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Friday, May 3, 2019

Georgia Agency Manager Allegedly Fired Because She’s A Black Woman

A former manager for a Georgia criminal justice agency has filed a lawsuit alleging she was harassed and later fired because she’s an African-American woman.

According to reports, the former Division Director Nicole Jenkins was targeted by Jay Neal, the executive director for the Criminal Justice Coordinating Council.

Jenkins’ lawsuit reportedly states she was falsely accused of exposing her staff to bullying, and she was compared to a domestic violence batterer.

Jenkins was later replaced in meetings with male employees, forced to submit paperwork that wasn’t required of her white colleagues and abruptly fired in June 2017, the lawsuit said.

Neal, a former Republican state legislator, didn’t return messages from The Atlanta Journal-Constitution seeking comment.

“It’s very clear there was a struggle and difficulty with having an African-American woman in that position of power,” said Jenkins’ attorney, Adian Miller. “She was treated differently, and there was no legitimate reason for it other than race or gender.”

Jenkins is seeking back pay and other monetary damages from a federal jury.

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Does hair need legal protections? Many black Americans say it does, here’s why

… hair need legal protections? Many black Americans say it does, here’s … symbol of black pride. Many black Americans have recently adopted natural hairstyles …

Biden To Test Appeal Among Black Voters In South Carolina

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — Joe Biden will have his first chance this weekend to demonstrate whether he can attract the type of diverse coalition that twice sent Barack Obama to the White House.

The former vice president has opened his presidential campaign with explicit appeals to white, working class voters across the Midwest, pledging his allegiance to unions and promising to rebuild the middle class. His premier trip to South Carolina as a 2020 contender on Saturday will gauge whether his message will resonate among black voters whose support will be crucial in winning the nation’s first southern primary.

Proving that he can win over black voters would be an essential part of Biden’s argument that he is the most electable Democrat in the race. Obama was the last Democrat to win the White House, and his success was based in part on his ability to unite black and white voters against his Republican foes.

But Biden is facing plenty of competition in South Carolina. At least 15 Democratic candidates have held more than 100 events here so far this year. Two of his rivals — Sens. Kamala Harris of California and Cory Booker of New Jersey — are black and are making explicit appeals to African American voters. Biden is aiming to distinguish himself by relying on his decades-long ties to the state and the goodwill he generated during eight years as Obama’s deputy.

“He is a known quantity in this state,” state Sen. Gerald Malloy, a member of South Carolina’s Legislative Black Caucus and chairman of this year’s state Democratic convention, said of Biden. “I think that there’s a longing … for the service of President Obama, and Vice President Biden right at his side.”

Obama remains popular among Democrats in the state, where he soundly defeated Hillary Clinton in the 2008 primary by a more than 2-to-1 margin. Much of that support came from minority voters, who comprise most of South Carolina’s Democratic primary voters.

Biden has maintained South Carolina ties dating back decades with his enduring friendships with fellow long-serving senators Strom Thurmond and Fritz Hollings, both of whom Biden has eulogized . He and his family have vacationed regularly in a resort area near Charleston, reportedly hunkering down there as he mulled — and ultimately chose not to pursue — a 2016 presidential campaign.

In 2018, Biden made several endorsements in South Carolina races, backing James Smith for governor, as well as longtime friend and adviser Dick Harpootlian’s successful legislative bid. He also supported Democrat Joe Cunningham’s campaign in South Carolina’s 1st District — the first in South Carolina to flip from red to blue in decades — and backed the state treasurer campaign of Democrat Rosalyn Glenn, who is now on-board as Biden’s state coalitions director.

He’s parlayed those ties into a strong team. Kendall Corley, Obama’s two-time South Carolina director and African American voter outreach specialist, is Biden’s state director. Deputy director Mariah Hill managed Cunningham’s campaign, and political director Scott Harriford was Smith’s deputy political director and has worked with Cunningham.

U.S. House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn, a South Carolina Democrat who is the highest ranking African American in Congress, said Biden appears to be the candidate to beat in his home state.

“I was home for two weeks … and I saw that a lot of people told me that they were waiting to see what Biden was going to do,” Clyburn said in an interview. “I suspect that, outside of Delaware, Biden might spend more time in South Carolina than any place else.”

Publicly, at least, other Democratic presidential candidates aren’t fazed by the Biden effect.

Asked about Biden during a recent campaign stop in Columbia, Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts said, “I will run my race.” In Manning, Booker told reporters he’s committed to a positive campaign.

Questioned in Orangeburg about the fact that Biden and Sen. Bernie Sanders, the early front-runners, are white men in their 70s, Harris said, “Look, it’s early. … And I actually wouldn’t hang my hat on that, period.”

Russell Ott, a Democratic representative in South Carolina’s House, says that many voters here are balancing the appeal of a fresh face with someone experienced, like Biden, who could go one-on-one with President Donald Trump in a general election.

“That’s another plus for Biden — he’s been in that pressure cooker,” Ott said, referencing Biden’s national-level experience. “For some of these candidates, even ones we may like a lot, this is truly going to be auditions.”

Name recognition aside, state Sen. Marlon Kimpson said Biden could have the ability to seal his hold on South Carolina, as long as he remains authentic, and doesn’t tack to the left too much during a combative primary.

“He’s middle of the road, and that’s what we need. Quite frankly, he’s more Obama-like than many of the candidates in the field,” said Kimpson, also a Black Caucus member. “I don’t expect him to show up in a black church all of a sudden speaking in a southern accent, espousing ideas from New York City.”

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Is Off-White Too White? Virgil Abloh Criticized for Lacking Diversity on His Staff

He has been hailed as a gamechanger in the fashion world, but is Virgil Abloh really changing the game for other black talents? That was the question raised by a now-deleted Instagram story published by Abloh on Tuesday, chronicling a dinner party thrown for his Milan, Italy-based staff.

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Racists Ignore AutoCorrect, Tattoo Misspelled Racial Slur on Token Black Friend as Punishment

Usually racist ass racists like Donald Trump or professional hate-monger Milo Yiannopoulos love to tout their imaginary black friends or actual black husbands as irrefutable proof they can’t be racist.

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source https://www.theroot.com/racists-ignore-autocorrect-tattoo-misspelled-racial-sl-1834500086

Stepping in IT (Information Technology)

At the beginning of this year, I saw a meme on Facebook where a young man mentioned that over the past year, he had learned to stop “aspiring to sit at tables where he had to bring his own chair, squeeze in between folks and repeatedly convince people that he deserved to be there.”

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source https://verysmartbrothas.theroot.com/stepping-in-it-information-technology-1834272041

These Discounted Samsung TVs are a Tremendous Bargain, Starting at Just $350

If you missed out on all the Super Bowl TV sales, don’t fret. This 55" 4K Samsung is on sale for $400 and, if you want one that’s a little smaller, this 50" unit is $50 less at Walmart right now. To be clear, these are not Samsung’s best TVs, but both include smart apps, HDR, and even a clean cable routing solution…

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2019 Tribeca Film Festival: Phillip Youmans Wins Best Narrative Feature for Burning Cane, 1st Black and Youngest-Ever Director to Win Top Prize

The 18th Annual Tribeca Film Festival is wrapping up on May 5, and I’m happy to report that black history has been made.

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source https://thegrapevine.theroot.com/2019-tribeca-film-festival-phillip-youmans-wins-best-n-1834500702

Teen Swimmers Pray For Help, Rescued By Boat Called The Amen

ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. (AP) — A pair of Florida teens saw their prayers answered after becoming stranded about 2 miles (3 kilometers) from shore.

News outlets report that 17-year-olds Tyler Smith and Heather Brown were swimming at Vilano Beach near St. Augustine during a senior skip day last month when strong currents pulled them out to sea.

