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Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Is there dark matter at the center of the Milky Way?

MIT physicists are reigniting the possibility, which they previously had snuffed out, that a bright burst of gamma rays at the center of our galaxy may be the result of dark matter after all.

For years, physicists have known of a mysterious surplus of energy at the Milky Way’s center, in the form of gamma rays — the most energetic waves in the electromagnetic spectrum. These rays are typically produced by the hottest, most extreme objects in the universe, such as supernovae and pulsars.

Gamma rays are found across the disk of the Milky Way, and for the most part physicists understand their sources. But there is a glow of gamma rays at the Milky Way’s center, known as the galactic center excess, or GCE, with properties that are difficult for physicists to explain given what they know about the distribution of stars and gas in the galaxy.

There are two leading possibilities for what may be producing this excess: a population of high-energy, rapidly rotating neutron stars known as pulsars, or, more enticingly, a concentrated cloud of dark matter, colliding with itself to produce a glut of gamma rays.

In 2015, an MIT-Princeton University team, including associate professor of physics Tracy Slatyer and postdocs Benjamin Safdi and Wei Xue, came down in favor of pulsars. The researchers had analyzed observations of the galactic center taken by the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, using a “background model” that they developed to describe all the particle interactions in the galaxy that could produce gamma rays. They concluded, rather definitively, that the GCE was most likely a result of pulsars, and not dark matter.

However, in new work, led by MIT postdoc Rebecca Leane, Slatyer has since reassessed this claim. In trying to better understand the 2015 analytical method, Slatyer and Leane found that the model they used could in fact be “tricked” to produce the wrong result. Specifically, the researchers ran the model on actual Fermi observations, as the MIT-Princeton team did in 2015, but this time they added a fake extra signal of dark matter. They found that the model failed to pick up this fake signal, and even as they turned the signal up, the model continued to assume pulsars were at the heart of the excess.

The results, published today in the journal Physical Review Letters, highlight a “mismodeling effect” in the 2015 analysis and reopen what many had thought was a closed case.

“It’s exciting in that we thought we had eliminated the possibility that this is dark matter,” Slatyer says. “But now there’s a loophole, a systematic error in the claim we made. It reopens the door for the signal to be coming from dark matter.”

Milky Way’s center: grainy or smooth?

While the Milky Way galaxy more or less resembles a flat disk in space, the excess of gamma rays at its center occupies a more spherical region, extending about 5,000 light years in every direction from the galactic center.

In their 2015 study, Slatyer and her colleagues developed a method to determine whether the profile of this spherical region is smooth or “grainy.” They reasoned that, if pulsars are the source of the gamma ray excess, and these pulsars are relatively bright, the gamma rays they emit should inhabit a spherical region that, when imaged, looks grainy, with dark gaps between the bright spots where the pulsars sit.

If, however, dark matter is the source of the gamma ray excess, the spherical region should look smooth: “Every line of sight toward the galactic center probably has dark matter particles, so I shouldn’t see any gaps or cold spots in the signal,” Slatyer explains.

She and her team used a background model of all the matter and gas in the galaxy, and all the particle interactions that could occur to produce gamma rays. They considered models for the GCE’s spherical region that were grainy on one hand or smooth on the other, and devised a statistical method to tell the difference between them. They then fed into the model actual observations of the spherical region, taken by the Fermi telescope, and looked to see if these observations fit more with a smooth or grainy profile.

“We saw it was 100 percent grainy, and so we said, ‘oh, dark matter can’t do that, so it must be something else,’” Slatyer recalls. “My hope was that this would be just the first of many studies of the galactic center region using similar techniques. But by 2018, the main cross-checks of the method were still the ones we’d done in 2015, which made me pretty nervous that we might have missed something.”

Planting a fake

After arriving at MIT in 2017, Leane became interested in analyzing gamma-ray data. Slatyer suggested they try to test the robustness of the statistical method used in 2015, to develop a deeper understanding of the result. The two researchers asked the difficult question: Under what circumstances would their method break down? If the method withstood interrogation, they could be confident in the original 2015 result. If, however, they discovered scenarios in which the method collapsed, it would suggest something was amiss with their approach, and perhaps dark matter could still be at the center of the gamma ray excess.

Leane and Slatyer repeated the approach of the MIT-Princeton team from 2015, but instead of feeding into the model Fermi data, the researchers essentially drew up a fake map of the sky, including a signal of dark matter, and pulsars that were not associated with the gamma ray excess. They fed this map into the model and found that, despite there being a dark matter signal within the spherical region, the model concluded this region was most likely grainy and therefore dominated by pulsars. This was the first clue, Slatyer says, that their method “wasn’t foolproof.”

At a conference to present their results thus far, Leane entertained a question from a colleague: What if she added a fake signal of dark matter that was combined with real observations, rather than with a fake background map?

The team took up the challenge, feeding the model with data from the Fermi telescope, along with a fake signal of dark matter. Despite the deliberate plant, their statistical analysis again missed the dark matter signal and returned a grainy, pulsar-like picture. Even when they turned up the dark matter signal to four times the size of the actual gamma ray excess, their method failed to see it.

“By that stage, I was pretty excited, because I knew the implications were very big — it meant that the dark matter explanation was back on the table,” Leane says.

She and Slatyer are working to better understand the bias in their approach, and hope to tune out this bias in the future.

“If it’s really dark matter, this would be the first evidence of dark matter interacting with visible matter through forces other than gravity,” Leane says. “The nature of dark matter is one of the biggest open questions in physics at the moment. Identifying this signal as dark matter may allow us to finally expose the fundamental identity of dark matter. No matter what the excess turns out to be, we will learn something new about the universe.”

This research was funded in part by the Office of High Energy Physics of the U.S. Department of Energy.



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Why Volcanologists Didn't Predict New Zealand's Deadly Eruption

Scientists knew White Island was showing signs of “volcanic unrest,” but their arsenal of data and sensors couldn't prepare them for tragedy.

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Jared Green: ‘The Dreamer’ Serves New Orleans As A Nonprofit Founder

BE Modern Man: Jared Green

Nonprofit founder, author, speaker; 25; Executive Director, Sunny With A Chance of Love; Special Assistant, Mayor’s Office, City of New Orleans

Twitter: @jaredthedreamer; Instagram: @j.r._green

I’ve been doing community work since the age of five. As I grew older, I continued to have a passion for leading and serving others, so I continued to volunteer via community service in many different capacities. Most recently, I released my children’s book There’s A Creature In My Belly, which teaches young children about the greatness within them. I wanted to create something that young children of color can see and smile at. Representation matters. To have someone that looks like you and comes from where you come from can change a person’s outlook on life. I raised just enough money to print 1,000 copies of my book, which is $15,000 in product. I then donated those copies and more to mostly underprivileged children housed within various schools and organizations throughout the city of New Orleans. I was able to get this done through my nonprofit organization, Sunny With A Chance Of Love, which aims to create innovative social and economic change throughout the city of New Orleans.

WHAT ARE YOU MOST PROUD OF IN LIFE?

First and foremost I am a proud father of my 4-year-old son, Jayce. He is my biggest inspiration and the force behind my everyday drive. Secondly, I am proud that I am still here and that I still have hope. In the world we call home today, the life of a young black male seems fragile. Every day is lived cautiously, even when trying to do positive work. As a nonprofit founder, I wish to continue to help this to change, and to continue to build a platform that can be used to change lives.

HOW HAVE YOU TURNED STRUGGLE INTO SUCCESS?

