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Wednesday, June 10, 2020

Jermaine Dupri, Slutty Vegan, and Impossible Foods Launch Nationwide Voting Initiative

midterm elections

Local elections are underway in multiple states leading up to the November presidential elections. A number of public figures have been using their platforms to spread awareness and encourage people to go out and vote. Recently, Atlanta native and music superstar Jermaine Dupri and Pinky Cole, owner of the Slutty Vegan, are teamed with Impossible Foods to start a new campaign to encourage young people to go out and vote.

Starting this week, the group will host the Votenik Initiative, playful spin from the city’s famous Freaknik event, to help feed communities while also encouraging them to go out and vote in their local elections and in November. Cole, who is known for her famous vegan soul food pop-ups, will open her food truck at schools and voting sites. Patrons who vote will be offered a complimentary food item from the Slutty Vegan’s menu.

“This is the next step in making sure that everyone gets out and vote,” said Cole in a press statement. “This is the most productive way to get our voices heard, and we are beyond grateful to be launching this initiative with both Jermaine Dupri and Impossible Foods.”
This event is the latest initiative of Cole’s Pinky Cole Foundation that recently has been offering local relief efforts to the community amid the COVID-19, or novel coronavirus pandemic. Through her foundation, Cole has been able to offer financial assistance to help small businesses pay their rent and provide meals to other local grassroots organizations.

 

 

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Hey GA Sluts! IT’S VOTING DAY! We know the lines are long, so we’re going to take care of you while you wait! 💪🏾 . Join us for VoteNik! ✊🏾 . We teamed up with @jermainedupri, @pinkygivesback and @impossiblefoods to feed voters for FREE between 2PM-6PM at Ralph Bunche Middle School. . *While supplies last* . Your voice is necessary to make changes in our communities! See you soon! 🙌🏽 . . #sluttyveganatl #sluttyvegan #slutsofinstagram #vegan #slutburger #thesluttytakeover #veganburger #vegantakeover #burgers #atl #atlanta #veganislife #slutnation #slutsonthemove #slutmobile #veganstastebetter #sluttified #getsluttified #fortheculture #eatplants #atlshawty #eatplantsyaslut #eatplantsbitch #sluttystrong #slutthevote #voteordie #sluttysummer #sluttysummer2020

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Martin Management Group Advocates For Anti-Lynching Bill, Donates to NAACP

The Martin Management Group, a family with Kentucky roots dating back to 1833, has endorsed the passing of the anti-lynching bill and has donated $25,000 to the NAACP.

In a June 8 press release, the Martin family expressed its anger and disappointment in Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul blocking the anti-lynching bill stuck in the Senate.

“Our family is as shocked as many Kentuckians that Senator Rand Paul has decided to be the sole vote
thwarting the attempt to pass anti-lynching legislation that our country has fought for decades to have,” the Martin Family said. “During these times we need leaders that take swift and decisive actions that help to heal and unite Americans. This leadership also starts at home. These donations are a statement that our family remains in the fight for equality and social justice.”

The Martin Management Group ranked No. 9 on the BE 100’s Auto Dealer 40 list of the largest black-owned auto dealerships, also donated $25,000 to the Kentucky branches of the NAACP. The group added further commitments will continue to be made in support of social equality initiatives.

Many people have blamed the anti-lynching bill being stalled on Sen. Paul. Paul wrote an op-ed in the Courier-Journal Monday, explaining that he actually hasn’t blocked the bill, but instead offered an amendment to strengthen the bill.

“The bill as written would allow altercations resulting in a cut, abrasion, bruise, or any other injury no matter how temporary to be subject to a 10-year penalty,” Paul wrote last week. “My amendment would simply apply a serious bodily injury standard, which would ensure crimes resulting in a substantial risk of death and extreme physical pain be prosecuted as a lynching.

“Because I stand so strongly behind the belief that a hateful crime such as lynching deserves a severe sentence, I could not support a bill that places such a low threshold on what could be considered a lynching,” Paul added.

The House of Representatives passed the Emmett Till Anti-lynching Act in February by a bipartisan vote of 410-4. In response to the recent police killings and protests across the country, House Democrats have drafted the Justice In Policing Act.