The Christ’s Church Academy students say they were holding onto each other and praying to God for help just before Captain Eric Wagner and his crew spotted them. The boat was called the Amen.

Crewmembers pulled the teens on board and contacted the U.S. Coast Guard.

Smith and Brown are set to graduate later this month.

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An ode to black American triumph

Gabrielle Union: ‘I Approach My Job Like My Husband Approaches His … With The Freedom To Do Whatever The Hell I Want’

Gabrielle Union and Jessica Alba are a force to be reckoned with – on the streets and in each other’s lives, in their upcoming buddy cop drama “L.A.’s Finest.”

EUR correspondent Fahnia Thomas interviewed the lady bosses about the historical plot routinely crafted only for the fellas.

FT/EUR: You have kids, careers, men and doing it all with style and grace…

Gabrielle Union: The last couple of weeks, I’ve been on this journey with my husband as he’s been finishing his career and at no point in the 16 years of a very successful NBA career did anyone say, ‘did you change your game or approach the game differently because you’re a father, because you’re a husband? Are you settling for jump shots because you’re a dad?’

You go to work and do the job you need to do because you love it and it allows you to provide for your family. I approach my life and my choices with the same likeness. I’m not going to be like ‘well, you’re a mom now are you opposed to certain sex scenes? Well, you’re a wife now how do you choose your co-stars?’…No I pick jobs I’m passionate about and with people I want to work with. As long as it does not affect my joy, peace and grace, I’m going to take the job – as long as the check clears. I approach my profession the same way my husband approaches his…with the freedom to do whatever the hell he wants to do. And as family members it’s our job to love, support, amplify, protect and encourage each other. Get into it!

FT/EUR: There’s a funny scene with John Salley’s character saying he’s got the plug for Lakers tickets and Gabrielle’s character saying naw she’s a Heat fan and has her own plug…How much liberty do you have to ad-lib?

Jessica Alba: We have a say in the edit, how the characters stories are being told and the development of our own individual characters. We’re in the driver’s seat.

Gabrielle Union: It’s a boss power move! At this point in our careers we’ve been there, done that. We’ve seen how Hollywood has been and we’re trying to create the Hollywood we’ve always dreamed of.

“L.A.’s Finest” debuts on Spectrum On Demand May 13. For more details click here.

Follow #LAsFinest

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Uneducated Whites Hellbent On Voting Against Their Own Interests, Poll Finds

Recent polling shows that despite the disastrous tax code, manufacturing plants like General Motors laying off thousands of people, the coal industry crashing and 45’s promises, uneducated white voters were still unwavering in their blind support of Donald Trump.

According to CNN, whites without a college degree support Trump in double digits over every other presidential candidate:

Trump +13% over Biden

Trump +15% over Buttigieg

Trump +16% over O’Rourke

Trump +17% over Sanders

Trump +28% over Harris

Trump +34% over Warren

Trump +37% over Clinton ’16

Well, as Trump said on the campaign trail, “I love the poorly educated!”

Of course, these numbers weren’t shocking. But this doesn’t not mean there isn’t any hope in 2022. Here is some perspective. In 2016, Trump garnered fewer votes than any Republican candidate in 16 years: 59.2 million people voted for Trump, 60.9 million voted for Mitt Romney, 60 million voted for John McCain, and 62 million voted for George W. Bush.

An increase in the number of eligible Black voters may set the stage for a Trump loss in 2020, according to The States Of Change report, which was authored by several groups including the Center for American Progress and the Bipartisan Policy Center. For example, voting blocs — including African-Americans, Latinos and Asians — will have more of a share of the total eligible vote by 2020. The groups will grow one percentage point, with Blacks going from 12  percent in 2016 to 13 in 2020, the report revealed.

As the voter segments expand, the percentage of eligible “White without a college degree” voters will drop by 2 points, from 46 percent to 44. Trump is largely reliant on that voting group in 2016.

Yes, there is still an overwhelmingly white majority of eligible voters, but changes in turnout and support among Black voters in 2020 could put Trump at a disadvantage.

Black turnout and the Democrats’ margin of support with African Americans have both dropped by a significant amount in 2016 when Trump was elected, NBC News reported.  If more Black Americans voted, especially with the fight to restore voting rights to ex-felons, like in Florida, going on in states across the nation, the election results could be different.

All is not lost. Be an educated voter, encourage people in your community to vote and turn out in every election from now until November 2020.

 



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There Are No Sure Things in a Crisis of This Level. But Democrats Must Move to Impeach.

Nancy Pelosi and her caucus are running out of options. The time to defend the republic is here and now.



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The President Is Calling for Unity While Rudy Giuliani Is Shouting About Investigating Joe Biden

The farce continues.



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Ex-Black Militant-Turned Muslim Cleric Says Rights Violated

(AP Photo)

ATLANTA (AP) — A 1960s black militant-turned-Muslim cleric is challenging his imprisonment for the killing of a sheriff’s deputy in 2000, saying his constitutional rights were violated at trial.

Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin, 75, gained prominence in the 1960s as a Black Panthers leader who went by H. Rap Brown and famously said, “Violence is as American as cherry pie.” He later converted to Islam, changed his name and was living in Atlanta when authorities say he shot two sheriff’s deputies, killing one of them.

In 2002, Al-Amin was convicted of murder in the shooting death of Fulton County sheriff’s Deputy Ricky Kinchen and the wounding of Kinchen’s partner, Deputy Aldranon English. He was sentenced to life in prison.

The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals plans to hear arguments Friday in a constitutional challenge to his imprisonment.

Al-Amin argues his right to not testify in his defense was violated when a prosecutor raised direct questions for him during closing arguments in a sort of mock cross-examination. Al-Amin also says the trial judge should have let his lawyers question an FBI agent who was at his arrest about another incident involving the agent.

During his days as a radical activist in the 1960s, Al-Amin served as a leader in the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. He called violence a necessary tool for blacks and once suggested he might shoot Lady Bird Johnson, the widow of former President Lyndon B. Johnson.

While serving a five-year sentence for his role in a robbery that ended in a shootout with New York police, he converted to the Dar-ul Islam movement and changed his name.

He moved to Atlanta in the 1970s and became the leader of one of the nation’s largest black Muslim groups, the National Ummah.

On March 16, 2000, Kinchen and English went to Atlanta’s West End neighborhood, where Al-Amin lived, served as an imam and owned a grocery store, to serve a warrant for failure to appear in court on charges that he was driving a stolen car and impersonated a police officer during a traffic stop the previous year.

English testified at trial that Al-Amin raised a high-powered assault rifle and fired when the deputies tried to arrest him. Then, prosecutors said, he used a handgun to fire three shots into Kinchen’s groin as the wounded officer lay in the street.

He was arrested four days later in White Hall, Alabama, a small town where he had helped develop a Muslim community.

Prosecutors portrayed Al-Amin as a deliberate killer, while his lawyers painted him as a peaceful community and religious leader who had helped clean up poverty-stricken areas. They suggested he was framed as part of a government conspiracy that had followed him from his militant days.

Character witnesses during the sentencing portion of his trial included former Atlanta mayor and U.N. ambassador and civil rights leader Andrew Young, who had met Al-Amin in the 1980s.

“He was — and is — a very peaceful man,” Young said. “I saw no trace of any of the reported anger.”

Prosecutors sought the death penalty, but jurors decided on a sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole.

During closing arguments, the prosecutor displayed a chart titled “Questions for the defendant” and asked “pointed questions” meant to focus the jury’s attention on the fact that Al-Amin didn’t testify, his lawyers argue.