I used to measure my success by others’ ruler, but I now know that was a big mistake. Life hit me hard. There are so many stories I could tell, but I’ll sum it up by saying that I was depressed, badly. My depression was built up over the course of years, and I didn’t even realize it. Year after year voids and holes were created within myself that I could not fill. One day those voids caught up to me, life pushed me over the edge, and my suicidal thoughts began. I no longer wanted to be on this earth, and I cried out to God, letting him know I was ready to come home. God spoke back to me and told me that everything I needed was within me. I began to feel encouraged as I wrote the words to my first children’s book There’s A Creature In My Belly! This book has already touched the lives of thousands and has encouraged so many to believe again. This book has caused me to not only receive a proclamation from my city but also be flown out by the Obama Foundation because of my work in my community as a nonprofit founder. I have been on multiple local news and radio stations and I have also been featured in multiple magazine articles.

WHO WAS YOUR GREATEST MALE ROLE MODEL AND WHAT DID YOU LEARN FROM HIM?

My greatest role model is my Dad. The list of things I’ve learned is extensive, as he taught me a lot. What I reflect on the most are the intangibles. My dad never misses a beat, and his family will always eat. When his businesses were up and running, I watched him go above and beyond for not just his clients, but also his employees. He always goes the extra mile, for nothing more but to see the smile on your face, even when he knows you won’t appreciate it. He prays every morning before he walks out the door that God allows him to touch someone’s life if he can that day. His critical thinking skills are legendary, as he always has a solution for any problem. All of these things, and so much more is what I have learned and continue to learn from my Dad.

WHAT’S THE BEST ADVICE YOU’VE EVER RECEIVED?

You are the only thing that’s stopping you. You are the biggest hurdle you have to face. The sooner you get out of your own way, the sooner you’ll reach your desired destination.

HOW ARE YOU PAYING IT FORWARD TO SUPPORT OTHER BLACK MALES?

As a nonprofit founder, I am creating innovative programs and initiatives that will affect the minds of young black males. I have created a children’s book that is already changing lives, and I donated over 1,000 of my books to underprivileged children around my city. I will continue to create children’s books and products that will inspire and drive young minds for generations to come. I am growing the brand “Jared The Dreamer,” which gives me the platform to speak and influence young men through the journey I’ve been on and my life experiences. I am showing my peers how to create something from nothing.

HOW DO YOU DEFINE MANHOOD?

Manhood is responsibility and maturity. With responsibility and maturity comes independence. Manhood is the ability to stand alone and be confident in yourself and where you are in life.

WHAT DO YOU LIKE MOST ABOUT BEING A BLACK MAN?

The challenge. The levels. The appreciation for who I am and the work I do from my own people. I love my history, my ancestors, and where I come from. I love my culture and I appreciate the ability to disprove the stigma that comes along with being a black male.


BE Modern Man is an online and social media campaign designed to celebrate black men making valuable contributions in every profession, industry, community, and area of endeavor. Each year, we solicit nominations in order to select men of color for inclusion in the 100 Black Enterprise Modern Men of Distinction. Our goal is to recognize men who epitomize the BEMM credo “Extraordinary is our normal” in their day-to-day lives, presenting authentic examples of the typical black man rarely seen in mainstream media. The BE Modern Men of Distinction are celebrated annually at Black Men XCEL (www.blackenterprise.com/blackmenxcel/). Click this link to submit a nomination for BE Modern Man: https://www.blackenterprise.com/nominate/. Follow BE Modern Man on Twitter: @bemodernman and Instagram: @be_modernman.

 



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Jay-Z Releases Entire Catalog to Spotify for His 50th Birthday

We got a birthday present we weren’t expecting! According to Rolling Stone, for his 50th birthday, Shawn “Jay-Z” Carter blessed us with his entire discography by allowing it to be streamed on Spotify.

Spotify notified everyone about the good news of Hov‘s return via its Twitter account. Now every one of Jay-Z’s 13 studio albums can be heard on its platform. Previously, the only albums that were available on Spotify were Reasonable DoubtIn My Lifetime Vols. 1 and 2 and Collision Course, his 2004 album with Linkin Park. This news comes after his wife, Beyoncé Carter, made a similar move in April when her album Lemonade was made available on Spotify and Apple Music after only being available on Tidal previously.

Although Jay-Z earned $81 million and was crowned as hip-hop’s first billionaire earlier this year, he still wound up in second place behind his mentee and “younger brother” Kanye West. Earlier this year, the NFL announced a long-term partnership with Roc Nation, Carter’s sports and entertainment agency, as the league’s official Live Music Entertainment Strategists. The partnership, which went into effect at the start of the 2019-20 season, will serve to strengthen community through music and the NFL’s Inspire Change initiative.

The Shawn Carter Foundation was founded as a public charity in 2003 by Jay-Z and his mother, Gloria Carter. It supports initiatives to empower youth and communities in need through the following programs: Scholarship Fund, College Prep and Exposure, International Exposure, Professional Development, Scholar Support, and Community & Goodwill Programs. In April, Jay-Z announced a partnership with Toyota for the Shawn Carter Foundation annual black college bus tour. The program gives students the opportunity to visit several historically black colleges and universities around the country. You can find out more information about The Foundation on its website.



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This Alleged Bitcoin Scam Looked a Lot Like a Pyramid Scheme

Five men face federal charges of bilking investors of $722 million by inviting them to buy shares in bitcoin mining pools. 

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Democrats unveil 2 articles of impeachment against Trump

By LISA MASCARO and MARY CLARE JALONICK Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — House Democrats announced two articles of impeachment Tuesday against President Donald Trump — abuse of power and obstruction of Congress — pushing toward historic votes over charges he corrupted the U.S. election process and endangered national security.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi, flanked by the chairmen of the impeachment inquiry committees, stood at the Capitol in what she called a “solemn act.” Voting is expected in a matter of days in the Judiciary Committee and by Christmas in the full House.

“He endangers our democracy, he endangers our national security,” said Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., the Judiciary chairman announcing the charges before a portrait of George Washington. “Our next election is at risk… That is why we must act now.”

The charges unveiled Tuesday stem from Trump’s pressure on Ukraine to announce investigations of his political rivals as he withheld aid to the country.

Trump tweeted ahead of the announcement that impeaching a president with a record like his would be “sheer Political Madness!”

The outcome, though, appears increasingly set as the House prepares for voting, as it has only three times in history against a U.S. president.

In drafting the articles of impeachment, Pelosi is facing a legal and political challenge of balancing the views of her majority while hitting the Constitution’s bar of “treason, bribery or other high crimes and misdemeanors.”

Some liberal lawmakers wanted more expansive charges encompassing the findings from former special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe of Russian interference in the 2016 election. Centrist Democrats preferred to keep the impeachment articles more focused on Trump’s actions toward Ukraine. House Democrats have announced two articles of impeachment charging President Donald Trump with abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. AP’s earlier story follows below.

WASHINGTON (AP) — House Democrats are expected to unveil two articles of impeachment Tuesday against President Donald Trump — abuse of power and obstruction of Congress — pushing toward historic votes as the president insists he did “NOTHING” wrong.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi said ahead of the morning announcement that Trump tried to “corrupt our upcoming elections” and remains a “threat to our democracy and national security.”

Pelosi said in a tweet that the House was taking next steps to “defend’ the democracy.”
Democratic leaders are laying out next steps after their impeachment inquiry determined Trump put U.S. elections and national security at risk when he asked Ukraine to investigate his rivals, including Democrat Joe Biden, while withholding needed military aid. They say he then tried to obstruct Congress’ investigation.