The bill would allow for the use of force only as a last resort, ban chokeholds, prohibit racial and religious profiling, and make it easier to hold police accountable for misconduct, among other dramatic changes.



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Atlanta secretary of state vows to investigate voting delays in minority areas

The primary voting in Georgia on June 9 could be defined by one word, “catastrophe.” Plagued by long wait times and broken voting machines, the state made national news for its failures.

Georgia’s Secretary of State, Brad Raffensperger, a Republican called the problems “unacceptable.”

READ MORE: Federal judge rules felons cannot be stopped from voting due to fees

According to NBC, wait times in some parts of Atlanta and DeKalb County were up to seven hours.

The long waits were primarily in minority neighborhoods. In a Twitter thread from Atlanta Mayor, Keisha Lance Bottoms, voters reported their experiences. Most complaints were about malfunctioning voting machines.

“In line since 6:30 a.m. at Fanplex in Summerhill with 300+ people and none of the voting machines are working. NONE,” one user wrote, “@GaSecofState this is widespread, this is criminal. And it’s under your watch.”

Raffensperger, a Republican, said in a statement, “My office has opened an investigation to determine what these counties need to do to resolve these issues before November’s election.”

Atlanta Voting Lines theGrio.com
People wait in line to vote in Georgia’s Primary Election on June 9, 2020 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Elijah Nouvelage/Getty Images)

This is the second time in recent history that an election in Georgia has been deemed controversial.

The 2018 Gubernatorial election between Stacey Abrams and Brian Kemp, who was Secretary of State at the time, was plagued by allegations of voter suppression. Kemp won the race by a thin margin and Abrams called the election, “rotten and rigged.” She went on to found Fair Fight-a political action committee dedicated to advocating for fair and free elections.

There was a lot at stake in yesterday’s election, including two Senate seats. However, experts are most concerned about resolving the problems before November’s presidential election.

READ MORE: Stacey Abrams campaign scores another court victory, calls Brian Kemp the nation’s ‘foremost architect of voter suppression’

Kristen Clarke, president and CEO of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, said, “If we view the primary election as a dry run for November, then Georgia gets an F today.”

In a statement, David Ralston, the Speaker of the Georgia House of Representatives said, “The legislative branch of government has an obligation to go beyond the mutual finger-pointing and get to the truth and the real reasons underlying these frustrations and concerns.”

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The post Atlanta secretary of state vows to investigate voting delays in minority areas appeared first on TheGrio.



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Sonos Arc Soundbar Review: A Dolby Atmos Dream

The latest home theater speaker from Sonos sounds better than almost any soundbar you can buy. Plus, it has major smarts.

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The Pandemic and the Protests Are Mirror Images

The debate over Covid-19 and the uprisings against police brutality share perilous pasts and uncertain futures. Together, they can teach us where to go next.

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This Black Couple Is Helping Businesses Stay Clean Amid COVID-19

Mister and Virginia Nelson

Since the start of COVID-19, or the novel coronavirus, pandemic, cleaning items have become hot sellers with stores across the country along with the growing need for cleaning services for businesses that now need to adhere to new cleaning standards. Items like disinfectant wipes, hand sanitizer, and other cleaning supplies are often sold out for weeks at a time due to the increased demand. One couple has turned the situation into a business opportunity by helping storefronts and businesses remove harmful bacteria amid the public health crisis.

Florida-based couple, Mister and Virginia Nelson, launched their company Nelson’s Professional Cleaning Services, to help companies and their employees work in safe environments during the virus pandemic using eco-friendly products to clean local storefronts. The Jan-Pro franchise offers its EnviroShield® program to help minimize the spread of viruses and bacteria, especially on commonly touched surfaces.

In their interview with Black Business, Mister, who has worked in waste management for 21 years, added, “Look what’s going on with this coronavirus. It’s important that companies have a clean environment for their employees. We’re going to be here for them now and many months and years, too.”

“While many companies like ours are now jumping into the marketplace with various solutions of disinfection, my husband and I know that there’s a need for this now—and long after COVID-19,” Virginia told Black Business who worked as a juvenile detention officer before starting her own business. She now works as a program manager at an all-girls group home in addition to running her company with her husband.