Al-Amin also had court permission to remain seated during the trial for religious reasons, including not standing when the jury entered. The prosecutor implored the jury, “Don’t stand for him.”

The defense objected to these actions by the prosecutor, and the trial judge gave the jury instructions meant to lessen any harm caused by the prosecutor’s statements.

In September 2017, U.S. District Court Judge Amy Totenberg found that Al-Amin’s constitutional right not to testify was violated by the prosecutor’s questioning. She also found that the trial court’s attempt to mitigate the prosecutor’s violation was insufficient and may have actually been harmful.

But “there is ‘weighty’ evidence supporting his conviction,” she wrote.

Lawyers for Al-Amin have argued there was strong evidence of his innocence at the scene of the shooting. Totenberg conceded that the crime scene evidence presents a “mishmash of inconsistencies,” but she said evidence recovered near the scene of his arrest in Alabama “strongly ties” him to the crime.

Totenberg concluded the trial court also violated Al-Amin’s rights by refusing to let his lawyers cross-examine an FBI agent involved in his arrest about an earlier incident in which the agent was accused of shooting an unarmed Muslim man in Philadelphia and putting a gun with no fingerprints on it next to the man’s body. The guns used to shoot the Georgia deputies that were found near Al-Amin in Alabama also had no prints on them, and his lawyers contended that the FBI agent planted them.

The trial court excluded that evidence because the agent had been investigated in the Philadelphia incident and cleared of wrongdoing. Totenberg said the trial court was within its right to make that decision.

Overall, Totenberg found that there was not “sufficient cumulative error” to find his sentence unconstitutional. While the violation of his right not to testify was “serious and repeated,” Totenberg said she was constrained by the “onerous standards” imposed by the law and Supreme Court case law.

Al-Amin’s lawyers are asking the 11th Circuit to reverse Totenberg’s ruling.

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The Internet Successfully Bullied the Sonic Movie Director Into Changing That Creepy Blue Hedgehog

Jeff Fowler is going to scramble to change Sonic's weird design after fan outrage.



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Was Game of Thrones Battle of Winterfell Really Just a Distraction?

Fans think episode five is the season's actual 'oh shit' moment.



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The Radicalization of White America: How Donald Trump Weaponized Whiteness

On September 30, 2011, an unmanned American drone fired 40 missiles into the home of Anwar al-Awlaki, an American citizen living in Yemen. The prominent Muslim cleric was placed on the U.S. government’s kill list because he reportedly inspired numerous terrorists, including Nidal Malik Hasan, the Army officer who was…

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source https://www.theroot.com/the-radicalization-of-white-america-how-donald-trump-w-1834444146

New Fenty Beauty Alert: Feels Like Summer

Powder blues. Baby pinks. Neon greens. Hot fuchsias. These are the colors of summer, and ever on trend, Fenty Beauty is bringing us a bevy of new, limited edition products to heat up the season, all dropping on May 10, for your Fenty-loving mothers.

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Save on Sheets, Towels, Pillows, and More With 20% Off Sitewide at Brooklinen

It might be Brooklinen’s Birthday Event, but you’re the one getting the gift: For today only, save 20% sitewide at Brooklinen using promo code BDAY20. Our readers are big fans of the brand’s Luxe Sateen sheets, and their Classic Percale sheets won us over with their crisp, cool feel. So go ahead and load up on linens…

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How to Make a Mint Julep

It wouldn't be right to drink anything but this minty bourbon cocktail for the Kentucky Derby.



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Seth Rogen and Charlize Theron Recreate the Entire History of Romantic Comedies in 12 Minutes

From Pretty Woman to Love, Simon, James Corden spared no movie in his quest.



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19-Year-Old Director Phillip Youmans First African American To Win Tribeca’s Founders Award

… . He is also the first African American director to win the award …

Black Student Robbed Of Salutatorian Because District Wanted To Appease Racist Town

According to a federal lawsuit, recent high school graduate Olecia James claims she was denied her rightful place as salutatorian of her Mississippi high school’s graduating class so that the district would not cause an issue among the town’s white residents.

In the lawsuit, uploaded for viewing by The Hill, James seeks monetary damages and a change in the race-based policies she says the Cleveland School District used to violate her rights to equal protection under the law.

James graduated last year from Cleveland, Miss.’s brand-new and recently integrated Cleveland Central High School as part of its inaugural class. Until recently Cleveland had two separate high school, one for white students and another for Black students. In her suit, James says she had the second-highest grades in the graduating class, but that the honor of salutatorian was given to a white male student with lower grades.

According to the suit the district made the decision, “to prevent white flight.” Apparently, the district was nervous about how white people would react if Olecia James’ name was announced as salutatorian.

According to James, in their attempts to justify giving the white boy her salutatorian spot, district officials changed her grades on her school records to make it seem that they were lower.

They soon apologized James says, but still presented the white student as salutatorian. They justified their decision giving more educational weight to the classes he had taken at the historically white high school over the ones James had taken at the historically black high school.

School district officials had no comment when contacted by the Mississippi Clarion-Ledger.

Attorney Lisa Ross, who represents James, told the Clarion-Ledger what should be obvious to anyone:

“These positions that are set aside for students who work hard and do well, they should be awarded on who does the best,” Ross said. “And it should be done without consideration as to whether whites will leave the school district if their kids are not selected for awards.”

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PHOTOS: Around Town N'at: Beaver County Corridors, 'Toasting the Titans," SMPS Morgantown lunch and African American Chamber luncheon

We Were Ready to Forget About Vampire Weekend. Until Father of the Bride.

After six years, the New York band returns to a very different music landscape.



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19-Year-Old Director Phillip Youmans First African American To Win Tribeca’s Founders Award

(Tribeca Film Festival via AP)

NEW YORK (AP) — Phillip Youmans was just 17 and finishing high school when he completed his lyrical debut feature film, “Burning Cane.” Now, his movie has won the top award at the 18th Tribeca Film Festival.

“Burning Cane” won three awards at Tribeca on Thursday, including best U.S. narrative feature. The film also took awards for best cinematography and best actor for Wendell Pierce (“The Wire”) who stars as a Louisiana preacher drunkenly grieving the loss of his wife.

Youmans, a New Orleans native, is currently a freshman at New York University. With the award, he wins a prize of $20,000. He is the youngest filmmaker to ever compete at the Tribeca Film Festival, let alone win its top award. He is also the first African American director to win the award.

Set in rural Southern Louisiana, “Burning Cane” was inspired by Youmans’ upbringing in the Baptist church. He helped raise money for the film through crowd-sourcing, and eventually landed Benh Zeitlin, the director of “Beasts of the Southern Wild,” as an executive producer.

The jury that chose the best-narrative feature award hailed Youmans, who also wrote his film’s script, as “a voice that is searingly original.”

“We loved this filmmaker’s vision and we love this filmmaker’s inevitable brilliant future,” said the jury.

Tribeca also awarded best documentary to Ellen Fiske and Ellinor Hallin’s “Scheme Birds,” about a Scottish girl’s coming of age, and best international film to Bora Kim’s “House of Hummingbird,” a South Korean drama about an eighth-grader in 1994 Seoul. Like “Burning Cane,” both are feature-length directing debuts.

“This year’s winners signal a bright future ahead for independent film,” Festival Director Cara Cusumano said in a statement.

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This $85 Hoodie Feels Vintage, Looks Fresh, and Is Office-Ready

Buck Mason's Loopback Hoodie is a worthy investment.



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15 Best Gin Brands to Drink Right Now

Whether you like traditional London dry style, new-school botanicals, or something that's just plain weird.



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African-American fashion magazine 'Ebony' photos on show in Berlin

… to boost the confidence of black Americans. As Ebony reports on its … 1951. The two magazines presented African American doctors, lawyers, businessmen and black … . Publisher Johnson deliberately targeted an African-American audience that would participate in …

Thursday, May 2, 2019

A Poll Tax By Any Other Name: Florida’s Senate Mandates Bill Payment Before Felons Get to Vote

Last week, Florida’s House set things in motion with regard to mandating felons meet certain “financial obligations” before having their voting rights restored, and now Florida’s Senate has followed suit.

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source https://www.theroot.com/a-poll-tax-by-any-other-name-florida-s-senate-mandates-1834493293

Black Mississippi High School Grad Charges Her Salutatorian Honor Was Given to Less Qualified White Student to Appease Racist Townspeople

Apparently, in at least one Mississippi town, black folks can’t even come in second place without raising racist ire.

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source https://www.theroot.com/black-mississippi-high-school-grad-charges-her-salutato-1834492539

“Young And Restless” Cast Says Goodbye To Kristoff St. John In Tribute Episode

The Young & the Restless celebrated late actor Kristoff St. John’s — who died at age 52 on Feb. 3 — with an emotional tribute episode that aired Monday.

“To work with him was effortless,” said Victoria Rowell, who gather on the set with co-stars including Shemar Moore to share fond memories of the actor and relive some of his most memorable scenes, MSN reports.

“I don’t imagine in my lifetime I will ever have a scene partner like him and certainly not for 14 years,” she added.

“He always made a point of asking how you were and what was going on with you and that you mattered,” series star Eileen Davidson recalled.

“He had such a love of life,” Y&R’s Melody Thomas Scott added. “Whenever I would go to a party or an event, first thing I wanted to know was, ‘Where’s Kristoff?’ Because I knew wherever he was, that’s where the fun was being had. I wanted to be encompassed in that. He never disappointed.”

“He had the strength to make the choice every day he came to work here to be joyful,” said co-star Bryton James.

St. John began his portrayal of Neil Winters on the long-running soap series in 1991, and Moore portrayed Neil’s brother Malcolm from 1994-2005. He recently reprised his role for the memorial service episode last week.

“He’s touched so many lives, not just mine,” Moore said. “So many lives, we all know that. The only thing I’ve ever known as a brother, and felt unconditional love as a brother, was Kristoff St. John.”

He continued, “He carried me. He embraced me. I always looked up to him. The stronger I got, the prouder he got. When I went up there and tried to fly, he was so proud of me. He carried me. Now he’s gone but I’m going to keep on carrying him. I’m going to keep trying to make him proud for the rest of my life.”

“He was an anchor for us as actors,” said Rowell. “And without Kristoff, we would not have had the legacy that was built.”

“I found something that I had sent him years ago,” added Doug Davidson. “These are not my words, but it reminded me of who is he is truly. It says, ‘The truly creative mind in any field is no more than this. A human creature born abnormally, inhumanely sensitive, to them, a touch is a blow, a sound is a noise, a misfortune is a tragedy, a joy is ecstasy, a friend is a lover and a lover is a god. And failure is death.”

Last month, PEOPLE confirmed that Los Angeles County coroner’s office listed St. John’s cause of death as “hypertrophic heart disease … and effects of ethanol.”

PHOTO: PR Photos


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‘Black-ish’ Spinoff Will Focus On Growing Up Mixed In The 80’s

\LOS ANGELES (AP) — A spinoff of the ABC sitcom “black-ish” will focus on a young Rainbow Johnson and her challenges growing up in the 1980s.

ABC said Thursday that the new series, titled “mixed-ish,” will be narrated by Tracee Ellis Ross. She stars in “black-ish” as the adult character with the nickname of Bow.

In the spinoff, preteen Bow and her mixed-ethnicity family face the dilemma of assimilation or staying “true to themselves,” according to ABC.

Bow and her siblings also must adapt to suburbia and a mainstream school after their parents move from a commune.

Arica Himmel stars as Bow, with Tika Sumpter and Christina Anthony among the other cast members in “mixed-ish.” An airdate for the spinoff wasn’t announced.

ABC also said it renewed “black-ish” for next season, its sixth.


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Reports of Sexual Assault in the Military Soar by 50 Percent to More Than 20,000

Fueled by a significant increase in attacks on women in the military ages 17-24, reports of sexual assault in the military soared by 50 percent in 2018 from the same period two years before, according to a Pentagon survey released Thursday.

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AG William Barr Called Out As Trump Protector, Liar

WASHINGTON (AP) — Attorney General William Barr portrayed himself as an apolitical elder statesman at his confirmation hearing. He declared he’d rather resign than be asked to fire special counsel Robert Mueller without cause and insisted the prosecutor he’d known for decades would never involve himself in a witch hunt as the president claimed.

But now Barr has emerged as arguably the most divisive figure in Donald Trump’s administration. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi accused him on Thursday of lying — a charge the Justice Department called reckless and false — and House Democrats are poised to hold him in contempt.

His appearance this week before the Senate Judiciary Committee accelerated calls for his resignation after he said Trump had been falsely accused and he spun politically damning episodes in Mueller’s report in the president’s favor.

Barr might have seemed an unlikely lightning rod given his long government career, his distance from Trump’s inner circle and his age, 68, that he said made him unconcerned with political advancement. But he had telegraphed his sympathetic view of strong presidential powers — surely a useful viewpoint for Trump — in a memo to the Justice Department last year that criticized Mueller’s Trump-Russia obstruction of justice investigation. His latest testimony, including that Trump’s actions weren’t criminal, reaffirmed that philosophy and, to critics, established Barr as the president’s protector .

“We have a chief law enforcement officer who is definitely the defense lawyer for the president,” Democratic Sen. Mazie Hirono of Hawaii said Thursday.

The Senate testimony was the latest episode in a turnabout in public perception for Barr, whose selection was greeted by some with high hopes that he would return the Justice Department to stability following two years of leadership upheaval. He replaced an attorney general, Jeff Sessions, who was ridiculed by the president and ultimately pushed out, and an acting one, Matt Whitaker, who was dismissed by Democrats as unqualified and a Trump loyalist.

It’s the second time around for Barr, who was attorney general under George H.W. Bush between 1991 and 1993 and involved in some of that administration’s weightiest decisions. He was Mueller’s Justice Department boss back then, and at his January confirmation hearing he described the special counsel as a longtime friend and a “straight shooter” who’d be allowed to finish his Trump investigation without interference.

At the same hearing, he parried questions about his memo by saying it was written without knowing facts of the investigation. He also acknowledged constraints on presidential power, conceding that it could be a crime if a president granted a pardon in exchange for silencing someone with incriminating information. Even if most Democrats didn’t support him, they didn’t appear to dread his appointment.

“Confirmation hearings are easy in the sense that the smart nominee knows the right answer to all the questions, which is not to commit to anything but agree to consider everything,” said Greg Brower, a former assistant director in the FBI’s office of congressional affairs. “Now that he’s in the middle of the aftermath of the Mueller investigation, he’s obviously being pinned down to more specific answers to very specific questions, and that is obviously proving to be more problematic for him.”

While House Democrats have already asked Mueller to testify, Senate Democrats, as the minority in that chamber, are more limited. They don’t have the power to set hearing schedules or compel officials to appear. But they are trying to build a case in public opinion that it’s Mueller, not Barr, who needs to tell the investigation story.

Testimony from Mueller is especially in demand now that his apparent rift with Barr has been exposed. It stems from Barr’s decision to communicate Mueller’s main conclusions of his two-year investigation in a four-page letter. The letter said Mueller had not established a criminal conspiracy between Russia and the 2016 Trump campaign and had not reached a conclusion on obstruction despite laying out evidence on both sides of that question.

The decision to avoid a determination on obstruction caught Barr by surprise, Justice Department officials said, and he and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein resolved to reach a conclusion in place of Mueller’s team. They decided Mueller’s evidence didn’t add up to a crime, a decision that puzzled some Democrats and legal analysts given the vivid accounts of Trump’s conduct in the report.

Days later, Mueller complained to Barr that his summary letter had “not fully captured the context, nature and substance” of the special counsel’s work or conclusions. Barr said Wednesday his goal had been simply to release the report’s bottom-line conclusions as he readied the entire document for release. Neither Barr nor Mueller went public with their conversation.

When Barr was asked weeks later at an unrelated congressional hearing about reports of discontent within the special counsel’s team, he said he didn’t know what those reports referred to. Pelosi said Thursday “the attorney general of the United States was not telling the truth to the Congress of the United States — that’s a crime.” The Justice Department vehemently denied that.

House Judiciary Democrats now are poised to hold Barr, who skipped a hearing Thursday in a dispute over its terms, in contempt after the Justice Department missed a committee deadline to provide an unredacted version of Mueller’s report.

Even if Barr didn’t immediately acknowledge the disconnect with Mueller, his tone about the investigation did appear to evolve.

He told lawmakers at an April 10 hearing that he believed there’d been “spying” on the Trump campaign, echoing a common Trump talking point, and committed to investigating how and why the FBI began its probe into ties between Russia and the Trump campaign.

At a news conference shortly before the release of Mueller’s report last month, he repeatedly said Mueller had not found collusion between Trump aides and Russia, though the actual report pointedly noted that collusion is not a legal term. He praised the president’s cooperation, though Trump declined an in-person interview. He said Trump had a “sincere belief” that the investigation was undermining his presidency.

At Wednesday’s hearing, Democrats confronted Barr with a series of episodes from Mueller’s report, including the president’s directive to aides to lie on his behalf and for his White House counsel to seek Mueller’s ouster. But for each instance, Barr said Trump lacked the criminal intent required for obstruction and said there were alternate explanations for his behavior beyond trying to shut down the investigation.

Democrats were anything but persuaded.

“You have been very adroit and agile in your responses to questions here,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut. “But I think history will judge you harshly and maybe a bit unfairly because you seem to have been the designated fall guy for this report.

____

Associated Press writers Lisa Mascaro and Mary Clare Jalonick contributed to this report.

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AG William Barr Called Out As Trump Protector, Liar

WASHINGTON (AP) — Attorney General William Barr portrayed himself as an apolitical elder statesman at his confirmation hearing. He declared he’d rather resign than be asked to fire special counsel Robert Mueller without cause and insisted the prosecutor he’d known for decades would never involve himself in a witch hunt as the president claimed.

But now Barr has emerged as arguably the most divisive figure in Donald Trump’s administration. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi accused him on Thursday of lying — a charge the Justice Department called reckless and false — and House Democrats are poised to hold him in contempt.

His appearance this week before the Senate Judiciary Committee accelerated calls for his resignation after he said Trump had been falsely accused and he spun politically damning episodes in Mueller’s report in the president’s favor.

Barr might have seemed an unlikely lightning rod given his long government career, his distance from Trump’s inner circle and his age, 68, that he said made him unconcerned with political advancement. But he had telegraphed his sympathetic view of strong presidential powers — surely a useful viewpoint for Trump — in a memo to the Justice Department last year that criticized Mueller’s Trump-Russia obstruction of justice investigation. His latest testimony, including that Trump’s actions weren’t criminal, reaffirmed that philosophy and, to critics, established Barr as the president’s protector .

“We have a chief law enforcement officer who is definitely the defense lawyer for the president,” Democratic Sen. Mazie Hirono of Hawaii said Thursday.

The Senate testimony was the latest episode in a turnabout in public perception for Barr, whose selection was greeted by some with high hopes that he would return the Justice Department to stability following two years of leadership upheaval. He replaced an attorney general, Jeff Sessions, who was ridiculed by the president and ultimately pushed out, and an acting one, Matt Whitaker, who was dismissed by Democrats as unqualified and a Trump loyalist.

It’s the second time around for Barr, who was attorney general under George H.W. Bush between 1991 and 1993 and involved in some of that administration’s weightiest decisions. He was Mueller’s Justice Department boss back then, and at his January confirmation hearing he described the special counsel as a longtime friend and a “straight shooter” who’d be allowed to finish his Trump investigation without interference.

At the same hearing, he parried questions about his memo by saying it was written without knowing facts of the investigation. He also acknowledged constraints on presidential power, conceding that it could be a crime if a president granted a pardon in exchange for silencing someone with incriminating information. Even if most Democrats didn’t support him, they didn’t appear to dread his appointment.

“Confirmation hearings are easy in the sense that the smart nominee knows the right answer to all the questions, which is not to commit to anything but agree to consider everything,” said Greg Brower, a former assistant director in the FBI’s office of congressional affairs. “Now that he’s in the middle of the aftermath of the Mueller investigation, he’s obviously being pinned down to more specific answers to very specific questions, and that is obviously proving to be more problematic for him.”

While House Democrats have already asked Mueller to testify, Senate Democrats, as the minority in that chamber, are more limited. They don’t have the power to set hearing schedules or compel officials to appear. But they are trying to build a case in public opinion that it’s Mueller, not Barr, who needs to tell the investigation story.

Testimony from Mueller is especially in demand now that his apparent rift with Barr has been exposed. It stems from Barr’s decision to communicate Mueller’s main conclusions of his two-year investigation in a four-page letter. The letter said Mueller had not established a criminal conspiracy between Russia and the 2016 Trump campaign and had not reached a conclusion on obstruction despite laying out evidence on both sides of that question.

The decision to avoid a determination on obstruction caught Barr by surprise, Justice Department officials said, and he and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein resolved to reach a conclusion in place of Mueller’s team. They decided Mueller’s evidence didn’t add up to a crime, a decision that puzzled some Democrats and legal analysts given the vivid accounts of Trump’s conduct in the report.

Days later, Mueller complained to Barr that his summary letter had “not fully captured the context, nature and substance” of the special counsel’s work or conclusions. Barr said Wednesday his goal had been simply to release the report’s bottom-line conclusions as he readied the entire document for release. Neither Barr nor Mueller went public with their conversation.

When Barr was asked weeks later at an unrelated congressional hearing about reports of discontent within the special counsel’s team, he said he didn’t know what those reports referred to. Pelosi said Thursday “the attorney general of the United States was not telling the truth to the Congress of the United States — that’s a crime.” The Justice Department vehemently denied that.

House Judiciary Democrats now are poised to hold Barr, who skipped a hearing Thursday in a dispute over its terms, in contempt after the Justice Department missed a committee deadline to provide an unredacted version of Mueller’s report.

Even if Barr didn’t immediately acknowledge the disconnect with Mueller, his tone about the investigation did appear to evolve.

He told lawmakers at an April 10 hearing that he believed there’d been “spying” on the Trump campaign, echoing a common Trump talking point, and committed to investigating how and why the FBI began its probe into ties between Russia and the Trump campaign.

At a news conference shortly before the release of Mueller’s report last month, he repeatedly said Mueller had not found collusion between Trump aides and Russia, though the actual report pointedly noted that collusion is not a legal term. He praised the president’s cooperation, though Trump declined an in-person interview. He said Trump had a “sincere belief” that the investigation was undermining his presidency.

At Wednesday’s hearing, Democrats confronted Barr with a series of episodes from Mueller’s report, including the president’s directive to aides to lie on his behalf and for his White House counsel to seek Mueller’s ouster. But for each instance, Barr said Trump lacked the criminal intent required for obstruction and said there were alternate explanations for his behavior beyond trying to shut down the investigation.