Trump, meanwhile, insisted he did “NOTHING” wrong and that impeaching a president with a record like his would be “sheer Political Madness!”

Democrats have not public released their plans. Details were shared by multiple people familiar with the discussions but not authorized to discuss them and granted anonymity.
Pelosi declined during an event Monday evening to discuss the articles or the coming announcement. Details were shared by multiple people familiar with the discussions but not authorized to discuss them and granted anonymity.

When asked if she has enough votes to impeach the Republican president, Pelosi leader said she would let House lawmakers vote their conscience.

“On an issue like this, we don’t count the votes. People will just make their voices known on it,” Pelosi said at The Wall Street Journal CEO Council. “I haven’t counted votes, nor will I.”

The outcome, though, appears increasingly set as the House prepares to vote, as it has only three times in history against a U.S. president.

Trump, who has declined to mount a defense in the impeachment proceedings, tweeted Tuesday just as the five Democratic House committee chairmen prepared to make their announcement.

“To Impeach a President who has proven through results, including producing perhaps the strongest economy in our country’s history, to have one of the most successful presidencies ever, and most importantly, who has done NOTHING wrong, is sheer Political Madness! #2020Election,” he wrote on Twitter.

The president also spent part of Monday tweeting against the impeachment proceedings. He and his allies have called the process “absurd.”

Pelosi convened a meeting of the impeachment committee chairmen at her office in the Capitol late Monday following an acrimonious, nearly 10-hour hearing at the Judiciary Committee, which could vote as soon as this week.

“I think there’s a lot of agreement,” Rep. Eliot Engel of New York, the Democratic chairman of the Foreign Affairs committee, told reporters as he exited Pelosi’s office. “A lot of us believe that what happened with Ukraine especially is not something we can just close our eyes to.”

At the Judiciary hearing, Democrats said Trump’s push to have Ukraine investigate rival Joe Biden while withholding U.S. military aid ran counter to U.S. policy and benefited Russia as well as himself.

“President Trump’s persistent and continuing effort to coerce a foreign country to help him cheat to win an election is a clear and present danger to our free and fair elections and to our national security,” said Dan Goldman, the director of investigations at the House Intelligence Committee, presenting the finding of the panel’s 300-page report of the inquiry.

Republicans rejected not just Goldman’s conclusion of the Ukraine matter; they also questioned his very appearance before the Judiciary panel. In a series of heated exchanges, they said Rep. Adam Schiff, the chairman of the Intelligence Committee, should appear rather than sending his lawyer.

From the White House, Trump tweeted repeatedly, assailing the “Witch Hunt!” and “Do Nothing Democrats.”

In drafting the articles of impeachment, Pelosi is facing a legal and political challenge of balancing the views of her majority while hitting the Constitution’s bar of “treason, bribery or other high crimes and misdemeanors.”

Some liberal lawmakers wanted more expansive charges encompassing the findings from former special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe of Russian interference in the 2016 election. Centrist Democrats preferred to keep the impeachment articles more focused on Trump’s actions toward Ukraine.

Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., was blunt as he opened Monday’s hearing, saying, “President Trump put himself before country.”

Trump’s conduct, Nadler said at the end of the daylong hearing, “is clearly impeachable.”
Rep. Doug Collins of Georgia, the top Republican on the committee, said Democrats are racing to jam impeachment through on a “clock and a calendar” ahead of the 2020 presidential election.

“They can’t get over the fact that Donald Trump is the president of the United States, and they don’t have a candidate that can beat him,” Collins said.

In one testy exchange, Republican attorney Stephen Castor dismissed the transcript of Trump’s crucial call with Ukraine as “eight ambiguous lines” that did not amount to the president seeking a personal political favor.

Democrats argued vigorously that Trump’s meaning could not have been clearer in seeking political dirt on Biden, his possible opponent in the 2020 election.

The Republicans tried numerous times to halt or slow the proceedings, and the hearing was briefly interrupted early on by a protester shouting, “We voted for Donald Trump!” The protester was escorted from the House hearing room by Capitol Police.

The White House is refusing to participate in the impeachment process. Trump and and his allies acknowledge he likely will be impeached in the Democratic-controlled House, but they also expect acquittal next year in the Senate, where Republicans have the majority.

The president was focused instead on Monday’s long-awaited release of the Justice Department report into the 2016 Russia investigation. The inspector general found that the FBI was justified in opening its investigation into ties between the Trump presidential campaign and Russia and that the FBI did not act with political bias, despite “serious performance failures” up the bureau’s chain of command.

Democrats say Trump abused his power in a July 25 phone call when he asked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy for a favor in investigating Democrats. That was bribery, they say, since Trump was withholding nearly $400 million in military aid that Ukraine depended on to counter Russian aggression.

Pelosi and Democrats point to what they call a pattern of misconduct by Trump in seeking foreign interference in elections from Mueller’s inquiry of the Russia probe to Ukraine.
In his report, Mueller said he could not determine that Trump’s campaign conspired or coordinated with Russia in the 2016 election. But Mueller said he could not exonerate Trump of obstructing justice in the probe and left it for Congress to determine.
___
Associated Press writers Julie Pace, Laurie Kellman, Matthew Daly and Eric Tucker contributed to this report.

The post Democrats unveil 2 articles of impeachment against Trump appeared first on theGrio.



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How the Mandalorian Might See Through Walls

Mando's sci-fi ability might not be as crazy or outlandish as you think.

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Peter Olayinka: From earning $100 a month to facing Europe's elite

Seven years ago Nigeria's Peter Olayinka was earning $100 a month in Albania now he is taking on the likes of Inter Milan, Barcelona and Borussia Dortmund.

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Cardi B and daughter, Kulture, grace January cover of Vogue

Cardi B and her daughter, Kulture, grace one of four Vogue magazine covers in January – paying tribute to moms and moms-to-be who are also fashion or entertainment icons.

Appearing on the cover in a red Michael Kors polka dot dress and red heels and holding her smiling and adorable baby girl in her lap, Cardi, 27, told Vogue that motherhood has allowed her to “forget about the issues.”

READ MORE: On My Own: Cardi B says nah to a nanny for baby Kulture… for now

“I could shake my ass, I could be the most ratchet-est person ever, I could get into a fight tomorrow, but I’m still a great mom,” Cardi B tells Vogue. “All the time I’m thinking about my kid. I’m shaking my ass, but at the same time I’m doing business, I’m on the phone with my business manager saying, make sure that a percentage of my check goes to my kid’s trust. I give my daughter so much love, and I’m setting her up for a future. I want to tell her that a lot of the shit that I have done in life—no matter what I did, knowing that I wanted to have kids made me go harder to secure a good future for my kids.”

Vogue’s other three January covers feature Stella McCartney with her four kids, Greta Gerwig, and her new infant, and Ashley Graham was photographed holding her baby bump. The covers were shot by famed photographer, Annie Leibovitz.

When discussing the new album she’s working on, Cardi muses that she needs a slow song. Then she reveals how tough it is for her to be vulnerable.

“I need a slow song, a personal song. And those are harder for me — I always need help when it comes to talking about my feelings,” she tells Vogue. “It’s hard for me to be soft, period.”

She also addresses the pressure to create a work that is as big or bigger than her debut album.

“I thought ‘Press’ was fun and it was gangsta, and then because it didn’t perform as good as my other songs, people was like, Oh, she’s a flop; oh, she’s dying out,” Cardi explains. “This whole year has just been a lot for me. I feel like people are just so tired of me winning. I will look for my name on Twitter, and it’s like hate tweets, hate tweets, hate tweets.”

Many of those hate tweets come from women disappointed that she opted to stay with her husband, Offset, after learning that he cheated. Cardi addresses this and explains why she decided to forgive him and reunite.

READ MORE: Cardi B has a blast in Africa: performs two shows, makes it rain naira and gives back in a major way

“When me and my husband got into our issues—you know, he cheated and everything—and I decided to stay with him and work together with him, a lot of people were so mad at me; a lot of women felt disappointed in me,” Cardi explains to Vogue. “But it’s real-life shit. If you love somebody and you stop being with them, and you’re depressed and social media is telling you not to talk to that person because he cheated, you’re not really happy on the inside until you have the conversation. Then, if you get back with them, it’s like, how could you? You let all of us down. People that be in marriages for years, when they say till death do us part, they not talking about little arguments like if you leave the fridge open. That’s including everything.”

Do you, Cardi B. That’s why people love you.

The post Cardi B and daughter, Kulture, grace January cover of Vogue appeared first on theGrio.



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Industry Must Team up With Government to Keep America on Top

The Federal government takes on early investment risks that venture capital won't take, underwriting industry and the future.

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Success Beyond Bars: Lawrence Carpenter Applies Entrepreneurship To Transform Lives of Formerly Incarcerated

Lawrence Carpenter’s journey has taken him from a life behind bars to becoming a transformative business leader and philanthropist.

Growing up in one of Durham, North Carolina’s roughest neighborhoods, he had to contend with a father who spent much of his time behind bars and a heroin addict mother as part of his formative years. As a result, young Carpenter was drawn to street life.

By the tender age of 11, he was engaged in his first entrepreneurial pursuit—as a drug dealer. “I grew up poor. Selling drugs was all I knew,” he says. “One of the worst things happened to me through the process of selling drugs. I found a way to make my own money without having to ask someone for anything.”

That independence was fleeting, however. By the age of 17, he was convicted on drug charges and sentenced to six years in prison. Upon his release, the skill-less Carpenter returned to the drug trade because it was all he knew. But when 28-year-old Carpenter was placed behind bars a second time, he was a husband and a father. Unable to be connected to his wife and daughter, he says that his 11-month bid in jail was much tougher than the years he was locked up during his prior sentence. “The difference between my first incarceration and my second was the fact that I was young during my first incarceration. I was released after six years of prison with no reform and no hope,” he recalls. “Fatherhood changed me in so many different ways. The second time around, I was focused on providing a better life for me and my family.”

His path to personal growth and financial stability has been paved through entrepreneurship.

Today, Carpenter, 45, serves as CEO of Durham, North Carolina-based Superclean Professional Janitorial Services. He spent 19 years growing a one-man operation into a thriving, multimillion-dollar commercial cleaning firm that employs more than 60 full-time and part-time workers and operates in three states: Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. Along the way, the enterprising Carpenter co-founded another successful business, ZBS Trucking Co.

Beyond expanding his clientele and business interests, Carpenter’s focus has been on finding different ways to support his community: “I had created so much damage in the community in the past, I just had to give back.”

As part of that thrust, he has used his years of entrepreneurial experience to help the formerly incarcerated re-enter society, gain employment, and rebuild their lives. To achieve that end, he has been most passionate about his work with Inmates to Entrepreneurs, a nonprofit developed by entrepreneur and philanthropist Brian Hamilton to reduce recidivism by allowing the formerly incarcerated “to start their own businesses and rise above the systemic discrimination they face in the job market.” It provides individuals with entrepreneurship education through free in-person tutorials and online courses.

Since 2009, Carpenter has served as an instructor and speaker with Inmates to Entrepreneurs and today serves as its board chairman. He still makes the same life-changing contribution to program participants: Guiding ex-offenders through business fundamentals while delivering his message of hope and change.

Lawrence Carpenter is one of our 2019 profile subjects featured in Success Beyond Bars, the BLACK ENTERPRISE video series sponsored by Koch Industries. In the following video, Carpenter shares his personal and entrepreneurial journey in their own words, sharing events that led to incarceration, business and life lessons and his views on how to improve the criminal justice system.



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People fat shame Lizzo for twerking in thong courtside at Lakers game

Some liked it. Some didn’t. Lizzo could care less. That’s what makes her such a magnetic superstar: she’s confident and doesn’t appear phased by who’s bothered.

The “it” is referring to Lizzo’s twerking courtside in a thong at Monday night’s Los Angeles Lakers versus the Minnesota Timberwolves game as the Lakers girls did a routine to her hit song, “Juice.” Lizzo, 31, jumped up and started to dance. When the jumbotron captured her, Lizzo was in full twerk mode.

READ MORE: Flirt Alert: 50 Cent baptizes Lizzo as ‘Big Sexy’ on social media

Video shows she was hyped even before the game started, showing up in a black oversized t-shirt that had a cutout in the back revealing a thong bikini and fishnet stockings. She was captured sharing some thoughts on video: “This is how a bad bitch goes to a Lakers game versus Minnesota” Lizzo said in the arena’s tunnel. “You bitches can’t even spell ‘Minnesota.’”

Lizzo also told a Fox Sports reporter that she has a thing for a certain player.

“I’m personally cheering for No. 32,” Lizzo said, referring to Timberwolves star Karl-Anthony Towns. Although she admits she has never met Towns, that didn’t stop her from fawning. “That’s my baby!” And then she added him into her own “Truth Hurts” remix: “New man on the Minnesota Timberwolves!”

Reaction across social media was mixed – with some fat-shaming her for her antics and others, like Ari Lennox, letting it be known that the pop star has their support.

“Not here for the insensitivity to social anxiety Not here for y’alls ignorance on thickness Not here for y’all literally doing everything in your power to tear down black women,” Lennox tweeted.

“This is the most contradicting and ignorant shit that I’ve seen in a long time! This has been the year of beautiful women in all shapes in thongs and now there’s problem,” Lennox said in another tweet.

Some still took it there.

“I love you but you just doing too much, always making everything about that when it clearly ain’t whatsoever,” @KazutoXXI tweeted in response to Lennox.

“Somebody said Lizzo looked like Rikishi with that outfit on and I can’t stop crying,” tweeted @Ace1dr_

READ MORE: PHOTOS: Lizzo, Ciara, Lil Nas X, Billy Porter and more SLAY at the American Music Awards

“I love Lizzo, but this isn’t appropriate for ANYONE to wear to a game with kids present no matter what their shape or size,” another person said.

Whatever your take, Lizzo is taking it all in stride, as she always does. And the Timberwolves shared Lizzo’s crush on their official team account.

Way to make them talk, Lizzo! #winning

The post People fat shame Lizzo for twerking in thong courtside at Lakers game appeared first on theGrio.



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Floods and power cuts hit South Africa

Some 700 homes have been swept away, power stations have been flooded and mining has been affected.

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The Best Kindle to Buy (And Which to Avoid)

Amazon has four different ebook readers, and a ton of older ones. Here's how they stack up, and which may be right for you.

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Baby Phat Has Officially Relaunched

Baby Phat is back! According to Madame Noire, Kimora Lee Simmons surprised the fashion world by relaunching and revamping the streetwear brand and dropped a surprise on BabyPhat.com earlier this month.

The initial collection has 10 to 15 styles, including an updated version of its iconic velour tracksuit. Shoppers can expect windbreakers, oversized hoodies, and knitwear separates. Everything will be priced between $70 and $300.

The former model’s daughters, Aoki Lee, 17, and Ming Lee, 19, are featured as the campaign models who are showcased on the website. When Kimora announced back in June that she reacquired Baby Phat, she dropped a Forever 21 collaborative collection that was sold out online within 24 hours.

 

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“When I created Baby Phat 20 years ago, it was because women—especially women of color—had no voice at all in the streetwear category,” Simmons tells Yahoo. “It’s in our DNA that this brand is created for women, by women—which was rare then and still is today once you really look closely at who truly owns and controls many womenswear brands on the market.”

“I think it’s really exciting to see how Baby Phat lives in 2019,” Aoki Lee Simmons said. “We have this whole online shopping and social media universe that didn’t exist before. From the first day we announced that there was a Baby Phat relaunch in the works, back on International Women’s Day in March, we have had women clamoring for new tracksuits via comments and DMs on Instagram — or begging us to restock our [Forever 21] capsule collab. There’s so much passion and we take all the feedback to heart. We get to interact with Baby Phat fans in a way the brand never got to do before.”

“I think it’s a huge opportunity to teach by example: to always keep growing and pushing yourself to evolve,” Kimora Lee Simmons continued. “Baby Phat is our family business in a lot of ways, and I’m excited for them to participate in a hands-on way to rebuild it alongside me.” She continued: “Our strategy is tied to embracing all the exciting things that have happened in the market so that Ming Lee and Aoki Lee can tell their story to a new generation of young women, some of whom may not have even been born during our first go around.”



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Algeria jails two former prime ministers ahead of election

They were accused of abusing authority in a car manufacturing embezzlement scandal.

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Camels gift from EU bewilders Mauritanians

The EU's gift of 250 camels to boost Mauritanian border security has been mocked online.

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Apple MacBook Pro Review (2019, 16-Inch): A Return to Form

The new MacBook Pro is a little boring, but after years of misfires in Apple's laptop lineup, the machine reliably gets the job done.

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What is 5G? The Complete Guide to When, Why, and How

Dive deep into the 5G spectrum, millimeter wave technology, and why 5G could give China an edge in the AI race.

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The FCC's Push to Purge Huawei From US Networks

The rural carriers who rely on Huawei are wary of a costly “rip and replace” effort.

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Amazon, Google, Microsoft: Here's Who Has the Greenest Cloud

A WIRED report card on the top three cloud providers shows how their environmental claims stack up.

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Why the ‘Queen of Shitty Robots’ Renounced Her Crown

YouTuber Simone Giertz gave up wildly popular but barely functioning machines and confronted her fears of imperfection (while facing her own mortality and making an awesome Truckla EV).

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Monday, December 9, 2019

Bringing figures in anticolonial politics out of the shadows

Independence movements are complicated. Consider Burma (now Myanmar), which was governed as a province of British India until 1937, when it was separated from India. Burma then attained self-rule in 1948. Amid some straightforward demands for autonomy from India, one Burmese nationalist, a Buddhist monk named U Ottama, had a different vision: He wanted his country to break free of Britain but remain part of India, until Burma could become independent.

Why would a Burmese Buddhist want independence from one country, only to seek a union with a much bigger — and majority Hindu — neighbor to achieve this?

“At the heart of Ottama’s politics lay a spiritual and civilizational geography that framed his argument for Burma’s unity with India,” says MIT historian Sana Aiyar, who is working on a book about Burma and India at the time of the independence movement. “As Burmese nationalists increasingly defined their nationhood in religious terms to demand the separation of Burma from India, U Ottama insisted that since India was the birthplace of Buddhism, Burma was inextricably linked with India.”

That this vision found an audience hints at the extensive connections between Burma and India. From 1830 through 1930, an estimated 13 million Indians passed through Burma — the majority of whom were migrant or seasonal laborers — making the city of Rangoon a cosmopolitan capital. Many stayed and married Burmese women — which helped spark an anti-immigrant, anti-Indian backlash that became one driver of Burma’s independence movement.

The complexity of the political fault lines of Burmese self-rule makes the topic a natural for Aiyar. A historian of the Indian diaspora, she generally examines how migration, nationalism, and religion have fed into 20th-century anticolonial politics.

Aiyar’s work has another distinctive motif. She specializes in illuminating figures like U Ottama, who were once influential but are little-known now.

“The core interest that I have is in political history,” says Aiyar, who was awarded tenure earlier this year. “But I’m interested less in the big event, the obvious narrative, and the big leaders. What has always fascinated me are the alternatives, the possibilities that did not get a chance to see complete fruition — the person who didn’t become ‘Gandhi,’ didn’t quite get the same following, but seems to have really mattered in the moment.”

In Aiyar’s 2015 book “Indians in Kenya: The Politics of Diaspora,” for instance, a key figure is Alibhai Mulla Jeevanjee, a trader who, in another complex scenario, became a leader for Indian rights in British-occupied Kenya, even as many Indians never became fully aligned with the British or other Kenyans. But even people strolling through Jeevanjee Gardens, a park in central Nairobi, are unlikely to know much about its namesake. 

“In all of my research, I’ve been following those kinds of elusive figures whose long, shadowy presence emerges in fragments in colonial and national archives,” Aiyar says. “They allow me to ask questions about the dilemmas and dynamics of the moment.”

Old and new in Delhi

Aiyar grew up in Delhi, in an intellectually minded family; her mother was a journalist, and her father a diplomat and politician.

“Even around the dining table, history and politics were always there. It was just part of growing up,” Aiyar says.

History and politics were always there in Delhi, too.

“Growing up in a city like Delhi … you’re surrounded by history,” Aiyar notes. “It’s almost impossible to look out of the window when you’re driving anywhere in Delhi without seeing historical sites and the outcomes of historical processes in people’s everyday lives.”

Aiyar received a BA in history at St. Stephen’s College of Delhi University and then a BA and MA in history at Jesus College in Cambridge, U.K. Aiyar’s stay in England was also the first time she had observed Indians abroad, which made a significant impression on her: “I noticed the way the diaspora made itself visible in Britain, especially in a multicultural state, was not by presenting itself as secular, but through religion,” she says.

At that time, politics within India had also taken a turn away from the secularism of the post-independence era, opening up, Aiyar says, “the question of what defined Indian nationhood, who is Indian.”

Aiyar attended Harvard University for her PhD in history, originally planning a dissertation about the rise of Hindu nationalism among the Indian diaspora in Britain. She started her research examining the first group in Britain to assert their right to belonging through religion — Indians who had arrived in the U.K. from East Africa in the 1960s. Aiyar became fascinated by the migration of Indians to Kenya in the 19th and 20th centuries, a little-known history at the time, and the relationship they had to both sides of anticolonial politics. Visiting Kenyan archives made clear there was abundant material on hand involving Jeevanjee and many other figures.

“Methodologically it always comes back to the archives, where I find a person or an event that calls into question what we think we know about the past,” Aiyar says. “I wonder what is this person doing there, and then I start digging up all the files I can find. I am really an archive rat and the thing about dealing with South Asian history in the colonial period is, there’s just files and files and files of documents — the Brits really liked their paperwork! If one likes the joy of discovery in the archives, there’s so much to piece together.”

After completing her dissertation, Aiyar took a postdoc position at Johns Hopkins University, then served on the faculty of the University of Wisconsin at Madison for three years. She joined MIT in 2013.

Partition project

At MIT, Aiyar appreciates her students — “They are curious, they are open-minded, and a lot of fun to teach” — and enjoys being part of a history faculty with global scope.

“One of the things I absolutely love about being here is how international our world history section is,” she says. “For a small department, we really pack a punch. We have every region of the world represented with top-rate scholars.”

While teaching, Aiyar is pursuing two long-term research efforts. One project is about the encounters between African soldiers and civilians during World War II,  in Burma and India. The other, about Burmese independence and titled “India’s First Partition: Recovering Burma’s South Asian History,” is her second book project.

The title is an indirect reference to the division of Pakistan from India in 1947, which almost exclusively holds claim to the world “partition” in South Asian history. But Aiyar’s contention is that this term applies to the separation of Burma from India in 1937.  

“It is a partition,” Aiyar says. “It’s the very first time a carceral border is created in South Asia, and immigration laws are introduced that literally prevent the millions who moved in and out of Burma from crossing over without paperwork. The border creates a surveillance state. All of this takes place a full decade before Pakistan is created. … I am arguing that 1937 was the first partition of India.”

In writing the book, Aiyar is also digging into literature, diaries, and other documents to reconstruct daily life in Burma and show the many interconnections among people of Burmese and Indian heritage.

“The history of the mundane, the everyday, I think will really complement the political history of conflict and tension,” Aiyar says. “I’ve always been interested in how people live together with difference.”

Or not live together, as the case may be. In South Asia or elsewhere, then and now, as Aiyar recognizes, separatist identity politics can also be a powerful animating force for individuals and political factions.

“We can look to history to understand what these questions are about and why people are that invested,” Aiyar says. “I’ve always found history is a really useful way to understand what is going on in the contemporary world.”



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West Ham 1-3 Arsenal: Gunners gain first win under Freddie Ljungberg

Arsenal beat West Ham to end a winless run of nine games and gain their first victory under interim boss Freddie Ljungberg.

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A DNA Firm That Caters to Police Just Bought a Genealogy Site

In 2018, GEDmatch played a key role in reopening the 40-year-old Golden State Killer case. Now a company that serves law enforcement is gobbling it up.

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Why can't this doctor work in the UK?

An refugee doctor would love to work in the UK, and the NHS would love to have him - but there's a hitch.

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College Cheerleader Punished For Taking A Knee Wins $145,000 Settlement

Taking a knee seems to get attention. According to The Huffington Post, a college cheerleader who took a knee during a game won a $145,000 settlement.

The Georgia college cheerleader was inspired by Colin Kaepernick and his stance against racial injustice and followed in his footsteps by kneeling at a college game. Tommia Dean has won a $145,000 settlement against Kennesaw State University after they attempted to punish her for doing so.

Dean and four other cheerleaders made headlines during a December 2017 football game when they decided to take a knee during the national anthem to protest police brutality and racism. The cheerleader agreed to the settlement in October, practically two years after they took the action in protest.

Tommia Dean sued Kennesaw State University’s then-President Sam Olens, alongside Scott Whitlock and Matt Griffin who worked for the KSU athletics department at the time. She dropped her lawsuit after settling with the Georgia Department of Administrative Services for $145,000.

“A compromise has been reached,” the agreement obtained by Marietta Daily Journal states. “The intent of this agreement is to buy peace of mind from future controversy and forestall further attorney’s fees, costs, or other expenses of litigation, and further that this agreement represents the compromise, economic resolution of disputed claims and, as such, shall not be deemed in any manner an admission, finding, conclusion, evidence or indication for any purposes whatsoever, that the KSU defendants acted contrary to the law or otherwise violated the rights of Dean.”

In Dean’s complaint, she charged officials, specifically Cobb County Sheriff Neil Warren and state Rep. Earl Ehrhart, R-Powder Springs, had conspired against the cheerleaders by not allowing them on the field during the anthem after their initial protest. The cheerleaders were not allowed on the field at the next game until after the national anthem was played. Officials of the state university system concluded two months later that the women had a constitutional right to protest and that Kennesaw should not have kept them off the field unless their actions caused a disruption. Kennesaw State University’s then-president Sam Olens was forced to resign because of the school’s actions.



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Ethiopia's Abiy Ahmed: Inside the mind of this year's Nobel Peace Prize winner

Ethiopia's Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has published a book outlining his philosophy of "medemer".

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South Florida man first convicted under ‘Red Flag’ law

A Florida man, who was the first in his state to be charged with violating the “Red Flag” law, was convicted of the charge and now faces up to five years behind bars.

Jerron Smith, 33, of Deerfield Beach, was found guilty on December 6 of refusing to let police confiscate his weapons under the “Red Flag”. It requires certain people considered to be more apt to use their firearms in a crime to surrender their firearms upon law enforcement requests. Smith allegedly refused to do this in March 2018 according to the South Florida Sun-Sentinel.

The bi-partisan backed law was passed after the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland. In order to be invoked, the law requires law enforcement agencies to determine that a person is at an elevated risk to use a firearm in a crime. Once that determination is made, police then have to convince a judge that the person is at a high risk of illegally using their weapon. When a judge signs off, a person has two options: to surrender their firearms to police or give them to an independent person who is authorized to legally possess the weapons, however that person has to agree not to allow the defendant access to the weapons.

READ MORE Two mothers who advocated against gun violence slain in drive-by shooting

Smith was arrested in 2018 for reportedly firing his gun at a car driven by his friend, Travis Jackson, after the two got into an argument over a cell phone. Jackson wasn’t hurt in the incident, according to the Sun-Sentinel. However, police obtained a “risk protection order” under the new law, which they served on Smith after they showed up at his home.

Smith’s lawyer, Jim Lewis, said his client refused to turn his weapons over to police, or give them to an independent person, because he didn’t understand his rights.

“He never had an opportunity to understand what was going on,” Lewis said, according to the Sun-Sentinel. “He thought he had a right to have an attorney present before the order was executed.”

During his trial, Smith also told a jury that he invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.

READ MORE Men try to rob Texas woman sitting in car…but she had something waiting for them

However, Prosecutor Diana Chiorean told jurors that Smith knew his rights and that the encounter was captured on police body cam, which was replayedfor the jury. The deputies are heard telling Smith that he must surrender his weapons but that his lawyer could challenge the ruling at a court hearing.

The jury returned a guilty verdict in less than an hour. Smith also faces an attempted murder charge and is awaiting trial.

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José Filomeno dos Santos: Son of Angola's ex-leader in 'extraordinary' trial

Jose Filomeno dos Santos is alleged to have stolen $0.5bn from Angola's Sovereign Wealth Fund.

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North Dakota county may become US’s 1st to bar new refugees

JAMES MacPHERSON Associated Press
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — Reuben Panchol was forced to leave war-torn Sudan decades ago as a child, embarking on an odyssey that eventually brought him to the American Midwest and left him eternally grateful to the country that took him in.

“I am an American citizen, a North Dakotan,” said Panchol, a 38-year-old father of four. “And without North Dakota, I couldn’t have made it.”

Panchol hopes to share his story on Monday with members of a local commission who are set to vote on whether their county will stop accepting refugees. If they vote to bar refugees, as expected, Burleigh County — home to about 95,000 people and the capital city of Bismarck — could become the first local government to do so since President Donald Trump issued an executive order making it possible.

The county postponed a vote last week when more than 100 people showed up and overflowed the commission’s normal meeting space. Monday night’s meeting will be held in a middle school cafeteria to accommodate public interest that Chairman Brian Bitner said is the most intense he’s seen in more than a decade on the commission.