As companies begin to reopen as more and more states enter the second phase of reopening, the Nelsons plan to expand their coverage in northern and central Florida coasts including Brevard County, Orange County, Vero Beach, Cocoa Beach, and Cape Canaveral.

“We don’t use your everyday household products,” Virginia continued. “We use eco-friendly products and color-coded rags that are used only for certain surfaces and rooms.”



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Podhero Wants to Be Patreon for Podcasts

The streaming app aims to take on Spotify—and the entire podcast advertising business—by charging listeners a subscription fee.

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The Dangers of Excluding Women From HIV Prevention Drug Tests

PrEP, or pre-exposure prophylaxis, pills are highly effective in blocking HIV if taken daily. But their drug trials have a mixed track record for access.

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Across the Globe, Scientists Are Striking for Black Lives

On June 10, thousands of academics are stopping research activities to educate themselves about disparities and take action against systemic racism in science.

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IBM's Withdrawal Won't Mean the End of Facial Recognition

Many other companies continue to offer similar services, which studies show are less accurate for women and people of color.

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Nintendo Game Boy Hackers Are Building a Better Retro Console

Fueled by nostalgia and longing for a simpler time, hardware tinkerers are injecting new life into the iconic handheld game console.

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'The Last of Us Part II' and Its Crisis-Strewn Path to Release

Videogame developer Naughty Dog was racing to finish the sequel to its blockbuster set in a post-pandemic dystopia. Then it was hit with trolls, hackers—and a real pandemic.

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Tuesday, June 9, 2020

George Floyd protests: The statues being defaced

As statues are toppled and defaced, a light is being shone on countries' colonial history.

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Dozens killed in attack in northern Nigeria

At least 59 people are reported to have been killed in the raid by jihadist militants on Tuesday.

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‘Vanderpump Rules’ stars Stassi Schroeder, Kristen Doute fired for racist behavior

It looks like years of bad behavior has finally caught up with Stassi Schroeder and Kristen Doute. Both women have been fired from Vanderpump Rules over racist incidents.

It took a whole week for the stars of the hit Bravo reality series to get the boot after their one and only Black former costar Faith Stowers revealed that the pair called the police on her for fun.

After one of the series’ stars, Jax Taylor, cheated on his fiancee with Stowers, the girls decided to take revenge by making false claims to the police. The women had seen a story about theft in The Daily Mirror and the suspect pictured was a Black woman. Schroeder and Doute called the police and told them they suspected Stowers was the culprit.

READ MORE: Bravo stars reportedly have to sign an STD clause

“There was this article on Daily Mail where there was an African American lady,” Stowers recalled during a recent Instagram Live chat. “It was a weird photo, so she looked very light-skinned and had these different, weird tattoos. They showcased her, and I guess this woman was robbing people. And they called the cops and said it was me. This is like, a true story. I heard this from actually Stassi during an interview.”

Schroeder was so proud of this disgusting behavior that she bragged about it during an appearance on the “Bitch Bible” podcast.  Meanwhile, Doute shared the article on social media.

Reality TV Personality Faith Stowers attends the GMCLA’s 5th Annual Voice Awards at The Ray Dolby Ballroom at Hollywood & Highland Center on April 23, 2016 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Paul Archuleta/FilmMagic)

“hey tweeties, doesn’t this ex #pumprules thief look familiar? someone put her on mtv & gave her a platform for press. I didn’t wanna go there but I’m going there,” she posted.

Schroeder and Doute have both issued apologies since Stowers came out with her story, but it looks like the pathetic attempts to save face were too little too late. They have been dropped by their book agents and are reportedly losing endorsement deals left and right.

They aren’t the only ones getting fired from the show. Two other cast members. Max Boyens and Brett Caprioni, are being dismissed as well, even though allegations of their racist behaviors came out in January.

READ MORE: 50 Cent reignites feud with ‘Vanderpump Rules’ star Lala Kent

It looks like Bravo may be bracing for more drama because their statement about the dismissals was pretty short.

“Bravo and Evolution Media confirmed today that Stassi Schroeder, Kristen Doute, Max Boyens and Brett Caprioni will not be returning to Vanderpump Rules,” the statement read.

