Page 2 The Skanner November 22, 2017 ® Challenging People to Shape a Better Future Now Black Celebrities, Athletes and Politicians Must Respect the Black Press — Even After Big Fame Bernie Foster Founder/Publisher Bobbie Dore Foster Executive Editor T Jerry Foster Advertising Manager Christen McCurdy News Editor Patricia Irvin Graphic Designer Melanie Sevcenko Reporter Monica J. Foster Seattle Office Coordinator Susan Fried Photographer 2017 MERIT AWARD WINNER The Skanner Newspaper, es- tablished in October 1975, is a weekly publication, published every Wednesday by IMM Publi- cations Inc. 415 N. Killingsworth St. P.O. Box 5455 Portland, OR 97228 Telephone (503) 285-5555 Fax: (503) 285-2900 info@theskanner.com www.TheSkanner.com The Skanner is a member of the National Newspaper Pub lishers Association and West Coast Black Pub lishers Association. All photos submitted become the property of The Skanner. We are not re spon sible for lost or damaged photos either solicited or unsolicited. ©2017 The Skanner. All rights re served. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission prohibited. Local News Pacific NW News World News Opinions Jobs, Bids Entertainment Community Calendar LOCAL NEWS BRIEFS n F ebo m me • nts TheSkannerNews o k • learn • co in y o u r c o m m u n d ay ! • L i ke u s o ac it Updated daily. to y • Opinion hroughout history, the Black Press has been the best friend that Black celebrities, athletes and politicians have ever had. The Black Press often covers Black public figures from the very start of their careers, before they’re “discovered” by the mainstream media, all the way through to their as- cension to star or leadership status. Before they became household names, had hit re- cords, secured multi-million dollar contracts or became leaders in the United States Congress, it was the Black Press that was always there for their press conferences and events, often giving them extensive coverage when the mainstream media might only give them a brief men- tion in the B-section of their newspapers or 15 seconds at the end of an evening news segment. When the mainstream me- dia finally “discovers” these same Black celebrities, ath- letes and politicians and they attain a certain degree of fame and success, suddenly, they think it’s okay to snub the Black Press. Now they don’t have time to give inter- views to Black newspapers or magazines; there’s no time to make the visits to Black ra- dio stations, where they once made regular appearances; Rosetta Miller- Perry NNPA Columnist their (usually) White public relations and management staffers guard their time and appearances carefully, and shun Black-owned media. These same public relations “ Public rela- tions firms often dis- courage their Black clients from working with Black- owned media firms often discourage their Black clients from working with Black-owned media com- panies and advertising with the Black Press. This is a disgrace, because when things go bad and these Black celebrities want to get “their” side of the story out, the first place these folks run to is the Black Press. If there is a story about political cor- ruption, infidelity or other alleged crimes involving a Black public figure, the main- stream media’s attitude is usually “guilty until proven innocent.” It’s the Black Press that usually takes the “in- nocent until proven guilty” approach, urging fairness and caution, telling readers, listeners and viewers to wait until all the evidence is in, frequently reminding folks of all the great things that their favorite hero did in the past. The Black Press remains the advocate for Black celebri- ties, athletes and politicians, even now, despite the fact that so many of them seem oblivious to our existence. That is why, increasingly, the National Newspaper Publish- ers Association (NNPA), the trade group that represents over 200 Black-owned media companies, that reach more than 20 million readers in print and online every week, is reminding these Black pub- lic figures that Black news- papers are their champions and defenders 24/7, and that we have backed them in good times and bad. While the clas- sic case of a Black superstar, who ran away from the Black Press for years and then re- turned at the eleventh hour, remains O.J. Simpson, it is instructive to see how main- stream media is covering the NFL in the wake of Donald Trump’s garbage claims that the players are somehow “dis- respecting the flag and the military” if they kneel during the playing of the national anthem, a claim that was and continues to be absolute non- sense. The Black Press backed Colin Kaepernick’s protest against oppression and police brutality from the beginning, and continues to do so. The Black Press supports Seattle Seahawks defensive lineman Michael Bennett and other players who have