Though he declined to predict which way the commission would go, Bitner said he would vote against accepting additional refugees.

“The overwhelming public opinion is so clear to me, that I think if you vote for it, you’re not going to be reelected if you choose to run again,” he said.

Trump’s executive order this fall came as he had already proposed cutting the number of refugees next year to the lowest level since Congress passed the Refugee Act of 1980. He declared that refugees should be resettled only in places where the state and local governments — counties — gave consent. Since then, many governors and counties around the country have declared that they would continue taking refugees.

Republican Gov. Doug Burgum said last month that North Dakota would continue accepting refugees where local jurisdictions agreed, and his spokesman said the governor saw it as a local decision. Soon after, Cass and Grand Forks counties, which are home to the state’s largest city, Fargo, and third-largest city, Grand Forks, respectively, declared they would continue taking refugees. Fargo Mayor Tim Mahoney said refugees were needed to boost the city’s economy, and that 90% were fully employed within three months of resettling in his city.

But the idea was quickly opposed in more conservative Burleigh County. Among the opponents was Republican state Rep. Rick Becker, of Bismarck, an ultraconservative who took to social media to criticize the program as unrestrained and a possible drain on social service programs, schools and law enforcement, though the county said it doesn’t track any costs directly related to refugees.

“This isn’t about skin color,” said Becker, a plastic surgeon and former gubernatorial candidate. “In the past, nobody had any say whatsoever. Now we have something that should have been in place decades ago.

“Now, if they want to accept them, they can, and if they don’t want to they shouldn’t,” he said.

Bismarck Mayor Steve Bakken said the city government has no say in the matter, but he sides with those who want to stop taking in more refugees.

“Right now it’s a blank check and that equates into a lot of questions,” Bakken said of the number of refugees that could be placed in the area. “We have burgeoning school enrollment, veterans’ needs, homeless needs, and Native American needs.

“This isn’t about heartstrings, this is about purse strings,” he said.

Shirley Dykshoorn, a vice president for Lutheran Social Services, which handles all of North Dakota’s refugee resettlement cases, said her agency used to handle about 400 cases per year, but that number dropped to 124 in fiscal 2019, which ended in September. The program has been in existence in North Dakota since 1948.

LSS settled 24 refugees in Bismarck in fiscal 2019, after settling 22 in fiscal 2018. Dykshoorn said Burleigh County had been projected to get no more than 25 refugees annually in the coming years.

“We always look at the capacity of a community to handle these,” she said.
“I’m trying to understand the basis for believing how 25 people will dramatically change the fabric of a community,” she said. “What does it say to the rest of the country when a county where your capital city is located would choose not to participate?”

For decades, North Dakota considered any population gain a good thing. Its population declined by more than 21,000 between 2000 and 2007 until an oil boom sparked a rush of workers into the state. Many jobs remain unfilled even though the state has added nearly 100,000 residents in the past decade. Though many new arrivals work in the oil patch, many are also attracted to Fargo, which has a burgeoning tech industry, and Grand Forks, which is an aviation hub.

Burgum, who has said he’ll seek a second term, acknowledged that Burleigh County’s vote could be seen as unwelcoming in a state that has about 30,000 more jobs than takers.
“It sends a very negative signal” if Burleigh County refuses refugees, he said.

The Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service, which works with Lutheran Social Services, is one of three national organizations that is suing to block Trump’s executive order. The group’s president and chief executive, Krish O’Mara Vignarajah, said her organization has closely tracked the response and is aware of no other local government that has voted to reject refugees.

Panchol, the father of four, moved to North Dakota in 2001 as one of the “Lost Boys,” Sudanese orphans who fled thousands of miles on foot during the civil war that ravaged his country. His path wound through Ethiopia and Kenya before he ended up in Fargo and later in Lincoln, a small community outside of Bismarck.

“I ran from bullets every day,” he said. “We moved from country to country not to disturb anyone’s life but to stay alive.”

Since moving to the state, he has earned degrees from North Dakota State University in Fargo and the University of Mary in Bismarck. He works now at the state Department of Environmental Quality, heading its underground storage tank program, and has become enough of an Upper Midwesterner that he occasionally drops a “You betcha” into the conversation.

Panchol said he understands the reservations that people may have about new arrivals, but he believes any fear is more politically driven than reality.

“Honestly, North Dakotans have been very welcoming to me and I give North Dakota credit for helping people like me better their lives,” he said. “It wasn’t my choice to come to North Dakota, but I’m glad I did. Big time.”
___
Associated Press writer Doug Glass in Minneapolis contributed to this report.

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These Plastic Bunnies Got a DNA Upgrade. Next up, the World?

Scientists infused a 3D-printed rabbit with genetic material, the first step toward a potential “DNA of things” where biology makes gadgets smarter.

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Amid #DemSoWhite Protests, Cory Booker Slams DNC For Lack Of Diversity Among Dec. 19 Debate Participants

Six months ago, the field of candidates vying for the Democratic presidential nomination was considered the most diverse in history. With four days before the candidate selection deadline for the Dec. 19 debate in Los Angeles, there is currently an all-white slate of six contenders who have qualified to appear on the stage.

Outraged critics of the Democratic National Committee’s qualifications criteria have been protesting the process on social media using the hashtags #DemSoWhite and #DebateSoWhite.

They are not alone in their fury.

US Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, currently one of two African American candidates in the race, is fighting to get his message heard at the upcoming debate. According to The Washington Times, he completed a nearly 800-mile, 12-county tour of Iowa on Sunday by rebuking the Democratic Party for letting “elites” and “money” decide which candidates gain the opportunity to occupy the debate stage. He’s now urging voters to include his name when pollsters call.

“Iowa never lets elites decide,” he told a crowd at his Cedar Rapids, Iowa, campaign office on Sunday. “Let’s let Iowa have another comeback story.”

So far, South Bend, Indiana Mayor and Iowa Caucus frontrunner Pete Buttigieg, former Vice President Joe Biden, Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, Sen. Amy Klobchar of Minnesota, and billionaire Tom Steyer have qualified for the L.A. debate.

Although Booker has not been selected, he has met the required threshold of donors but does not rate when it comes to polling – either garnering 4% support in at least four polls or 6% in two early-state polls. With the Dec. 12 deadline quickly approaching, he has not been able to make the cut on a single poll.

Booker maintains that the debate standards favor candidates who can afford to run television ads. That doesn’t mean, he claims, that their candidacy reflects the true sentiments of voters in the Hawkeye State. From town halls to forums with unionists and farmers across four days, news outlets reported about Booker’s ability to connect with different segments of voters as well as his standing-ovation reception at events.

“I’m a little upset with the (Democratic National Committee) right now because they seem to be trying to make the decisions for you,” he told a Sunday afternoon crowd gathered in a Dubuque, Iowa bar.

DNC spokesperson Xochitl Hinojosa told the Washington Times that the party’s debate requirements were “inclusive. She asserted that historically, candidates who have polled lower than 4% in the primary season have never been selected as the Democratic presidential nominee. “While we are legally required to have objective criteria for each debate, our qualifying criteria has stayed extremely low throughout this entire process,” she said in an emailed statement. “We’ve never seen a political party take this many steps to be inclusive.”

With that said, it still appears that the Democrats could be absent of African American candidates during primary season. With top contender Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) dropping out of the race last week and the largely unknown Miramar, Florida Mayor Wayne Messam calling it quits two weeks ago, Booker and former Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick are the only African Americans in the pool of 15 candidates. At this point, the former HUD secretary under Obama Julian Castro, who is Latinx, has not made the cut for the debate but Chinese businessman Andrew Yang and Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D-HI), the first Samoan-American member of Congress, are reportedly on the cusp.

Politico reported that the Booker camp has announced that Harris’ exit has “triggered an outpouring of financial support.” In fact, Booker said his campaign had its best online fundraising day of his campaign on Wednesday.  Still, political observers maintain that such news will have little impact in earning him a spot on the debate stage.



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Despite what you heard, Beyoncé is not doing a Las Vegas residency

Despite what you heard, Beyoncé is not headed to the Las Vegas strip to do a residency.

LoveBScott initially ran with information from “sources” claiming Queen Bey would announce she is doing a Las Vegas residency sometime in the first half of next year. The misinformation also said Bey would rake in more dough from the residency than any other entertainer in the city.

The singer’s rep, however, told Variety that the rumors were unfounded and categorically false.

It’s “absolutely not true,” her rep told Variety.

READ MORE: Cardi B has a blast in Africa: performs two shows, makes it rain naira

All over the world, Beyoncé fans weighed in on the initial speculation, with some arguing from the jump that the rumor was just that as the singer would opt for a new album release and tour over a residency. Others said now that Bey is a mom of three, a residency might suit her mommy schedule better than a multi-city world tour.

To be clear, the “Lemonade” singer has performed in Las Vegas before. She released the I Am… Yours: An Intimate Performance at Wynn Las Vegas album in the City which was recorded in Sin City during a few dates of her “I Am…” world tour, back in 2009.

She’s just not doing a residency. At least not right now.

Beyoncé is coming off of a successful, and busy, past few years. The singer’s Homecoming  album, filmed last April at Coachella, received six Emmy nods for pre-recorded variety special, directing for a variety special, and writing for a variety special, according to Variety. Homecoming and Lemonade, which she also re-released last April, marked the first time Beyoncé had two Billboard top ten albums at the same time.

READ MORE: Miss South Africa wins Miss Universe 2019 competition

This year, Beyoncé was busy releasing Homecoming as a Netflix documentary, and also working on The Gift, Disney’s Lion King soundtrack.

News outlets now say the star is gearing up to film the video for her song, “Brown Skinned.” The singer reportedly is doing the video in London and is hiring brown-skinned stunners of every hue.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

IVY PARK January 18

A post shared by Beyoncé (@beyonce) on

In other Beyoncé news, on Jan. 18 the singer’s Ivy Park x Adidas sneaker and apparel line will hit retail stores. She gave viewers a glimpse of the lineup on her Instagram page.

Who needs a residency when you have all of this going on?

The post Despite what you heard, Beyoncé is not doing a Las Vegas residency appeared first on theGrio.



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The First *Wonder Woman 1984* Trailer Is Here

It's pretty epic. Oh, and after it's over, you might want to watch Ryan Reynolds in *Free Guy* too. 

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It’s Time to Rethink Diversity Hiring, Starting With Middle Management

In an era when diversity is celebrated, when corporations recognize the power of that diversity, when programs, incentives, and opportunities are put into place to expand workplace diversity, why is the human resources department often looked upon by the minority community as a career roadblock and not a pathway?

At a recent gala event for black leaders, the keynote speaker addressed this issue directly. While pushing for more inclusion in the workplace, he pleaded with the audience to do their best to bypass their HR department in order to fill more meaningful roles in their organizations with minority applicants.

Today, many HR practitioners partner with top corporate leadership to embrace minority hiring, provide educational programs for employees that advance their careers, and embed into the fabric of their company a sustained commitment to diversity. But have HR professionals done enough when we see thought leaders in the minority community questioning HR hiring practices that they perceive as falling short of ensuring long-term diversity growth?

Start with middle management

A common practice in current HR hiring is to emphasize diversity and inclusion for entry-level job applicants. This may allow corporations to “check the box” in meeting hiring goals, but by doing so, companies are setting themselves up for failure. Diversity and inclusion can only work as an institutional change embedded throughout the company and not a simple metric applied only to entry-level applicants.

Creating that change takes time and a plan. That is why this HR professional suggests that my colleagues consider expanding their current focus on entry-level hiring and seek first to fill middle-management positions with diverse candidates. In sports it’s called “building a bench.”

Concentrating on creating a diverse mid-level executive team requires a two-tiered strategy. First, by hiring experienced mid-level management, the organization builds a talent pipeline from which diverse top leadership can be selected in the future. As these mid-level executives have “grown up” within the organization, they will already be deeply versed in the company’s culture and values and primed for senior positions. Second, company leaders can invest in the future by having diverse middle management identify and mentor younger employees.

By starting in the middle of the corporate hierarchy, companies can ensure that inclusion is taking root in a fertile place, reaching down toward entry level positions while growing up toward senior titles. This will enable institutional change that is comprehensive, enduring, and apparent to any new job applicant. All this must be accomplished while taking care to support the growth and career development of existing minorities in middle management.

Take a good look in the mirror

The sad reality is there still remains subtle racism in the 21st-century workplace. In Britain, the publication of Racism at Work: The Danger of Indifference, revealed that 60% of black and 42% of Asian people have experienced racism at work (compared to just 14% of white people), with one in five (20%) experiencing verbal or physical abuse. One suspects similar numbers can be found in the United States, where racism was pervasive, open, and accepted up until the late 1960s.

Every workday, HR professionals are challenged to put down the mirrored lens that can subconsciously affect our decisions regarding who to hire based on our own characteristics, whether that is education, race, religion, or gender. It is important to recognize the potential bias that mirrored lens creates and to safeguard against its destructive effects by establishing practices and protocols that guarantee we are never indifferent to the task of creating a genuinely diverse workplace.

Companies can target establishing diverse middle management in two ways. The first is looking closely at their recruitment sources. Instead of looking at the same communities or referral sources, HR and hiring managers should look to new talent pipelines, whether that is graduate programs or partner organizations.  Leadership will need to practice skilled outreach to find and create these partnerships, to broaden a company’s reach and brand.

Secondarily, diversity in middle management can subsequently be achieved if human resources works with company leaders to highlight diversity and inclusion in their recruitment materials, including job descriptions. An attractive employee value proposition will include not only a good benefits package but will also spotlight opportunities to serve as diversity mentors. By including diversity in the corporate brand, especially in recruitment ads and job descriptions, businesses are showing the talent pool that diversity and inclusion are truly seamed into the company culture and that they want to be consistent with those values in hiring and promotion.

By starting “in the middle,” i.e., hiring or developing diverse middle management, a company has the opportunity to invest in the future of its corporate soul. But it isn’t without challenges. It requires a heightened level of self-awareness to ensure we never allow ourselves to become indifferent to the challenge or remain content with our recruitment achievements.

 


diversity hiring

(Angela Colon-Mahoney, VP, Human Resources at Otsuka Pharmaceutical Companies)

Angela Colon-Mahoney is Vice President, Human Resources at Otsuka Pharmaceutical Companies, a global leader at the intersection of technology and medicine where her responsibilities include strategic organizational design and attracting the best possible talent to this innovative company. Ms. Mahoney brings over 20 years of experience in attracting executive leadership to global brands such as The Estée Lauder Companies, Tyco and Unilever. Mahoney earned an MS in Organization Change Management from the New School University, and a BA of Psychology from St. John’s University.



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