Dream Wired
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Celebrity
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • TV
  • Music
  • Comics
  • Shop
  • Home
  • Celebrity
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • TV
  • Music
  • Comics
  • Shop
No Result
View All Result
Dream Wired
No Result
View All Result
Home DramaAlert

It’s Time To Address America’s Black Femicide Crisis [Op-Ed]

Connie Marie by Connie Marie
April 26, 2026
in DramaAlert
0
It’s Time To Address America’s Black Femicide Crisis [Op-Ed]
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


You might also like

Trump Says He’s Considering Buying Spirit Airlines • Hollywood Unlocked

The Complete Roadmap to IT Certification Success in a Competitive Tech World

Agnes O’Casey On Apple TV’s ‘Star City’ & Playing A Female James Bond

Systemic violence against Black women is a public health crisis, with disproportionate rates of intimate partner and gun violence.
Misogynoir, lack of accountability, and cultural forces like patriarchy fuel this crisis, which must be directly confronted.
Tangible support like emergency funds, housing, and legal aid is critical to enable Black women’s safety and autonomy.

Black women deserve safety, protection, and the fundamental right to live. Yet for far too long, the national conversation around violence in the Black community has ignored that painful truth. We rally, we protest, we organize around the systemic dangers facing our men and the heartbreak of losing our sons—but we rarely address or name the violence that lives much closer.

Black women
Source: Delmaine Donson / Getty

Whether at work, the gym, or at home, Black women face a high level of danger. From sexual violence to murder, we are the most vulnerable when it comes to being unprotected by our men and the system, but if we’re being real, this isn’t new.

Look at the response to the 2020 shooting of Megan Thee Stallion by Tory Lanez and the harassment she has continued to endure from him and his fans for speaking out.

2023 GQ Men Of The Year - Arrivals
Source: JC Olivera/WireImage / JC Olivera/WireImage

Love Bossip? Get more! Join the Bossip Newsletter

We care about your data. See our privacy policy.

You will see why the blatant disregard for the life of Dr. Cerlina Wanzer Fairfax, DDS while Black men rushed to hoist up her killer, because he was “a good man” and a member of their fraternity, is no different—same story, different names.

Dr. Cerina Wanzer Fairfax
Source: Courtesy of Dr. Fairfax & Associates Family Dentistry / Courtesy of Dr. Fairfax & Associates Family Dentistry

It’s time to get loud and serious about the problem. 

Before we dive into this, I want to be clear about why this subject is personal for me. Not only am I a Black woman, but I survived more than two years of domestic violence at only 15 while pregnant by an adult. I was told then that it was love, but it wasn’t—it was control and jealousy at the hands of a predator. 

Also, this is not to bash Black men; I understand that there are extenuating circumstances that can lead to someone causing irreparable harm or acts of violence. My stepfather, who only ever received a seatbelt ticket while I was growing up, is currently incarcerated after snapping and contributing to the death of his then-wife after more than a year of unreported emotional abuse at her hands. The reason this is important is that this incident made me confront my own bias. Truthfully, in my mind, for years I felt it was a twisted form of justified karma for her destruction of my parents’ marriage— she was the side chick and also white. The earth-shattering event forced me to confront uncomfortable truths about my own bias and highlighted how easily we can dismiss harm depending on who the victim and perpetrator are—and that distortion sits at the heart of this crisis.

Black women have long been both the backbone and the footstool in America—uplifted in rhetoric, neglected in protection. Even historically, figures like Eldridge Cleaver are championed as a freedom fighter who fought for liberation while openly admitting in his 1968 bestseller book, Soul on Ice, that he targeted “Black girls in the ghetto” to rape because they were “easy targets.” The years of abuse that reportedly contributed to the death of Tammi Terrell are another painful reminder. The list of victims is long and often minimized, while their abusers are met with sympathy and redemption.

Portrait Of Tammi Terrell
Source: Michael Ochs Archives / Getty

But the data doesn’t lie. 