Democrats were anything but persuaded.

“You have been very adroit and agile in your responses to questions here,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut. “But I think history will judge you harshly and maybe a bit unfairly because you seem to have been the designated fall guy for this report.

____

Associated Press writers Lisa Mascaro and Mary Clare Jalonick contributed to this report.

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Kamala Harris Looks To Regain Spotlight In Crowded 2020 Field

WASHINGTON (AP) — Kamala Harris found her way back to the spotlight this week.

The Democratic presidential candidate and California senator won praise from liberals for seemingly stumping Attorney General William Barr during a contentious hearing over special counsel Robert Mueller’s report. Harris’s team quickly highlighted the exchange in a fundraising appeal and President Donald Trump seemed irked, telling Fox Business the senator was “probably very nasty.”

By late Thursday, more than 4 million people had viewed a C-SPAN video circulating on Twitter of Harris pressing Barr.

The moment was much needed. After launching her campaign in January before an adoring crowd of tens of thousands of people, Harris has largely been in the background in a presidential field that has ballooned to more than 20 candidates. While she has been a fixture in early states and on the fundraising circuit, former Vice President Joe Biden and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders are sitting on top of the polls. Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, meanwhile, is shaping the policy debate and Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Indiana, remains the surprise underdog.

Some Democrats are awaiting Harris’ second act.

“I think she is at this moment being drowned out by other candidates unveiling and rolling out big policy positions and proposals,” said Democratic strategist Maria Cardona. “She needs to do the same to reclaim the robust conversation about issues that is being ignited by such a diverse— and big — field of candidates.”

Harris’s team has capitalized on exchanges like Wednesday’s hearing to bolster her oft-repeated argument that she is prepared to “prosecute the case against Trump.” In the four early states that are key to the Democratic nomination, voters frequently cite Harris’s role in the hearing to address sexual misconduct allegations against Justice Brett Kavanaugh, as a leading reason for supporting her.

But strategists say Harris has been missing opportunities. Her early campaign has been marked by caution, tight control of her message and a fairly traditional approach to media.

Harris “shouldn’t be afraid to be provocative,” said Ben LaBolt, who worked on both of Obama’s campaigns.

LaBolt suggested that her campaign could take a cue from Buttigieg, who’s become known for sitting for interviews with more traditional outlets along with more obscure podcasts and newsletters. Harris did some of that early in her campaign, but LaBolt said she could return to “unconventional platforms.”

Harris’ team sees the next phase of the race, which began at the end of the first fundraising quarter and ends with the first debate next month, as having three distinct priorities: Rolling out fresh ideas and policies, raising money and sustaining a travel schedule that includes frequent visits to key primary states.

Harris’s campaign views South Carolina, home to the nation’s first-in-the-South primary, as essential to its prospects. She has methodically campaigned there, visiting both urban centers and rural parts of the state. Her first campaign policy rollout, a federal investment in teacher pay, mentioned the state explicitly. And she returned to South Carolina for an education round table this week as teachers marched on the Statehouse.

She raised $12 million during the first quarter, cementing herself as a top competitor. Harris’s campaign spent much of the two years aggressively building her online donor list, but she is also finding support on the traditional fundraising circuit, in particular, among bundlers who amass big checks on behalf of presidential candidates.

The campaign already has nearly 200 former Hillary Clinton bundlers committed, according to a person with knowledge of the finance operations. The person spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly. The average Harris finance event pulls in $100,000, the person said.

Harris is set to return to the fundraising circuit in the months leading up to the Democratic debate, including in California where she’s cultivated donors for years.

“The insanely large field means that the next few months will be wildly unpredictable for everyone so you have to stay focused on creating the conditions to be relevant when it really matters,” said Brent Colburn, a veteran of the Obama administration and both Obama campaigns. “If she can stay in the top half-dozen or so in the polls and continue to raise money she will be a factor in January.”

Many voters and strategists draw comparisons between Harris and the most recent Democratic nominees. Like Obama, Harris is aiming for a similar ascent from first-term senator to president. And like Clinton, Harris is vying to be the first woman president.

Mary Jane Kimball, a retired federal government worker in New Hampshire, said she thinks Harris is “the strongest in terms of who can hold her own.”

“I absolutely love Kamala Harris,” Kimball said. “I think she’s great, she’s engaging. She doesn’t look angry. I think that’s one thing that kind of killed Hillary Clinton.”

In South Carolina, 66-year-old Joann Berry said that Harris’s candidacy filled her with pride as a black woman.

“I have faith in her just like I had faith in Barack Obama,” Berry, 66, said. “A lot of people said he couldn’t do it — and he won.”

___

Associated Press writers Julie Pace in Washington, Meg Kinnard in West Columbia, S.C. and Hunter Woodall in Manchester, N.H. contributed reporting.

PHOTO: AP


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Kamala Harris Looks To Regain Spotlight In Crowded 2020 Field

WASHINGTON (AP) — Kamala Harris found her way back to the spotlight this week.

The Democratic presidential candidate and California senator won praise from liberals for seemingly stumping Attorney General William Barr during a contentious hearing over special counsel Robert Mueller’s report. Harris’s team quickly highlighted the exchange in a fundraising appeal and President Donald Trump seemed irked, telling Fox Business the senator was “probably very nasty.”

By late Thursday, more than 4 million people had viewed a C-SPAN video circulating on Twitter of Harris pressing Barr.

The moment was much needed. After launching her campaign in January before an adoring crowd of tens of thousands of people, Harris has largely been in the background in a presidential field that has ballooned to more than 20 candidates. While she has been a fixture in early states and on the fundraising circuit, former Vice President Joe Biden and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders are sitting on top of the polls. Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, meanwhile, is shaping the policy debate and Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Indiana, remains the surprise underdog.

Some Democrats are awaiting Harris’ second act.

“I think she is at this moment being drowned out by other candidates unveiling and rolling out big policy positions and proposals,” said Democratic strategist Maria Cardona. “She needs to do the same to reclaim the robust conversation about issues that is being ignited by such a diverse— and big — field of candidates.”

Harris’s team has capitalized on exchanges like Wednesday’s hearing to bolster her oft-repeated argument that she is prepared to “prosecute the case against Trump.” In the four early states that are key to the Democratic nomination, voters frequently cite Harris’s role in the hearing to address sexual misconduct allegations against Justice Brett Kavanaugh, as a leading reason for supporting her.

But strategists say Harris has been missing opportunities. Her early campaign has been marked by caution, tight control of her message and a fairly traditional approach to media.

Harris “shouldn’t be afraid to be provocative,” said Ben LaBolt, who worked on both of Obama’s campaigns.

LaBolt suggested that her campaign could take a cue from Buttigieg, who’s become known for sitting for interviews with more traditional outlets along with more obscure podcasts and newsletters. Harris did some of that early in her campaign, but LaBolt said she could return to “unconventional platforms.”

Harris’ team sees the next phase of the race, which began at the end of the first fundraising quarter and ends with the first debate next month, as having three distinct priorities: Rolling out fresh ideas and policies, raising money and sustaining a travel schedule that includes frequent visits to key primary states.

Harris’s campaign views South Carolina, home to the nation’s first-in-the-South primary, as essential to its prospects. She has methodically campaigned there, visiting both urban centers and rural parts of the state. Her first campaign policy rollout, a federal investment in teacher pay, mentioned the state explicitly. And she returned to South Carolina for an education round table this week as teachers marched on the Statehouse.

She raised $12 million during the first quarter, cementing herself as a top competitor. Harris’s campaign spent much of the two years aggressively building her online donor list, but she is also finding support on the traditional fundraising circuit, in particular, among bundlers who amass big checks on behalf of presidential candidates.

