Food deserts are usually thought to be areas in the U.S in which it's difficult to buy fresh produce, fruits and vegetables, and other healthy food items. Large swathes of urban communities whose economic base is marginal, and many rural areas, experience this problem. You're lucky in those areas if you have access — often miles from where you live — to a big superstore like Wal-Mart, which may or may not have a smattering of fresh produce for you to buy. Or you're lucky if you have access to a fried chicken or hamburger chain, an unhealthy fast-food option.
Showing posts with label Arkansas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arkansas. Show all posts
Saturday, November 5, 2022
Sunday, December 6, 2020
As Arkansas Governor and Med School Chancellor Warn We Are at a Critical Point, Arkansas Attorney General Rutledge Tweets Photos of Maskless Gathering
This is Arkansas's Republican attorney general Leslie Rutledge on December 4.
Labels:
Arkansas,
consistent ethic of life,
pandemic,
Republican party
Saturday, November 7, 2020
Church Bells Ringing Throughout the World, Horns Honking, Fireworks and People Dancing in the Streets: Celebration of the End of Trump Presidency
"The Guardian, CNN's Van Jones brought to tears as Joe Biden wins US election"
Mark Sumner, "America is celebrating like a cloud has left the skies and a weight is off our hearts":
Right now, a pandemic is raging. Right now, the economy is in recession. Right now, the nation is suffering from four years in which Donald Trump did everything possible to rewind decades of progress and tear at the foundations of democracy.
But right now. Right now. All of that has to be set aside. Right now, it is time to shout. To cry in joy and in relief. To jump. To dance. To celebrate.
Labels:
Arkansas,
Donald Trump,
Joe Biden,
Minnesota
Friday, August 21, 2020
Robert P. Jones's White Too Long: The Legacy of White Supremacy in American Christianity — Excerpts Worth Noting
As I did recently with Sarah Posner's new book Unholy: Why White Evangelicals Worship at the Altar of Donald Trump, I'd like to share with you some excerpts from Robert P. Jones's book White Too Long: The Legacy of White Supremacy in American Christianity (NY: Simon & Schuster, 2020), which I recently read. This book is very important, as Jones's Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI) issues a report today entitled, "Summer Unrest over Racial Injustice Moves the Country, But Not Republicans or White Evangelicals." This reports summarizes recent PRRI polling findings which show that, even as other white Americans are gradually coming to see and admit the depths of racial injustice everywhere in American society, Republicans and white evangelicals — who are to a great extent one and the same — refuse to budge. These groups continue to want to claim that white citizens are the real victims of injustice.
Monday, July 13, 2020
News Commentary in Time of Plague: 43 Pages of Obituaries in Houston Today (and the Role Many US Christians Are Playing in the Pandemic)
OUR LOCAL PAPER: The Houston Chronicle— Rogelio Garcia Lawyer (@LawyerRogelio) July 13, 2020
obituary section was 43 pages today.
Let that sink in.
(P.S. As Newsweek reports, this is a standalone section of obituaries for the year up to now. Read the Newsweek report, and you'll see a lot of commenters on social media are stating that it's likely a high percentage of those deaths are Covid deaths.)
Labels:
Arizona,
Arkansas,
Betsy DeVos,
Catholics,
Donald Trump,
evangelicals,
Florida,
pandemic,
pro-life,
Texas,
Wendell Griffen,
white supremacy
Thursday, June 25, 2020
"Public Health Train Wreck in Slow Motion" in US: Where's the Leadership? Where Are the Pro-Life White Christians Who Set This in Motion?
Teresa Hanafin in today's "Fast Forward" from Boston Globe:
[A]s Dr. David Blumenthal, president of The Commonwealth Fund, put it, the coronavirus pandemic in the United States is like watching a "public health train wreck in slow motion." And the Choo-Choo-in-Chief is at the controls, either completely befuddled or completely callous. Take your pick.
Labels:
Arkansas,
Donald Trump,
Republican party,
Texas,
Wendell Griffen
Wednesday, May 20, 2020
As Churches Re-Open Across US, CDC Issues Report on Arkansas Church in Which a COVID Cluster Spread into Wider Community
In the current pandemic, churches and church gatherings have proven repeatedly to be a perfect petri dish for spread of coronavirus infection. Churches within which infection begins to circulate then bring the infection into the wider community. Yet many Americans continue clamoring for churches to be re-opened even as medical officials urge caution, and. as they clamor, they want to weaponize the pandemic with claims that shutting churches down is an attack on religion.
