Influential San Antonians
San Antonio trailblazer named to Time's 100 Most Influential People 2020 list

A San Antonio trailblazer is being saluted as one of the most influential people in the world.
General Charles. Q. Brown, Jr. made history this summer when he became the nation’s first Black chief of not just the Air Force, but any military service. In his new post, Brown serves as a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, largely regarded as the most prestigious role for any member of the U.S. military. In addition to being born in San Antonio, Brown received his bachelor's from Texas Tech University.
This year, Time tasked other influential people, many of whom have been on the list themselves, to pen the accompanying articles. For Brown, the magazine asked Heather Wilson, president of the University of Texas at El Paso and former Secretary of the Air Force. In her piece, Brown is applauded for both his lengthy military service and unwavering leadership.
"CQ [Brown's nickname] has opened doors throughout his career and made sure that they have stayed open for those who follow," writes Wilson.
In the artists category, San Antonio-born, Houston-based Megan Thee Stallion was applauded for her tenacity by Taraji P. Henson, who penned an accompanying essay about the rapper.
"I don’t like to put the stigma of the word strong on Black women because I think it dehumanizes us, but she has strength — strength through vulnerability. She’s lost much of her family — her mother, her father, her grandmother — yet she is the epitome of tenacity, of pulling herself up by her bootstraps," Henson writes.
The Time list, published September 23, includes five other Texans.
Austin-based businessman Robert Smith, who stunned students at Morehouse College last year when he announced he was paying off their student loans, has been named to the Time 100 Most Influential People 2020 list.
Smith — who is worth $6.2 billion and ranked No. 125 on the recently releasedForbes' 400 Richest Americans — is applauded for not only his impressive career in private equity, but for his multimillion-dollar investments in people.
"Robert F. Smith has keenly recognized that the most important way to use wealth and considerable resources is to reinvest in people and their communities, societies and futures," write Samuel L. Jackson and LaTanya Richardson Jackson. "If we can perpetuate this priority, we just may have a shot at creating a better world for future generations."
In addition to his Morehouse College promise, which amounts to $35 million, Smith has made sizable donations to Cornell and Columbia universities, his alma maters, and the United Negro College Fund.
Sister Norma Pimentel was born in Brownsville and continues to work along the Texas-Mexico border as executive director of Catholic Charities of the Rio Grande Valley. Her organization, notes Julían Castro in Time, has served more than 100,000 families at the border.
"Her work has taken on greater importance in the era of Donald Trump, and for good reason. As he has acted with cruelty toward migrants, she has acted with compassion. As he has preyed on the vulnerable and sought rejection, she has preached community and acceptance. As he has promoted fear, she has taught love," Castro writes.
Lauren Gardner, who received both her bachelor's and master's from the University of Texas at Austin, also earned a spot. Gardner is a Houston native and the engineer who developed the Johns Hopkins University dashboard that is used to share information about the COVID-19 pandemic.
The other Texans applauded on this year's list are actor Selena Gomez, who was born in Grand Prairie, and NFL darling and Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, who was born in Tyler.