Black people in America need to be registered to vote, all of us. Full Fk’n Stop.
In states like Georgia, Maryland, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama, turning to vote can shift outcomes in House, Senate, and gubernatorial races.
Look at Georgia. About 3.5 million Black residents live here. Roughly 2.5 million of us are eligible to vote, yet only around 1.4 million of us actually do. That leaves between 900,000 and 1.1 million eligible Black voters not participating.
Now compare that to the margins of the last two Ga: governor’s races. In 2018, the race was decided by about 54,000 votes. In 2022, about 191,000 votes. The number of eligible Black voters not participating is between 7 and 10x larger than those margins.
This isn’t about theory, it’s about MATH. If we show up consistently, outcomes change. The shift starts with registration, and it is sustained by turnout.
Register and VOTE.
#RightNowAtJSU: President Dr. Denise Jones Gregory is getting the crowd started with her “electric” dance moves at the Boots & Brims Southern Soul Celebration!
#JacksonStateUniversity
Going to an HBCU might be better for Black students’ health, according to a recent study
‘At age 62, Black adults who had attended an HBCU had better memory and cognitive function than those who attended a PWI’ https://t.co/09IW1XMERr
#JSUStudents: Congratulations to Elzy Furdge II, a sophomore Computer Engineering major at Jackson State University, who was awarded the Future Leader Award during the 2026 BEYA Conference! @BlackEngineer@JacksonStateU