Sunday, April 19, 2020
While the Elderly, Minorities, and the Imprisoned Die, A Push to "Re-Open" the Country by "Pro-Life" Christian Republicans
Reported US coronavirus deaths:— Ryan Struyk (@ryanstruyk) April 18, 2020
7 weeks ago: 0 deaths
6 weeks ago: 17 deaths
5 weeks ago: 49 deaths
4 weeks ago: 249 deaths
3 weeks ago: 1,588 deaths
2 weeks ago: 7,152 deaths
1 week ago: 18,758 deaths
Right now: 36,997 deaths
Cristina Cabrera, "Reported US Coronavirus Deaths Surge To Record 4,591 In A Single Day":
The U.S. saw a grim milestone this week: A record 4,591 patients in the U.S. with COVID-19 died in a 24-hour stretch ending at 8 p.m. ET Thursday, according to Johns Hopkins University.
According to the Wall Street Journal, the figure beats the previous record of 2,569 deaths.
The sharp increase is likely because in New York City's probable coronavirus deaths are now being counted in the official tally.
As of Friday morning, John Hopkins University reports that the death toll in the U.S. has reached 33,286, the highest mortality rate in the world.
Thursday, April 9, 2020
12,000 US Catholics Sign Petition to Bishops to Permit Public Masses for Easter: "The Reckoning Is Upon Us"
Kansas Gov Laura Kelly puts in place a stay-at-home order and a ban on large gatherings, like other (sane) governors.— Rachel Maddow MSNBC (@maddow) April 8, 2020
Republicans in KS Legislature just **overturned** the ban on large gatherings because they...
want Kansans in large gatherings?
now?https://t.co/OFDx224vny
Commentary I have found worth reading, and want to pass along to all of you:
Labels:
Arkansas,
Catholic,
churches,
coronavirus,
Donald Trump,
Easter,
evangelicals,
Kansas,
pro-life
Saturday, April 4, 2020
Quote for Day: Right-Wing Evangelical Churches Want to Resist Closing Services — But Risk Killing Off Their Congregations
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| David Neiwert, "Evangelical churches run smack into coronavirus' lethal reality, but some continue to resist" |
Evangelical churches with a right-wing, Christian-nationalist political bent really want nothing more than to resist government orders to cease holding services during the novel coronavirus pandemic. The main drawback is that there’s the possibility of killing off their congregations.
Labels:
Arkansas,
California,
churches,
Donald Trump,
evangelicals,
pandemic,
pro-life,
Republican
Saturday, March 28, 2020
As America Becomes Number 1 in World Coronavirus Infections, the "Beautiful" Idea of Packing Churches for Easter: My Commentary
8 in 10 white evangelicals, 6 in 10 white Catholics & Mormons, 50%+ of all US white Christians, set this nightmare into motion, claiming they voted "pro-life."— 𝕎𝕚𝕝𝕝𝕚𝕒𝕞 𝔻. 𝕃𝕚𝕟𝕕𝕤𝕖𝕪 🌈 (@wdlindsy) February 15, 2019
We must not forget. Racism + US white Christianity are central to this nightmare. Pretending re: this will not help.
An update on the story I shared with you recently (and here), about First Assembly of God church in Greer's Ferry, Arkansas, which hosted a children's crusade March 6-8, and then discovered that some three dozen church members who attended that event were infected with coronavirus: that story continues to gain international attention, as with this recent NBC news report.
Labels:
Arkansas,
churches,
coronavirus,
Donald Trump,
Florida,
Missouri,
pro-life,
religious right
Wednesday, March 25, 2020
Washington Post Reports on Arkansas Church with COVID Infections as Warning for Other Churches: My Response
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| KFSM News Arkansas, "Coronavirus live updates: 236 confirmed cases in Arkansas, 1,050 negative tests thus far" |
In an article entitled "'Take it very seriously': Pastor at Arkansas church where 34 people came down with coronavirus sends a warning," Julie Zauzmer reports on the story about which I shared information yesterday, about a church in Arkansas 34 of whose members now have COVID. She reports that the pastor of the church, Mark Palenske, is urging other churches to learn from his church's experience, and take the coronavirus pandemic seriously.
Tuesday, March 24, 2020
Rev. Wendell Griffen on Our Choice for This Season of Pandemic
And for a different (and in my view, authentically pro-life) voice from an Arkansas church, after I just shared dismal news about a church in Arkansas in a previous posting, I want to share this recent sermon from my friend Pastor Wendell Griffen of New Millennium Baptist church in Little Rock. New Millennium stopped holding services some weeks back, and Wendell is now delivering his sermons online.