responded positively in the wake of crit- icism. Black newspapers have printed the entire Star-Span- gled Banner, including its verses supporting slavery, while many mainstream pub- lications have bought into the Trump idiocy. When conser- vative newspapers and pub- lications attacked ESPN com- mentator Jemele Hill for her tweets about Trump, it was the Black Press that offered unqualified support. We’ve been there through decades of attacks on Black leaders, and we remain vigilant to the constant character assassina- tion and innuendos lodged against Black public figures at the local, state and national levels. Read the rest of this commentary at TheSkanner.com Better Watch Your Mouth: Dental Care in the Black Community F rom the time I was a lit- tle girl, to just a day or so ago, someone has al- ways told me to watch my mouth. Why? My mouth runs and sometimes it runs unplugged. I’ve been known to flim flam folks with flattery or eviscerate them with evil, sometimes moving from one to the other with just a shrug of my shoulders. But my “mouth-watching” is not the kind of mouth-watching I’m writing about in this column. I’m writing about the healthy mouth-watching that is criti- cal to our health. Nearly a hundred folks gathered at the National Council of Negro Women (NCNW) headquarters at 633 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Washington, D.C., to hear two dynamic women talk about dental health. Dr. Diane Earle, the managing dental director at Kool Smiles, in Lancaster, Texas, talked about dental health and its importance. Your mouth, she said, is the gateway to your body, so it is important for you to take care of it by getting regular checkups, taking care of your mouth and, especially, ensur- ing that children have early dental care as soon as they have even a single tooth. She was joined by healthy living Julianne Malveaux NNPA Columnist expert Debra Peek Haynes, who is passionate about the way we eat and how what we eat can transform our lives. These two women held an audience for an hour, focus- “ Your mouth... is the gate- way to your body, so it is important for you to take care of it ing on the many ways we can improve our lives so that we can better resist these oppres- sive political times. There was talk of the ways we can eat better, exercise better, and live better, with both Dr. Earle and Mrs. Haynes pre- senting as great examples of healthy living. Dr. Earle, for example, said she had never had a cavity in her life. Deb Haynes (whose husband, the Rev. Frederick Douglass Haynes, III, has expertly pa- stored Friendship West Bap- tist Church in Dallas, Texas) shared the ways she used healthy eating to turn her health around after a diagno- sis of infertility. I was thrilled to bring the women together and to moderate a discussion that had significant meaning for our community. NCNW, under the transfor- mative leadership of Attorney Janice Mathis (who led Rain- bow PUSH’s Atlanta office un- til she came to Washington), is the only space owned by Black people on Pennsylvania Avenue. It is close enough to the “People’s House” at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue that one might walk there, which perhaps means that it is close to the devil. That proximity offers an opportunity for re- sistance, and while much of our resistance must be polit- ical, some of it hinges on our personal commitment to a physical excellence that pre- pares us to have resilience for the struggle. Even as we met, the devil was busy. The House of Rep- resentative passed the new “tax overhaul” package that they say will create jobs, but we know will create wealth for billionaires; to benefit the top one percent, the bottom 80 percent will be hit hard, but Congress doesn’t seem to care. The Senate has a ver- sion of the legislation, and the two houses will have to come up with compromise legisla- tion, but both the House and the Senate agree that corpora- tions should pay less tax. At NCNW, we talked about Congresswoman Robin Kel- ly (D-Ill.) and her Action for Dental Health Act (HR 2422). The bipartisan legislation, co-sponsored with Republi- can Indiana dentist and Con- gressman Mike Simpson, would make dental care more accessible, but with issues like these having low priority in this ideologically divided Congress, it is not likely to even make it to the floor for a vote. Instead, the new tax law would weaken, not strength- en, healthcare access. Dental care and nutrition issues don’t get as much vis- ibility as Russia, or sexual harassment, or jiving Jeff Ses- sions. But they are also im- portant issues. So when we “watch our mouth” by watch- ing what we eat and how we manage our dental care, we are strengthening ourselves for the inevitable struggle against the inequality that is part of the status quo. nt • lo c a l n e w s • eve