In a joint effort to get students involved with the Children Services Councilâs 2019 Broward AWARE! Protecting OUR Children campaign: Growing the Voices of Our Future, the Westside Gazette will engage youth in a photovoice (photojournalism) project. The youth will tell their stories through the written word and through the lens of cameras they will operate as photojournalists focusing on but not limited to the Broward AWARE campaign.
Browsing: Westside Gazette
    A new issue brief from the Center for American Progress (CAP), a Washington D.C.-based a nonpartisan research and educational institute, paints a vivid portrait of how college athletics distort the reality of Black male experiences on college campuses and raises significant concerns about racial equity in college admissions and the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA).
    During the 50th NAACP Image Awards, the NAACP will announce its historic Jamestown to Jamestown event partnership, marking the 400th year enslaved Africans first touched the shores of what would become America.
   The poverty line for a family of three (a working mom and two children) is $16,910. A woman working full time at the minimum wage is living below the poverty line. She qualifies for SNAP (food stamps), and possibly for federal housing aid if she can get it. All too often, the list for housing subsidies is full, as is public housing, so assistance is not an option. What is a woman earning such a low wage to do, then, living at the economic periphery? She house-shares lives with family or endures homelessness. She lines up to get food at food banks or from other charities. She struggles to make ends meet, while her Congressional Representative earns $174,000 a year whether they produce or not
The revolution will not be on a podcast
    The Black community in America has not lashed out with retribution, violence or hate. We remain the most abused but have maintained a commitment to Dr. Kingâs principle of nonviolence. As a people we are still the most non-harming collective. Throughout the centuries we have been God-fearing and compassionate. But Scripture says, âfaith without works is dead.â We must, as a collective, come together and, where necessary, partner with others who have the same concerns and stand up.
you must seize the moment, every moment! If you want to tell someone you love them, you need to do it. Donât hesitate and donât let anyone else make or take away your decision to express your feelings. If you want to tell someone you donât like them, well, think again and ask yourself âwhat do I hope to accomplish,â or âwhat is the end game?â We must understand that there are consequences and repercussions for our actions and our inactions. We must be accountable and hold others accountable.
In a joint effort to get students involved with the Children Services Councilâs 2019 Broward AWARE! Protecting OUR Children campaign: Growing the Voices of Our Future, the Westside Gazette will engage youth in a photovoice (photojournalism) project. The youth will tell their stories through the written word and through the lens of cameras they will operate as photojournalists focusing on but not limited to the Broward AWARE campaign.
In an op-ed article on FoxNews.com, Brazile wrote that she hoped to improve the tenor of political debate. âWill I agree with my fellow commentators at Fox News? Probably not. But I will listen,â Brazile wrote.
Black Ivy Activism At Work