Considering fans have been watching these people making extremely offensive statements and demonstrating generally disgusting behavior, it’s a wonder this took so long.

Schroeder had this coming for sure, especially since this allegedly isn’t even the first racist thing she has done publicly. Thankfully, it looks like her bad behavior will cost her big time considering she was gearing up for a big Bravo wedding that’s likely off the table.

The post ‘Vanderpump Rules’ stars Stassi Schroeder, Kristen Doute fired for racist behavior appeared first on TheGrio.



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FBI probes link between fatal shootings of federal officer, deputy

The FBI has launched an investigation into whether the fatal shooting of a Santa Cruz police officer is connected to a separate incident in Oakland that left a federal protection officer dead and another critically hurt. 

READ MORE: Philadelphia police inspector applauded by colleagues after turning himself in for assault on protester

Sgt. Damon Gutzwiller, 38, was ambushed and killed in the line of duty Saturday afternoon. Law officials are now looking into possible connections between this case and the death of federal officer Dave Patrick Underwood, who was gunned down on May 29, KRCA.com reports. 

Investigators said both cases involved a shooter in a van. The suspected driver and gunman is U.S. Air Force sergeant Steven Carrillo who is believed to have been motivated by his support of Black Lives Matter. 

“They were ambushed with gunfire and multiple improvised explosives,” said Santa Cruz County Sheriff Jim Hart

Carrillo, 32, was shot during his arrest and remains hospitalized, according to reports.  Authorities say he used guns and detonated explosives during his ambush on Gutzwiller and another sheriff’s deputy, near his home in Ben Lomond, in Santa Cruz County, California.

Gutzwiller was killed and the second deputy remains hospitalized with serious injuries.

Hart said both were investigating after a 911 about a suspicious white van containing weapons and explosives. The same van was reportedly captured on surveillance cameras. 

Meanwhile, late last month, a federal security officer in Oakland was fatally shot in an ambush involving a white van. Federal investigators are now trying to determine if both cases are linked to Carrillo.

On his Facebook page, Carillo, who commanded an elite protection unit, was critical of law enforcement’s response to police killings and Black Lives Matter protesters.

“Who needs to start riots when you have police to do it for you,” Carillo posted last Friday, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. 

He also posted a meme on his Instagram page, reports ABC7News,  that read:

“I’ll never let racist white people make me forget about the dope white people I know exist. I love y’all.” Fist emojis of varying skin tones were part of the meme and Carillo had crossed those out, writing “The only race that matters, the human race.’

A friend of Carillo says those who knew him are stunned, even though they knew he was having some trouble processing his wife Monika’s death by suicide in an off-base hotel two years ago.

“A lot of regret, I think was there and it was just challenging for him,” retired Air Force military policeman Justin Ehrhardt told ABC. “But even with all that none of us the people I talked to who were stationed with him even once thought this would happen at all.”

Gutzwiller was a 14-year veteran and he leaves behind a pregnant wife and young child. 

READ MORE: Florida police union offers to hire officers accused of misconduct

“When I think about community policing and how we police here in Santa Cruz County, Damon is the picture of community policing,” Hart said. “He was kind, caring, patient, empathetic. He could take enforcement action when he needed to, but he would rather communicate his way through any problem that was in front of him.”


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QS ranks MIT the world’s No. 1 university for 2020-21

MIT has again been named the world’s top university by the QS World University Rankings, which were announced today. This is the ninth year in a row MIT has received this distinction.

The full 2019-20 rankings — published by Quacquarelli Symonds, an organization specializing in education and study abroad — can be found at topuniversities.com. The QS rankings were based on academic reputation, employer reputation, citations per faculty, student-to-faculty ratio, proportion of international faculty, and proportion of international students. MIT earned a perfect overall score of 100.

MIT was also ranked the world’s top university in 12 of the subject areas ranked by QS,

as announced in March of this year.

The Institute received a No. 1 ranking in the following QS subject areas: Architecture/Built Environment; Chemistry; Computer Science and Information Systems; Chemical Engineering; Civil and Structural Engineering; Electrical and Electronic Engineering; Mechanical, Aeronautical and Manufacturing Engineering; Linguistics; Materials Science; Mathematics; Physics and Astronomy; and Statistics and Operational Research.

