"Alabama's women wrote the verdict on Roy Moore," declares an NBC News headline, with the accompanying story pointing out that 58% of women voted for Doug Jones in Alabama. But a deeper look at the numbers reveals that headline is missing a word: black. As the Washington Post reports, 63% of white women voted for Moore; only 2% of black women, who made up 17% of voters, did. And the black turnout was strong, with African-Americans making up as much as 30% of voters, compared to 29% and 28% during the 2008 and 2012 presidential elections; that figure is a bit higher than the state's black population, which ABC News puts at 26.8%. Slate's takeaway for Dems: "Mobilizing black voters in conservative states en masse may be more possible than many imagined—even for candidates not named Barack Obama." How five black women responded to the news on Twitter: