPosted in African American History, American History, Black People, Civil Rights/Human Rights, Class, Crime, Hate Crimes, Health, Journalism and Ethics, Love, Mental Health/Psychology, National Issues, Police Misconduct/Killings, Post-Traumatic Stress Syndrome, Protestant Denominations, Race, Rape/Sex Crimes, Religion, Sexual Harassment, Sexuality, The Mainstream Media (MSM), The Tea Party Movement, Women
Tags: Abbeville, Abbeville Alabama, African Americans, African-American Civil Rights Movement (1955–1968), Alabama, Black Women, Blacks, Domestic Terrorism, Florida, Gang Rape, Mayor, News conference, Official Apology, Racism, Rape, Republicans, Robert Corbitt, Rosa Parks, Sexual Violence, State Senator Dexter Grimsley, The Forties, Types of Rape, United States, White People
Justice At Last For Recy Taylor? (w/Updates)
• March 21, 2011 • Comments Off on Justice At Last For Recy Taylor? (w/Updates)Posted in African American History, American History, American Politics, Black People, Books, Civil Rights/Human Rights, Class, Domestic Terrorism, Education, Health, Journalism and Ethics, Mental Health/Psychology, National Issues, Post-Traumatic Stress Syndrome, Race, Rape/Sex Crimes, Recy Taylor, Sexuality, The Mainstream Media (MSM), Womanism, Women
Tags: "At the Dark at the End of the Street", Abbeville Alabama, African American, African Americans, Alabama, Apology, Black Women, Blacks, Danielle McGuire, Grand Jury, Henry County, Jim Crow laws, Journal of American History, Lynching, Marriage, Montgomery Bus Boycott, PTSD, Racism, Rape, Recy Taylor, Rep. Dexter Grimsley, Robert Corbitt, Rosa Parks, The Civil Rights Movement, The Forties, The South, The Women's Movement, United States, White Supremacy
Highlights of Memorial Service for Shaniya Davis
• November 18, 2010 • 3 CommentsPosted in African American History, Black People, Class, Crime, Cultural History, Domestic Violence, Drug Culture/Industry, Health, Mental Health/Psychology, Pedophilia/Child Kidnapping, People of Color, Rape/Sex Crimes, Sexuality, Shaniya Davis, Women
Tags: African Americans, Alabama, Antoinette Davis, Biracial Children, Biracials, Bradley Lockhart, Child Abduction, Child Abuse, Child Exploitation, Child Molestation, Child Murder, Child Prostitution, Child Protective Services, Child Sexual Abuse, Children, Drugs, DSS, Fayetteville NC, Justice, Mario Andrette McNeill, Motherhood, Murder, North Carolina Department of Social Services, One Year, One Year Memorial, Police, Prison, Sex Crimes, Shaniya Davis, Shaniya Nicole Davis, WRAL.com
Spike Lee Returns with a New Documentary About New Orleans (and the Oil-Soaked Gulf) Five Years After Katrina on HBO
• August 19, 2010 • Comments Off on Spike Lee Returns with a New Documentary About New Orleans (and the Oil-Soaked Gulf) Five Years After Katrina on HBOPosted in African American History, American History, American Politics, Asians/Asian Pacific/Asian Americans, Black People, Celebrities/Royals, Chicanos/Latinos, Class, Cultural History, Democrats in Name Only, Documentaries, Documentary, Education, Environmental Crimes, Film, Haiti, Haitians/Francophone Caribbean, Health, Hurricanes, Journalism and Ethics, Love, Mental Health/Psychology, Music, Natural Disasters, New Orleans, Obama Administration, People of Color, Phyllis Montana LeBlanc, Post-Traumatic Stress Syndrome, Race, Television, The Economy, The Mainstream Media (MSM), The Rest of the World, Women
Tags: "Cancer Alley", "If God is Willing and Da Creek Don't Rise", "Treme", "When the Levees Broke", African Americans, Alabama, Barack Obama, Big Oil, Blacks, BP, Brown, Bush, Cable TV, Cheney, Condoleezza Rice, Debut, Dick Cheney, Documentary, Environmental Disaster, Florida, George W. Bush, Haiti, HBO, Hurricane Katrina, Levees, Louisiana, Mayor Mitch Landrieu, Michael Brown, Mississippi, Neighborhoods, New Orleans LA, NOLA, NOLA.com, Phyllis Montana LeBlanc, Premiere, President Barack Obama, Rep. Joseph Cao, Seafood Industry, Sean Penn, Simonize, Spike, Spike Lee, The BP Oil Spill, The Deepwater Horizon, The Gulf Coast, The Mahalia Jackson Theatre, Vietnamese Community, Wendell Pierce, William "Cold Cash" Jefferson
Rural Alabama Doctor Chosen As Surgeon General
• July 13, 2009 • 1 CommentPosted in Black People, Class, Health, History, Hurricanes, Obama Administration, People of Color, Regina Benjamin, Women
Tags: ABC News Person of the Week, Alabama, Bayou LaBatre, Birmingham AL, Cambodians, Dr. Regina Benjamin, Laotians, MacArthur Foundation, Morehouse College, National Health Service Corps, National Institutes of Health, Native Americans, Nelson Mandela Award for Health and Human Rights, Rural Clinic, U.S. Surgeon General, Underserved Communities, Uninsured, University of Alabama, Vietnamese, Xavier University