MIT also placed second in five subject areas: Accounting and Finance; Biological Sciences; Earth and Marine Sciences; Economics and Econometrics; and Environmental Sciences.



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Apollo Theater goes virtual for ‘Amateur Night’ auditions

The world-famous Apollo Theater is living by the credo “the show must go on.” Despite the COVID-19 pandemic, the theater is keeping pace with their Amateur Night contestants by hosting their audition videos online.

READ MORE: YG films music video at LA protest; claps back at critics

As reported by Vulture, the nation’s most famous theater for discovering Black talent has now gone virtual.

The Apollo Tribeca thegrio.com
Promotional image, HBO Documentary Film The Apollo

“The Apollo Amateur Night is all about access,” Kamilah Forbes, executive producer at the Apollo told Vulture. “What that’s saying is that, yes, this is a coveted space, but we want to make sure that any and everyone can get on, right? [Moving] our auditions online is one of those key ways we can lower the barrier of access.”

Producer Marion Caffey sorts the online videos via a one to five rating system but if there are any aspiring Apollo stars reading this, note that he reviews every one of those videos. And, according to Vulture, even lower-rated videos have a chance to make the show because, as he explains it,  you want to have a balance. (Basically, you want to have a few train wrecks for entertainment value.)

 

It’s the first time in the theater’s 86-year history of hosting auditions that they’ve not been at the theater. Evaluating videos online does give the team,  which includes Amateur Night’s coordinator Kathy Jordan Sharpton, more time to do a deeper dive on each video as contestants in-person get just over a minute.

“It takes a lot more time, but the talent really is no different,” Caffey tells Vulture. “I don’t get better talent live than I get online. It’s just that I have to look deeper and more for the online talent simply because there’s a lot more bad talent and a lot more mediocre talent and a lot more good talent.”

The Apollo has not determined when they will reopen as New York City slowly grinds back to full speed after the mandatory March 12 shutdown. They expect to lose about $4M in the fiscal year that ends this month. A virtual benefit concert “Let’s Stay (in this) Together” was held last week, which proceeds also benefitting neighborhood businesses also suffering. The Apollo is currently closed through at least June 30th.

#Let's Stay (In This) Together!

ICYMI: Tune in for the rebroadcast of LET'S STAY (IN THS) TOGETHER, a benefit to support our iconic theater. This special event features powerful performances and appearances by Dionne Warwick, Gary Clark Jr., Ledisi, Anthony Hamilton and many more. To support, please vistit apollotheaer.org/donate.

Posted by Apollo Theater on Friday, June 5, 2020

“We hope that the funds we raise will ensure long-term financial and operational stability, guaranteeing that we are around for generations to come,” Apollo president and CEO Jonolle Procope told Vulture.

READ MORE: Apple Music to launch its 1st radio show in Africa

You can donate to the storied theater here.


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Officer involved in shooting of Breonna Taylor accused of sexual assault

Brett Hankison, one of the officers involved in the police shooting of Breonna Taylor, was accused of sexual assault by two women.

The women, both white, alleged that Hankison drove them home from a bar on separate occasions and assaulted them while they were intoxicated.

READ MORE: Louisville city council committee passes Breonna Taylor law

The first accuser, Margo Borders, posted on her Facebook page that Hankison drove her home in uniform and in his marked Louisville police car. He then invited himself into her apartment where Borders says he assaulted her while she was unconscious.

“It took me months to process what had happened and to realize it wasn’t my fault,” Borders wrote, “I never reported him out of fear of retaliation. I had no proof of what happened and he had the upper hand because he was a police officer.” She continued, “Who do you call when the person who assaulted you is a police officer? Who were they going to believe? I knew it wouldn’t be me.”

Borders wrote that Hankison has a history of violence, sexual assault, and planting drug evidence on people. The officer is the subject of a federal lawsuit by a man named Kendrick Wilson, who accuses him of unnecessary arrests and harassment.

The second sexual assault accuser, Emily Terry, wrote on Instagram that she was walking home from a bar when Hankison pulled up next to her and offered her a ride home.

 

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This is Brett Hankison. In early fall, I began walking home from a bar intoxicated. A police officer pulled up next to me and offered me a ride home. I thought to myself, “Wow. That is so nice of him.” And willingly got in. He began making sexual advances towards me; rubbing my thigh, kissing my forehead, and calling me “baby”. Mortified, I did not move. I continued to talk about my grad school experiences and ignored him. As soon as he pulled up to my apartment building, I got out of the car and ran to the back. My friend reported this the next day, and of course nothing came from it. Flash forward, I see his face. This face. Involved with the shooting of Breonna Taylor. I then find out he has a history of corrupt behavior. He has had multiple sexual assault allegations, and was in a federal lawsuit over planting narcotics on a black man to arrest him. Not all cops are bad, but this one is. Right now, Mr. Hankison is walking free. Reading this, I hope you know this is not about me, but the reform that needs to take place. Please use your voices to speak up of the injustice occurring throughout our community. #silenceisviolence #sayhername #breonnataylor

A post shared by Emily Terry (@emily_terry1) on

Terry says that the officer “began making sexual advances towards me; rubbing my thigh, kissing my forehead, and calling me ‘baby.’” She wrote that she was “mortified.” The woman says that as soon as they arrived at her apartment, she ran from the officer’s car and that her friend reported the incident the following day.

“Not all cops are bad,” Terry wrote, “but this one is.”

READ MORE: On Breonna Taylor’s birthday, let us not forget her killers are still free

She went on to explain that reporting the assault was to influence police reform. “Please,” she wrote, “use your voices to speak up of the injustice occurring throughout our community.”

Brett Hankison, Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly and Officer Myles Cosgrove are currently on paid administrative leave while the Louisville Police Department investigate the shooting death of Taylor. No criminal charges have been filed.

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Burundi president dies of 'heart attack' at 55

Burundi's President Pierre Nkurunziza, aged 55, has died of a heart attack, the government says

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How Protesters Can Stay Safe During A Viral Pandemic

The viral videos detailing the deaths of Ahmaud Arbery and George Floyd at the hands of law enforcement officials and vigilantes have sparked protests all over the country and the world calling for an end to police brutality, The protests have attracted thousands to march in the streets despite the country still being in the midst of a public health crisis. The ongoing viral outbreak has caused many to stay inside despite the desire to join protesters in their fight against racial injustice.

“I was pretty hesitant to go out and protest,” Allison Lane, 34, a Washington, D.C-based bartender and podcaster told Consumer Reports. Lane says she broke her quarantine to join in the protest on Sunday night. “We spent all this time trying not to get COVID—now we probably have it.”

It’s too early to say whether or not the number of COVID-19, or novel coronavirus, cases will rise due to the protests. Some health officials say the large gatherings of people may spread the disease among the massive demonstrations.

“Gathering in large groups could increase the risk of coronavirus transmission, but that risk needs to be considered in the context of the very real health impacts of systemic racism and police brutality, which require action,” says Julia Marcus, Ph.D., an infectious disease epidemiologist and assistant professor in the department of population medicine at Harvard Medical School to Consumer Reports.

Experts say that protesters should continue to wear face masks and try to social distance if possible. Health officials are also concerned about how police tactics may contribute to the spread of the virus as well. warning protesters to leave the area immediately if tactics such as pepper spray are used.

“Those who are choosing to join the demonstrations are certainly likely to experience tear gas and pepper spray,” says Michele Heisler, M.D., the medical director at Physicians for Human Rights and a professor of internal medicine and public health at the University of Michigan to Consumer Reports.

 



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Black Economic Alliance PAC Endorses Jamie Harrison For U.S. Senate

Harrison

The Black Economic Alliance PAC, a nonpartisan group of business leaders, announced its endorsement for Jaime Harrison, Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate in South Carolina.

BEA Executive Director David Clunie released a statement Monday endorsing Harrison as a strong leader the group can trust to make the right choices.

“America is in dire need of strong leadership to move our country toward justice. We must use the power of the vote to elect leaders like Jamie Harrison,” Clunie said. “His commitment to growing the middle class, ending poverty and bolstering South Carolina’s education system so it can compete in a 21st century economy are critical to close the economic divide and level the playing field for black Americans.”

“Jamie’s lifelong dedication to economically empowering black communities makes him a candidate we can trust to make the right choices. Whether it’s expanding the earned income tax credit for families or unburdening students saddled with student loan debt, Jamie knows firsthand what kind of support families need because he has worked hard to uplift himself and those around him his entire career.”

Harrison served as the chair of the South Carolina Democratic Party from 2013 to 2017 and is an associate chairman of the Democratic National Committee. Harrison is currently running against Sen. Lindsey Graham and Harrison’s campaign brought in a total of $7.2 million in the first three months of 2020, while Graham brought in nearly $5.6 million.
Although Harrison’s numbers for the first quarter outpaced Graham’s, the senator has raised more since the beginning of the cycle, raising $6 million more than Harrison.
“The Black Economic Alliance PAC supports Jaime Harrison for U.S. Senate because he is committed to ending the systemic inequities that have widened the wealth gap between Black South Carolinians and their counterparts. A vote for Jaime Harrison this November means more than just casting your ballot—it’s an investment in South Carolina’s future.” Clunie added.


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Behind the Scenes With the Monterey Bay Aquarium's Master of Jellyfish

Aquarist Mac Bubel takes you into the rarely seen “jelly lab” to explore how she raises these sensitive, hypnotic creatures.

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Utah Suspends Defensive Coordinator Morgan Scalley For Using Racial Slur in 2013 Text

Morgan Scalley

Utah has announced that they have suspended defensive coordinator Morgan Scalley due to a 2013 text that contained a racist slur, according to Sports Illustrated.

Utah Utes athletics director Mark Harlan announced the suspension last week on social media. “The use of any form of racist language is not only antithetical to our policies and our values, but it is an affront to all of us, especially our African-American community members,” he stated.

“On Wednesday night I was made aware of a social media post that referenced a 2013 text message that included racist language, sent by our football program’s defensive coordinator, Morgan Scalley,” Harlan said in a statement. “I initiated conversations with our campus partners, including President Watkins, and we agreed to have outside firm review this matter to seek further details and determine whether this was an isolated incident.

“Coach Scalley and I have spoken. He is very contrite and acknowledged that the text was sent and that it did include a derogatory and painful word.”

“In 2013 I made a terrible mistake,” Scalley said in a written statement released by the school. “I used a racial slur in a text message. This language is offensive and hurtful to not only the African-American community, but to all. Immediately after sending it, I apologized to the recipient and his family. I am also heartbroken over the potential breach of trust with my fellow coaches, and with the young men in our program, both past and present.”

Former Utes defensive back Ryan Lacy alleged on Twitter that Scalley called him a racial slur in 2008.

Scalley has been an assistant at Utah for 13 seasons. He once played safety for the school and joined the football program in an administrative role in 2006 after he stopped playing professionally in 2004.



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Financial Educator Ash Cash Fuses Hip Hop and Finance in Daily Live Show

The Ash Cash Show

One of the nation’s top financial educators is helping African Americans with a hip-hop-inspired daily digital personal finance show.

According to Black News, The Ash Cash Show, hosted by Ash Exantus aka Ash Cash, livestreams on Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Periscope, Twitch, and Instagram Monday through Friday at 8 a.m. eastern. It is then released as a podcast.

The show focuses on personal finance and empowering people to achieve financial freedom and build wealth. Exantus told Black News he believes between the widespread unemployment due to the coronavirus pandemic and the uncertainty of the economy, a financial voice is needed.

“I once heard, when the country catches a cold, black folks get pneumonia and with the current coronavirus pandemic, this has been nothing but facts!” Exantus told Black News.

The coronavirus pandemic has hit African Americans harder than other races, both physically and financially.

“This is not a fire drill! Those who are blessed with knowledge have an obligation to give that knowledge to those who need it the most, said Exantus, who is dubbed as the Hip Hop Financial Motivator, on Friday during a live broadcast of The Ash Cash Show.

Exantus, whose first show was in September 2015, has also written eight books on financial matters from repairing credit to financial inspiration from Jay-Z’s 4:44 album.

According to Robert Fairlie, an economics professor at the University of California, 450,000 African American business owners have closed their stores since the coronavirus pandemic hit the U.S. One of the reasons for the steep decline is because beauty salons, barbershops, daycare centers, taxi services, and clubs make up a significant portion of African American-owned businesses. All of these industries have either had to completely shut down or have had to operate at a highly reduced capacity.

