AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, Pool
While many Blacks may suck at voting for their best interest, they kind of have the right idea on this COVID-19 vaccination campaign. To paraphrase the late President Ronald Reagan,
Verify, before you trust.
So this creepy, Twilight Zone-worthy Biden program of “Doses-to-Doors” in Mecklenberg County, North Carolina captured my attention, especially since the administration chose to mount the major push in this heavily-minority, lower income section of that state.
As a Charlotte Observer piece from a few years back attested:
In Mecklenburg, 1 in 4 residents lived in distressed neighborhoods in 2010, up from 1 in 10 in 2000, the Observer found. These neighborhoods have at least 20 percent of residents living below the federally established poverty level – for a family of four, a yearly household income of $23,850 or less.
North Charlotte church hosting COVID-19 vaccine clinic after deadly virus outbreak
The United House of Prayer in north Charlotte will be hosting a COVID-19 vaccine clinic months after a massive outbreak was linked to over 200 cases and nine deaths. Author: Hank Lee, Chloe Leshner (WCNC), Savannah Levins (WCNC) Published: 9:59 AM EST February 19, 2021 Updated: 8:55 PM EST February 20, 2021
CHARLOTTE, N.C. The United House of Prayer for All People in north Charlotte teamed up with Mecklenburg County Public Health to host a COVID-19 vaccine clinic this weekend.
The clinic, which is open for Groups 1 and 2 vaccinations, ran from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 20. Eligible individuals were able to register online or call the county s COVID-19 hotline at 980-314-9400 to schedule an appointment.