The campaign already has nearly 200 former Hillary Clinton bundlers committed, according to a person with knowledge of the finance operations. The person spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly. The average Harris finance event pulls in $100,000, the person said.

Harris is set to return to the fundraising circuit in the months leading up to the Democratic debate, including in California where she’s cultivated donors for years.

“The insanely large field means that the next few months will be wildly unpredictable for everyone so you have to stay focused on creating the conditions to be relevant when it really matters,” said Brent Colburn, a veteran of the Obama administration and both Obama campaigns. “If she can stay in the top half-dozen or so in the polls and continue to raise money she will be a factor in January.”

Many voters and strategists draw comparisons between Harris and the most recent Democratic nominees. Like Obama, Harris is aiming for a similar ascent from first-term senator to president. And like Clinton, Harris is vying to be the first woman president.

Mary Jane Kimball, a retired federal government worker in New Hampshire, said she thinks Harris is “the strongest in terms of who can hold her own.”

“I absolutely love Kamala Harris,” Kimball said. “I think she’s great, she’s engaging. She doesn’t look angry. I think that’s one thing that kind of killed Hillary Clinton.”

In South Carolina, 66-year-old Joann Berry said that Harris’s candidacy filled her with pride as a black woman.

“I have faith in her just like I had faith in Barack Obama,” Berry, 66, said. “A lot of people said he couldn’t do it — and he won.”

___

Associated Press writers Julie Pace in Washington, Meg Kinnard in West Columbia, S.C. and Hunter Woodall in Manchester, N.H. contributed reporting.

PHOTO: AP


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The Story of Fazendeville: an African American Town in the Middle of a Battlefield

Please enable Javascript to watch this video CHALMETTE, LOUISIANA-- Technology is a sign of our race to the future.  It can be also be used to help get a closer look at our past. Chalmette Battlefield is but a quiet memory of struggle between Brittish …

Workshop at Macy’s Celebrates Diverse Beauty Brand and Fashion Founders

The wine flowed, hors d’oeuvres were nibbled, and colorful fabrics abounded. The iconic Macy’s at Herald Square celebrated its latest class of diverse beauty and fashion entrepreneurs at the Workshop at Macy’s event on Wednesday.

Fifteen brands from around the country and Puerto Rico showed off their fashion and skincare products. The brands included:

Mare Cheia, a swimwear brand by Lorel Torres.

Footnanny, a skincare brand by Gloria Williams

Gunas New York, a vegan handbag brand by Sugandh Agrawal.

SUNDÃRI, women’s skincare.

Chen Burkett, an Africa-inspired fashion line

The Workshop at Macy's

Chen Burkett (Photo: Kent Miller)

Parisian Pet, pet apparel

Solo Noir, men’s skincare

Frères Branchiaux Candle Co.

Tayion Collection, men’s suits.

Jo Handbags

Fe Noel, women’s clothing

The Workshop at Macy's

Fe Noel (Photo: Kent Miller)

Nager by Nic Hyl, women’s apparel

Earth’s Nectar, haircare

MAIR, fragrance

The Workshop at Macy’s is a program the retailer launched in 2011. Its purpose is to diversify the supplier pipeline in the retail industry. Many of the brands that participate in the program have gone on to have their products sold at Macy’s.

Macy’s was recognized on Black Enterprise’s ‘50 Best Companies for Diversity List.’

 

The post Workshop at Macy’s Celebrates Diverse Beauty Brand and Fashion Founders appeared first on Black Enterprise.



Say Aloha To Southwest's Lucrative New Credit Card Welcome Offers

Southwest’s Rapid Rewards credit cards aren’t necessarily the most rewarding airline credit cards out there for your day-to-day spend, but their lucrative welcome offers, anniversary points bonuses, and relatively low annual fees make them a great addition to any wallet, especially in the wake of the airline’s recent…

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Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh Books Out the Door, Abandons City Hall Post

Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh has written herself out of her role as the city’s chief executive, announcing her resignation Thursday after coming under intense scrutiny about the sale of books she wrote to those doing business with both the city and the state of Maryland.

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Arrest Warrant Issued for Offset

Georgia law enforcement officers have issued a felony arrest warrant for rapper Offset, also known as Cardi B-minus, one-third of the Migos.

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African-American women use new skills to take careers to next level

MADISON, Wis. (WMTV) - African-American women are taking newly learned … main goal is to help African-American women deal with issues they …

Chewbacca Actor Peter Mayhew, a Star Wars Legend, Has Died at 74

He played Chewie in the original trilogy.



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Census 2020 Looks To Count Everyone, Even Those Who Don’t Want To Be Counted

LOS ANGELES (AP) — In a squat office building not far from downtown, Esperanza Guevara is getting ready to look for people who might not want to be found. And her job could get a lot harder.

The immigrant-rights activist is leading a drive to reach tens of thousands of people who entered the U.S. illegally and persuade them to participate in the 2020 census, the government’s once-a-decade count of the population.

The Trump administration’s plan to use the census to inquire about each person’s citizenship has sent a chill through immigrant communities. Guevara and others fear the question could discourage participation and, by some estimates, leave millions uncounted across the country.

Such concerns are concentrated in Democratic-led states with large immigrant populations. An inaccurate count could have real-world consequences, since billions in federal dollars and seats in Congress are allocated according to population.

In immigrant communities often wary of government, a question about citizenship status will make people “less likely to fill out the census form or even answer the door when someone comes knocking,” said Guevara, who works for the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles.

Those concerns have been heightened by Trump’s slashing rhetoric toward immigrants and by fears that census information could be used to find and deport people.

“Their first thought is, ‘Is this information going to be used against me?'” Guevara said, standing near rows of computers that will be staffed by volunteers trying to connect with prospective census participants.

Census Bureau chief Ron Jarmin said the agency is legally barred from sharing its information with law enforcement agencies, adding: “We are committed to ensuring that the data we collect are always protected.”

The U.S. Supreme Court is weighing a legal challenge seeking to strike the citizenship question from the census form. During oral arguments last week, the court’s conservative majority appeared ready to allow the question.

The Trump administration has argued that it has wide discretion in designing the questionnaire and that the citizenship question is clearly constitutional because it has been asked before — most recently, 1950 — and continues to be used on smaller, annual population surveys.

The Public Policy Institute of California has said that failure to accurately tally immigrants and other hard-to-reach groups could lead to an undercount of 1.6 million people, or roughly 4 percent of the state’s population. That would be enough to cost California one of its 53 House seats.

So California and other states are spending millions to persuade residents, legal and not, to fill out census forms, employing such means as public service messages, mailings, visits to people’s homes and informational gatherings.

“States are doing this because of the number of threats to a fair and accurate count,” said Vanita Gupta, president and CEO of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights.

Colorado’s House recently endorsed spending $12 million to encourage participation in the census. The governors of Kansas and Nevada have moved to create committees devoted to making sure everyone takes part.

In New Mexico, where the state has launched a multimillion-dollar effort to ensure an accurate tally, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham has warned that a 1% undercount could translate into more than $700 million in lost federal revenue over a decade.

Perhaps no state has more at risk than California, where no racial or ethnic group constitutes a majority and Hispanics outnumber whites. More than a quarter of its residents are foreign-born.

Nearly 3 in 4 Californians belong to groups the census has historically undercounted, including Hispanics, blacks, renters, immigrants, children and members of multiple families that share a single home. The state also has an above-average poverty rate, and the poor — especially the homeless — are difficult to count.

With online surveys being widely used next year, people with shaky access to the internet also could disappear from the count.

