One morning this paris fashion week, I found myself making some unusual plans. I was one of few editors on the ground during the city’s
                                                                                                                        
                                
                            - Reporter 21
 - 04 Nov, 2021
 
Greater
 Bridgeport – For a few moments on, August 11, 2020, the discussion of 
the ravages from the pandemic of COVID-19 was pushed aside by the 
rushing tide of history. Senator Kamala Harris of California became the 
nation’s first African American woman nominated for the vice presidency 
of the United States. It is a moment to be savored, a time to reflect, 
and a new journey to begin. Shirley Chisholm was the first African 
American woman elected to Congress, and the first Black major party 
candidate to run for president of the United States. In 1972 she said, 
“at present, our country needs women’s idealism and determination, 
perhaps more in politics than anywhere else.” The historicity of this 
hour reminds us again of that idealism, determination, and authentic 
sensitivity we often find in women. It just seems to be a part of who 
they are. It often appears in the way they govern. There is an undying 
belief on the part of women, expressed in the words of former 
presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton, “we are agents of change,
 we are drivers of progress, we are makers of peace – all we need is a 
fighting chance.” This is a bold move on the part of Vice President Joe 
Biden. It is another opportunity for our nation to move a little closer 
towards a more perfect union. It is a union for which Dr. Martin Luther 
King, Jr., said, “one day we will judge people not by the color of their
 skin but by the content of their character.” While the NAACP does not 
endorse candidates, we are compelled to recognize the historic impact of
 these rare moments in time. This election will really be for the very 
soul of our nation. As the author James Cone has written When My Soul 
Looks Back, “it wonders how I get over.” I can hear the voice of Harriet
 Tubman humming. I can hear Ida B. Wells declaring, Fannie Lou 
Hamersinging, and Shirley Chisholm calling out the words of that old 
gospel song “he didn’t bring us this far to leave us.” It is time for 
everyone regardless of color, station, or vocation to Take Your Soles To
 The Polls.
 
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