As noted by the Berkeley Journal, Black femicide is rooted in misogynoir, which is leaving us killed at rates four times higher than non-Black women. According to reports, Black women make up just 10% of the U.S. female population, yet account for 59% of women murdered. Most of these cases involve intimate partner violence—making them acts of Black femicide. Pregnant women in particular are at a higher risk of being murdered than those who die from the top three pregnancy-related complications, and Black women represent 44.6% of all pregnancy-related fatal intimate partner violence cases in the U.S., highlighting the pattern. 

The death toll for Black trans women has also increased by 93% in just four years, and still, this crisis remains largely absent from mainstream discourse.

Why?

Because stereotypes paint Black women as aggressive, unbreakable, strong women who are less deserving of softness, protection, or empathy.

Even when we are soft, accomplished, supportive, self-sufficient, joyful, and minding our business, there is always a narrative that suggests we somehow deserved mistreatment.

In 2020, as homicides rose nearly 30% nationwide, the rate for Black women and girls increased by 33%—a sharper rise than nearly every demographic except Black men, and more than double that of white women. These killings spanned all ages, from children to seniors. Gun violence drove the majority, with three-quarters of Black female victims dying from gunshot wounds. Additionally, about 45% of Black women have experienced physical or sexual violence or stalking by an intimate partner in their lifetime.

It is time to call this what it is—an epidemic.

This is not a buzzword or trend, it is a real issue that Rosa Page, founder of Black Femicide U.S., publicly named to bring visibility to the disproportionate killings; after reports delivered a staggering reality that an average of five Black women and girls were killed every single day in 2020.

Every. Single. Day.

Nearly 80% of these killings involved firearms, with over 90% of victims reportedly knowing their attackers. These are not random acts. They are intimate, targeted, and deeply personal acts of violence committed by partners, husbands, boyfriends, and even fathers. That truth forces us to confront something uncomfortable, that the danger is not only external, but it exists within the community, too. Since 2017, the homicide rate for Black women has been steadily on the rise—yet the attention, resources, and urgency remain disproportionately low. 

When tragedies like the Shreveport mass killing dominate the news cycle, the conversation often centers on the perpetrator’s pain over the innocent lives lost. While mental health issues are real, they cannot continue to be used as a shield that deflects accountability. When we humanize abusers more than victims, we send the dangerous message that her life is secondary to his pain. Depression doesn’t pull triggers and overt stress doesn’t orchestrate violence—these are calculated decisions and must be treated as such. 

Another aspect adversely affecting us that we can no longer ignore, is the cultural forces fueling this crisis, including patriarchy; yes, even within marginalized communities, it plays a huge role. The normalization of dominance, control, and entitlement by men can manifest easily as violence, especially when combined with economic disparity, lack of institutional support, and limited access to resources.

Then there’s the digital world.

Black Women
Source: FG Trade Latin / Getty

Online spaces also play a major role in amplifying harmful rhetoric targeting Black women. The “manosphere” culture, once associated primarily with white extremist spaces, now includes a growing segment of young Black men being exposed to and radicalized by the misogynoir-driven content, further adding to the disconnect when it comes to protection against violence.

When Black women are consistently devalued in conversations, media, and digital culture, it creates an environment where harm feels justified or, at the very least, ignored. The rise in rhetoric and the rise in violence are not separate, but instead connected.

Despite all of this, Black women continue to show up. We are the caretakers, the breadwinners, the organizers, and the visionaries. We carry families, communities, and the culture—often without anything in return and it’s time for the lack of reciprocity to end.

ESSENCE rightly labeled this a “public health crisis” and that framing is important, because this is not just about individual incidents—it’s about systemic patterns that are costing Black women their lives, and awareness alone is no longer enough. We’ve shared the posts. We’ve expressed outrage; now we need action.

Next Steps

Below are a few ways to effectively address the femicide issue plaguing our community while setting up the framework to hold perpetrators accountable. 

1. Demand Policy Change

We need structural solutions that match the scale of this crisis. Minnesota has set a precedent by establishing the nation’s first Office for Missing and Murdered Black Women and Girls. That level of intentional policy must become a national standard.

We also need better data collection, targeted interventions, and dedicated funding to address violence against Black women. If systems can respond to other crises, they can respond to this one as well. 

2. Challenge the Culture

This is cultural as much as it is political. Accountability must start in everyday spaces—conversations, group chats, podcasts, and homes. Misogynoir cannot be ignored or laughed off.

Silence is complicity.

Calling it out in real time matters because waiting until violence occurs is already too late and rarely results in the offender being held to any real forms of accountability. 

3. Support Women’s Autonomy

Speaking out and leaving an abusive situation are often the most dangerous moments for a woman. Telling someone to “just leave” without providing real resources is not only ineffective—it can be life-threatening. While dismissing a victim’s testimony or reducing her experience because “she didn’t say something sooner,”,  continues to push the ideology that exposing abuse leads to ridicule. 

Also don’t forget, support must be tangible, complete with emergency funds, safe housing, childcare, legal aid, and secure access to personal documents. Autonomy is not just about freedom; it is literal survival.

Black Women
Source: Delmaine Donson / Getty

Black women deserve to live. That should not feel radical, but it does. We deserve safety in our homes, relationships, and communities. Yet the data—and the lived experiences behind it—tell us that safety is not guaranteed. So the question is simple: what are we going to do about it?

Are we going to keep treating these stories as isolated tragedies, or are we finally going to connect the dots and address the pattern? Black women have always shown up for everyone; now it’s time for that protection to be returned.

If you or someone you know is experiencing domestic violence, you are not alone. Call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-SAFE (7233). 



Source link

Tags: AddressAmericasBlackcrisisFemicideOpEdtime
Share30Tweet19
Connie Marie

Connie Marie

Recommended For You

Trump Says He’s Considering Buying Spirit Airlines • Hollywood Unlocked

by Connie Marie
April 25, 2026
0
Trump Says He’s Considering Buying Spirit Airlines • Hollywood Unlocked

Socialites, come get into this: Spirit Airlines is back in the national conversation, and this time it’s coming straight from President Donald Trump himself. Speaking to reporters at...

Read more

The Complete Roadmap to IT Certification Success in a Competitive Tech World

by Connie Marie
April 25, 2026
0
The Complete Roadmap to IT Certification Success in a Competitive Tech World

IT certifications are also very imperative in career progression and accreditation in a fast moving and technologically oriented society. As more industries are fast embracing digital transformation, the...

Read more

Agnes O’Casey On Apple TV’s ‘Star City’ & Playing A Female James Bond

by Connie Marie
April 25, 2026
0
Agnes O’Casey On Apple TV’s ‘Star City’ & Playing A Female James Bond

Spies are back, at least according to rising star Agnes O’Casey, who is playing four agent roles this year and who unsurprisingly has some thoughts about the most...

Read more

Cher’s conservatorship request over son Elijah Blue Allman denied: report – National

by Connie Marie
April 25, 2026
0
Cher’s conservatorship request over son Elijah Blue Allman denied: report – National

Cher’s request for conservatorship over her adult son Elijah Blue Allman has been denied. A Los Angeles judge rejected the 79-year-old singer’s request to appoint a conservator of Allman’s...

Read more

BOSSIP & Cassius Talk ‘A Different World’

by Connie Marie
April 25, 2026
0
BOSSIP & Cassius Talk ‘A Different World’

Showrunner Felicia Pride's experience and Debbie Allen's involvement lend credibility to the sequel's foundation. Panelists reflect on beloved characters like Freddie and Whitley, highlighting the show's enduring cultural...

Read more
Next Post
Sleeping With Sirens announce new LP An Ending in Itself, produced by Will Yip

Sleeping With Sirens announce new LP An Ending in Itself, produced by Will Yip

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Browse by Category

  • Celebrity
  • Comics
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • Music
  • TV
  • Uncategorized

CATEGORIES

  • Celebrity
  • Comics
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • Music
  • TV
  • Uncategorized
No Result
View All Result

Recent News

  • Stephen And Ayesha Curry Reintroduce PLEZi Hydration With A New, Family-Focused Approach – Essence
  • Where Is The Taskmaster House — And Can You Visit It?
  • Spider-Man/Superman Tops The Bleeding Cool Weekly Bestseller List

Copyright © 2025 DramaWired.
DramaWired is a content aggregator and not responsible for the content of external sites.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Celebrity
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • TV
  • Music
  • Comics
  • Shop

Copyright © 2025 DramaWired.
DramaWired is a content aggregator and not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In