Labels:
Arkansas,
hope,
pro-life,
Wendell Griffen
News Breaks That 34 Members of an Arkansas Church Are Infected with COVID: My Reflections on the Curiously Slow Learning Curve of Churches
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| Jose A. Del Real, Julie Zauzmer, and Ava Wallace, "Without guidance from the top, Americans have been left to figure out their own coronavirus solution" |
On March 15, Jose A. Del Real, Julie Zauzmer, and Ava Wallace reported for Washington Post,
In Arkansas, the Rev. Josh King met with the pastors of five other churches on Thursday [i.e., March 12] to decide whether to continue holding service. Their religious beliefs told them that meeting in person to worship each Sunday remained an essential part of their faith, and some of their members signed on to Trump's claims that the media and Democrats were overblowing the danger posed by the virus.
"One pastor said half of his church is ready to lick the floor, to prove there's no actual virus," said King, lead pastor at Second Baptist church in Conway, Ark.
Monday, November 11, 2019
"You Served Your Tour with Valor": Honoring Veterans of the African-American Struggle for Justice and Dignity
Today is the U.S. Veterans' Day holiday, and as tributes to this or that family member who has been in the military pop up in my social media feed, I'm thinking of a tribute my friend Wendell Griffen posted on his blog a number of days back to an Arkansas civil rights attorney and state representative, John W. Walker. John Walker died 28 October, and Wendell eulogized him at his funeral in Little Rock on 1 November.
Tuesday, September 3, 2019
Wendell Griffen, "Standing with Elaine"
With the permission of my friend Judge (and Reverend) Wendell Griffen, I'd like to share with you a statement he has made recently on his blog The Fierce Urgency of Prophetic Hope. A bit of background: as Wendell's posting notes, in October 1919, hundreds of black men, women, and children were murdered in an event in eastern Arkansas now known as the Elaine Massacre. There are some outstanding historical accounts of what occurred in this massacre — one of the largest race-based massacres in American history. These accounts provide a narrative of what happened to the extent to which historians can piece together what occurred, when so much evidence has been lost or suppressed.
Labels:
African American,
Arkansas,
discrimination,
prejudice,
race,
racism,
violence,
Wendell Griffen
Tuesday, July 2, 2019
Everybody Has a Story: Updating You on Recent Events in My Husband Steve's and My Life
Weeks back, I alluded to a hard patch through which Steve and I have been walking, and told you readers of Bilgrimage that I would say more about this when the time was ripe. I am now free to talk. I shared the following statement on Facebook yesterday. I feel a certain ambivalance about making this story public, and I think the ambivalence arises from my concern that I not target the individuals who created this hard patch for Steve and me.
Saturday, June 29, 2019
Indianapolis Archbishop Claims Firing of Gay Employees Necessary to Address "Public Situations": My Response
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| Masha Gessen, "Coming Out, and Rising Up, in the Fifty Years After Stonewall," on the Supreme Court ruling in Bowers v. Hardwick (1986) |
Associated Press, "Indiana archbishop defends firing of teacher in gay marriage":
Archbishop Charles Thompson said during a news conference that he didn't seek out information about the marriages involving the teachers but had to respond to what he called a "public situation" of Catholic school employees not following church doctrine.
Labels:
Arkansas,
Catholic,
discrimination,
heterosexism,
homophobia,
prejudice
Friday, February 8, 2019
Bishop Anthony Taylor of Little Rock Updates List of Priests Credibly Accused of Abuse of Minors
This is another footnote to my posting two days ago entitled "As Catholic Dioceses Release Lists of Priests Credibly Accused of Abuse of Minors, Important Things to Watch for: The Case of Arkansas." In that posting, I told you that Father Bede Mitchell, OSB, of Subiaco Abbey in Arkansas, was listed by the Fort Worth diocese in its recent list of priests credibly accused of abuse of minors, but was not listed on the list of credibly accused priests released by the diocese of Little Rock last year.
Michael Iafrate on How Jurisdictional Mentality Protects Abusive Priests by Hiding Cross-Diocesan Connections in Lists of Abusive Priests
This is a follow-up/companion piece to what I posted two days ago about lists of priests credibly accused of abusing minors which are now being compiled and published by many Catholic dioceses* across the U.S. (and by some religious orders). As I noted in that posting, as more and more Catholic dioceses (and some religious communities) release names of priests credibly accused of abusing minors, it's important that we monitor those lists to spot "cross-pertinent" information that may be omitted from any given list. In many cases, priests named in one place have also had pastoral assignments in other places.
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