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FOCUS: F*ck cancer

FOCUS: F*ck cancer

By Catherine Brack, special to Charleston Currents  |  October is Breast Cancer Awareness month, and for many, it is pink:  Pink ribbons, walks and fashion shows featuring pink clothing, shoes and cocktails. If there needs to be an awareness month to inspire more women to schedule mammograms and have real talks about their health with their doctors, then great. Keep it up.

But if this is about the symbolism of a month or a ribbon or socializing at walks or parties, then that’s nothing but Barbie-fying breast cancer. It desensitizes the public to the reality of breast cancer. It fails to illustrate how difficult this disease is to detect, much less treat. 

Breast cancer is vile. It is soul-destroying. It is physically painful. It is an emotional terrorist. It is my reality, every single day.

I talk openly about cancer because I want people to understand the face of cancer. I never wanted this reality. I never wanted the surgeries or scars. I never thought I could be facing death at my age, 51, and yet, here I am. Cancer sucks, but that’s not even close to sufficient description. 

NEWS BRIEFS: Holiday Festival of Lights set to kick off Nov. 13

NEWS BRIEFS: Holiday Festival of Lights set to kick off Nov. 13

Staff reports | Children won’t be able to sit in Santa’s lap this year for pictures at regular visits to the annual Holiday Festival of Lights, but they will offer photos with a popular Old St. Nick uring select daytime visits.  Families can sign up for a timeframe visit with Santa during the day at James Island County Park, according to Charleston County Parks. Sessions come complete with a private visit and a photo package from the official Holiday Festival of Lights photographer Gary Coleman. For details or to register, visit HolidayFestivalofLights.com.

by · 10/19/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Good news, News briefs
Gov. David Beasley in Uganda. Photo courtesy of WFP.

FOCUS: Beasley leads Nobel Prize-winning food program

By Andy Brack, editor and publisher  |  Hats off and hearty congratulations to Former Gov. David Beasley and the United Nations’ World Food Program that he leads. Just days ago, it won the Nobel Peace Prize for its work to feed the world’s hungry.  Part of the prize’s international glory is a tribute to Beasley’s leadership.  It’s something in which  the whole state should take pride.  

Beasley, who admitted to reporters that he was speechless after hearing the news, wrote on Twitter earlier today: “I struggle to put into words what the @WFP family is feeling right now. We are so touched by your overwhelming support. But it breaks my heart that millions of people are starving today. Let this #NobelPeacePrize2020 awaken the world to the suffering and struggle of so many.”

Three years ago after Beasley took the job that has taken him all over the world, we offered the following profile of what he’s been doing.  It’s fitting to republish it today. 

by · 10/12/2020 · 1 comment · Focus, Good news
NEWS BRIEFS: How to vote early in the 2020 general election

NEWS BRIEFS: How to vote early in the 2020 general election

Staff reports | With so much voting information available online, the options to vote early can seem overwhelming or complicated. But voting early may save you long waits in line on Nov. 3.  So here is a breakdown of everything you need to know:

by · 10/12/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Good news, News briefs
Blast from the past: Christine Mermer, Noel Mermer, former Charleston Mayor Joe Riley, Stephanie Barna and Blair Barna in a 2003 photo.

NEWS: City Paper’s Mermer passes away Saturday

Noel Stephen Mermer, the 53-year-old founding publisher of the Charleston City Paper, died late Saturday after a long battle with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also known as ALS or Lou Gehrig’s disease.

by · 10/05/2020 · Comments are Disabled · News
NEWS BRIEFS: Offshore wind in S.C. in peril thanks to memo, group says

NEWS BRIEFS: Offshore wind in S.C. in peril thanks to memo, group says

Staff reports | A presidential memorandum that halts offshore drilling and testing off South Carolina waters also puts an end to the burgeoning offshore wind industry, clean energy advocates say.

The memo initially seemed to be good news for conservationists: President Donald Trump recently signed a memo halting new leases for offshore drilling exploration for South Carolina, North Carolina, Georgia and Florida from July 1, 2022, until June 30, 2032.Sure, it could easily be undone with another memo, it doesn’t apply to any current leases already issued and it wouldn’t stop seismic testing completely. But it was something and appeared to be in the direction South Carolina officials have pushed: putting an end to chants of “drill, baby, drill” in Palmetto waters. 

by · 10/05/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Good news, News briefs
FOCUS: Five Lowcountry Senate races to keep an eye on

FOCUS: Five Lowcountry Senate races to keep an eye on

By Lindsay Street, Statehouse Report  |  Political observers are watching five Lowcountry state Senate seats as being ripe for plucking by Democrats in the November elections.  But Republicans aren’t worried about losing control of the Senate because they’ve targeted Democratic seats across the state that may flip, too.  Read the full story in Statehouse Report. 

“Democrats could pick up four races in Charleston County, and if Democrats win four races in Charleston County, they would be looking at a tie (in the Senate),” Democratic strategist Tyler Jones of Charleston said, adding that a tie could benefit Democrats since not all Republicans vote along party lines. He said a tie would have big consequences in 2021, a redistricting year.

But S.C. Republican Party Chair Drew McKissick isn’t worried:  “No fear at all about losing the Senate at all,” he said. “There are seats that are ripe for Republicans to win in this cycle in the Senate.”

by · 09/28/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Focus, Good news
In what is believed to be a sign of positive maritime activity to come, Charleston’s port last week welcomed the largest ship ever to dock on the East Coast -- the 15,072-TEU CMA CGM Brazil. (Photo SCPA/English Purcell).

NEWS BRIEFS: Upswing at Ports since drops caused by pandemic

Staff reports  |  The South Carolina Ports Authority saw some positive cargo trends in August, pointing to a slow but emerging recovery during the ongoing global pandemic.

SC Ports handled 208,837 twenty-foot equivalent container units (TEUs) at the Wando Welch and North Charleston container terminals in August, down about 10 percent year-over-year, according to a press release. When compared to recent months however, volumes are trending positively, with TEUs up 18 percent since July and up 33 percent since June.  Furthermore, the ports moved 116,248 pier containers, down 12 percent year-over-year, but up 17 percent from July and up 31 percent from June.

by · 09/28/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Good news, News briefs
FOCUS: Interest in Slavery to Freedom Tour spikes at Magnolia 

FOCUS: Interest in Slavery to Freedom Tour spikes at Magnolia 

By Herb Frazier, special to Charleston Currents  |  With rapid-fire questions, Georgia nurse Leonza Hudson wanted to know where the enslaved people at Magnolia Plantation and Gardens attended church and cook and were the children taught to read.

He and his wife, pediatrician Tamara New-Hudson, directed their questions to Joseph McGill as he led the couple and eight others through four former slave dwellings open daily during Magnolia’s Slavery to Freedom Tour.

The African-American couple, who lives in Decater, Ga., said they were drawn to Charleston for its history. A Google search steered them specifically to Magnolia for a lesson on slavery. They said slavery was not taught in the all-white schools he attended in Michigan and at her school in Maine.

by · 09/21/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Focus, Good news
Photo provided.

NEWS BRIEFS: On trolls, a big ship and a big gift

By Lindsay Street  |  Two Clemson University professors want to fight online misinformation by giving everyone a pop quiz. But don’t worry, it’s only eight questions. Darren Linvill and Patrick Warren have debuted this week “Spot the Troll,” an educational tool to guide users toward being better informed on social media while asking participants to divine the legitimate profiles from those linked to foreign governments. 

by · 09/21/2020 · Comments are Disabled · Good news, News briefs