The state has budgeted about $100 million for education and media campaigns to reach people, a figure likely to jump to $150 million later this year. Most of the money is going to hire field workers and to advertise the importance of participating, a message that will be printed even on lottery tickets.

The Trump administration’s “citizenship question has one purpose: to undercount our diverse communities,” Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom said. “Our state won’t be intimidated by the White House’s actions, and we aren’t going to back down from fighting for a fair count.”

The Census Bureau’s own plans call for hiring 450,000 to 475,000 temporary workers. Most of them will knock on the doors of people who do not fill out the questionnaires. That number is lower than it was 10 years ago because the bureau is counting on technological changes to make the job more efficient.

With a $400,000 contract from the state, Asian Americans Advancing Justice in Los Angeles is working to reach into immigrant communities where more than a dozen languages are spoken, including Korean, Vietnamese and Chinese. Southern California is home to the largest Asian population in the U.S.

An Le, the group’s statewide census manager, said census research has found that Asians who speak little or no English and were born outside the U.S. are fearful of repercussions from the government if they submit the information. The group is stressing the importance of the census to health and education funding.

Le said more money is needed to produce census materials in a greater range of languages. She worries, too, about the citizenship question.

Even for legal permanent residents, that would serve as “a deterrent and a barrier,” she said.

___

Mulvihill reported from Cherry Hill, New Jersey.


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Census 2020 Looks To Count Everyone, Even Those Who Don’t Want To Be Counted

LOS ANGELES (AP) — In a squat office building not far from downtown, Esperanza Guevara is getting ready to look for people who might not want to be found. And her job could get a lot harder.

The immigrant-rights activist is leading a drive to reach tens of thousands of people who entered the U.S. illegally and persuade them to participate in the 2020 census, the government’s once-a-decade count of the population.

The Trump administration’s plan to use the census to inquire about each person’s citizenship has sent a chill through immigrant communities. Guevara and others fear the question could discourage participation and, by some estimates, leave millions uncounted across the country.

Such concerns are concentrated in Democratic-led states with large immigrant populations. An inaccurate count could have real-world consequences, since billions in federal dollars and seats in Congress are allocated according to population.

In immigrant communities often wary of government, a question about citizenship status will make people “less likely to fill out the census form or even answer the door when someone comes knocking,” said Guevara, who works for the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles.

Those concerns have been heightened by Trump’s slashing rhetoric toward immigrants and by fears that census information could be used to find and deport people.

“Their first thought is, ‘Is this information going to be used against me?'” Guevara said, standing near rows of computers that will be staffed by volunteers trying to connect with prospective census participants.

Census Bureau chief Ron Jarmin said the agency is legally barred from sharing its information with law enforcement agencies, adding: “We are committed to ensuring that the data we collect are always protected.”

The U.S. Supreme Court is weighing a legal challenge seeking to strike the citizenship question from the census form. During oral arguments last week, the court’s conservative majority appeared ready to allow the question.

The Trump administration has argued that it has wide discretion in designing the questionnaire and that the citizenship question is clearly constitutional because it has been asked before — most recently, 1950 — and continues to be used on smaller, annual population surveys.

The Public Policy Institute of California has said that failure to accurately tally immigrants and other hard-to-reach groups could lead to an undercount of 1.6 million people, or roughly 4 percent of the state’s population. That would be enough to cost California one of its 53 House seats.

So California and other states are spending millions to persuade residents, legal and not, to fill out census forms, employing such means as public service messages, mailings, visits to people’s homes and informational gatherings.

“States are doing this because of the number of threats to a fair and accurate count,” said Vanita Gupta, president and CEO of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights.

Colorado’s House recently endorsed spending $12 million to encourage participation in the census. The governors of Kansas and Nevada have moved to create committees devoted to making sure everyone takes part.

In New Mexico, where the state has launched a multimillion-dollar effort to ensure an accurate tally, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham has warned that a 1% undercount could translate into more than $700 million in lost federal revenue over a decade.

Perhaps no state has more at risk than California, where no racial or ethnic group constitutes a majority and Hispanics outnumber whites. More than a quarter of its residents are foreign-born.

Nearly 3 in 4 Californians belong to groups the census has historically undercounted, including Hispanics, blacks, renters, immigrants, children and members of multiple families that share a single home. The state also has an above-average poverty rate, and the poor — especially the homeless — are difficult to count.

With online surveys being widely used next year, people with shaky access to the internet also could disappear from the count.

The state has budgeted about $100 million for education and media campaigns to reach people, a figure likely to jump to $150 million later this year. Most of the money is going to hire field workers and to advertise the importance of participating, a message that will be printed even on lottery tickets.

The Trump administration’s “citizenship question has one purpose: to undercount our diverse communities,” Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom said. “Our state won’t be intimidated by the White House’s actions, and we aren’t going to back down from fighting for a fair count.”

The Census Bureau’s own plans call for hiring 450,000 to 475,000 temporary workers. Most of them will knock on the doors of people who do not fill out the questionnaires. That number is lower than it was 10 years ago because the bureau is counting on technological changes to make the job more efficient.

With a $400,000 contract from the state, Asian Americans Advancing Justice in Los Angeles is working to reach into immigrant communities where more than a dozen languages are spoken, including Korean, Vietnamese and Chinese. Southern California is home to the largest Asian population in the U.S.

An Le, the group’s statewide census manager, said census research has found that Asians who speak little or no English and were born outside the U.S. are fearful of repercussions from the government if they submit the information. The group is stressing the importance of the census to health and education funding.

Le said more money is needed to produce census materials in a greater range of languages. She worries, too, about the citizenship question.

Even for legal permanent residents, that would serve as “a deterrent and a barrier,” she said.

___

Mulvihill reported from Cherry Hill, New Jersey.


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Four Things Steve Canal Wants You to Know About Marketing and Branding

Steve Canal was a star college athlete and now is a branding expert. He’s worked with an impressive list of companies including McDonald’s, Facebook, Coors Light, Delta, and Walmart. After some stumbles in his journey, he has learned many lessons of success in marketing and branding. 

For example, Canal worked with the U.S. Army in its branding efforts. That work taught him the value of human connection. He led a national campaign that connected recruiters to potential soldiers looking for opportunities. The campaign involved wrapping hummers and jets in U.S. Army branding and turning them into interactive installations. It gave the brand identity, and made potential recruits feel invited and engaged. 

His work has led him to other marketing and branding realizations from which other entrepreneurs and marketing and PR professions can learn.

Four Things Steve Canal Wants You to Know About Marketing and Branding (In His own Words)

-What leads the campaign is research. I need to know what you’re passionate about, what motivates you, and what you’re trying to accomplish. For example, even though they may offer similar products; Company A and Company B need a unique offering that must be brought to life. You have to understand what’s important to each brand and create a package that says I’m paying attention to you, I know what’s important to you. I don’t call them clients, I call them partners because it’s a two way street.

-Who is the brand? What are they offering, and who are the people who care? Some organizations do focus groups. Take that extra step to get that insight. Times are changing, people are changing, there’s a new mindset within age demographics that don’t think like you as the brand. That’s where localizing your brand comes to play. You must find advisers and champions within those communities to get you that information, and listen to them

-It’s important to know what your strengths and weaknesses are, and find opportunities to make your weaknesses a strength. If you’re super passionate about something or you need to know something then do it. Either way, you must prioritize what’s important for you to be able to do versus what you can outsource.

-Brands need to stop thinking they have all the answers by coming up with campaigns within their walls, and not having any diversity of thought. Many times you get into these rooms to pitch, and across the table there are a bunch of like minded people coming up with campaigns without being where their customer is. Diversity of thought will make or break brands in the future. If you’re not aligned with consumers then they won’t mess with you.


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