Monday, May 6, 2024
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Ring in the New Year with health care savings

Discover your options for subsidized, or at least affordable, quality health care coverage in 2022.

Deion Sanders shocks the world

Jackson State Univ. Coach Deion Sanders’ recruitment of high school cornerback Travis Hunter may be the start of the next great migration. 

The crime of the 21st century: The dismantling of public housing and displacement of...

Warning, strong backer of HOPE SF Nancy Palosi and friends heard collaborating between the walls of public housing.

City abandons 60 houseless people in Bayview RV lot: ‘Everything we own is soaking...

We have been abandoned here with no way to warm ourselves, our vehicles, or to dry out our clothing or bedding. Everything we own is soaking wet and we are dying from exposure.

Will Democrats enact universal health care?

Vote. If Dems and Pubs won’t discuss health care during a pandemic, then when?

We Charge Genocide: 70th anniversary

Looking at the reality of US government’s ongoing genocide being committed upon its own people.

Haitian asylum seekers sue U.S. government for ‘anti-Black racism within the immigration system’

The U.S. government continues to show true colors of anti-Black racism in its shell games of immigration tactics.

A State of Emergency … for people sleeping outside

Elected ‘officials’ failures result in not “The Homeless Problem,” but instead, “The Politricksters Problem.” VOTE

Wealth and Disparities in the Black Community has launched a second holiday season of...

Good people bringing good tidings and essential goods to their Bayview neighborhood in times of deep need.

A Livituary: Ms. Regina Jackson, President and CEO of the East Oakland Youth Development...

Regina Jackson’s love, expertise and trust span 27 years of dedicated attention to our most beautiful and valuable element in shared humanity, our youth.

I am honored to call Archbishop Tutu a friend

Matt Meyer shares his loving appreciation and acknowledgment for his friend, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, fallen warrior for liberation for all, now transitioning to the ancestors.

‘His spirit reflected a giant’: Mumia Abu-Jamal remembers Archbishop Desmond Tutu’s visit to Death...

Mumia Abu-Jamal recalls the short giant of Archbishop Desmond Tutu’s visit to his tiny cell on death row, “The Arch” to his friends and family, a perfect example of love

The Machiavellian politics of London Breed

On Dec. 17, 2021, Mayor London Breed declared “the existence of a local emergency” based upon a spike of overdose deaths in the Tenderloin, but to a trained eye it appears in its true colors as a coup d’état.

Fillmore-raised father-to-be who defended himself against hospital security acquitted by jury

The risks to achieve victory can be great, and the victory of acquittal by your peers is sweet.

Cleaning is code for evicting, from Frisco to Winnemucca: The UnHoused Nation speaks

Genocide in action as unhoused people fight for survival while being swept, stripped, demolished and evicted, even from land assigned to them by U.S. federal government.

NFL grant awarded to Concord expansion of NY-based nonprofit

NFL’s Inspire Change initiative awards four new grant partners including Wall Street Bound, which promotes and uplifts social justice work of NFL players and League to develop positive successes within communities of color.

SFUSD ramps up efforts to stop the spread of Omicron in schools

Keeping schools open for in-person learning is best for our kids, for their parents, and can be safely accomplished with concentrated support and everyone doing their part for each other.

Against all odds, Mama Mesha Irizarry lives to fight another year

Mama Mesha embodies the universal balance, the love circle, of that which you give, you get.

The Great Palestinian Escape of 2021: Reflections from the U.S. Abolitionist landscape

Diana Block illuminates the revolutionary picture of the right and duty of the prisoner to escape the oppressor.

Black leaders protest big white contractors’ move to bar small businesses from $60 million...

Construction was a major source of work for all Black communities 30 years ago, but efforts, driven by fear of Black competition, to push Blacks out of construction and lock them out of an industry they founded during slavery has now succeeded in largely maintaining that lockout nationwide.