“We already have disparities. African Americans have the lowest business-ownership rate in the population. …And so here we’re creating a situation of closures that’s hitting the groups with the lowest rates even harder,” Fairlie told The Washington Post.



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Ramsey Orta, man who filmed Eric Garner’s arrest, released from prison

The man who videotaped the police chokehold death of Eric Garner has been released from prison.

Ramsey Orta was sentenced to four years in 2016 for possession of a weapon as well as drug charges. He was eligible for early release due to the coronavirus pandemic, his sentence is officially over on July 11.

READ MORE: New York State Assembly passes Eric Garner Anti-Chokehold Act

The Staten Island man who filmed Eric Garner’s last breaths was arrested multiple times on drug and weapons charges. According to The New York Daily News, Orta sold drugs in 2016 to an undercover officer multiple times. He was arrested in possession of a .25-caliber handgun.

Many believe that he was the victim of police harassment outside and inside of prison. In 2015, Orta filed a lawsuit alleging that he was poisoned while in Rikers Island. He and 19 other inmates alleged that they were rendered ill after guards tampered with their meatloaf.

At the age of 22, Orta filmed the police chokehold of Eric Garner who was accused of selling loose cigarettes. New York Police officer, Daniel Pantaleo, held Garner around the neck on the ground. The man continuously said, “I can’t breathe,” in a statement that became a rallying cry for the Black Lives Matter movement.

The words were again echoed by George Floyd who was killed after being pinned to the ground by Minneapolis police officer, Derek Chauvin, for over nine minutes. The similarities in the cases have propelled Orta’s name back into the media spotlight.

READ MORE: GoFundMe for fired officer who fatally choked Eric Garner raises over $100K in 48hrs

Daniel Pantaleo was fired five years later, in 2019, he faced no criminal charges.

Ramsey Orta told Time Magazine that he regretted being involved in the Garner case. He said the public attention was overwhelming, “It just put me in a messed-up predicament,” he told the publication that he became the victim of consistent police harassment.

A GoFundMe campaign to help Orta has nearly met its $200,000 goal.

Have you subscribed to theGrio’s new podcast “Dear Culture”? Download our newest episodes now!

The post Ramsey Orta, man who filmed Eric Garner’s arrest, released from prison appeared first on TheGrio.



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The Best Kindle to Buy (and Which to Avoid) for 2020

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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The Protests Prove the Need to Regulate Surveillance Tech

US policymakers too often argue that regulation is about geopolitical competition. But algorithms have perpetuated harm and inequality at home.

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Outcry in South Africa after woman found stabbed and hanging from tree

Tshegofatso Pule had been missing for four days before her body was discovered.

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Comcast Announces $100 Million Multiyear Plan To Combat Racial Injustice

Comcast

Since the uprising of protests all over the country and the world, many corporations have been forced to make public statements regarding the current state of events surrounding racial violence. Media conglomerate, Comcast, announced today that it will also be joining in the fight with a $100 million pledge to combat racial injustice across the nation in partnership with nonprofit organizations.

In a press statement, CEO Brian Roberts explained the company will divide the donation to cover essential areas in the advancement of social justice including digital equity, awareness, and education.

“Last Sunday, I wrote to you to express my outrage over the far too familiar and frequent acts of violence against the Black community, and to acknowledge the structural racism that fuels these injustices,” said Roberts in a press statement.

“I’ve spoken with many employees—as have our leaders across Comcast Cable, NBCUniversal and Sky—and we have begun to mobilize as a company. While we recognize we don’t have all the answers, we agree it’s time that we start putting our words into real, sustainable action.”

In the statement, Roberts goes to say that Craig Robinson, EVP and Chief Diversity Officer for NBCUniversal, will be leading these efforts to “create sustainable programs within their businesses and will be proactively soliciting ideas from employees so that we can build this effort together.”

“To that end, we are developing a comprehensive, multiyear plan to allocate $100 million to fight injustice and inequality against any race, ethnicity, gender identity, sexual orientation or ability,” he continued.

“There will be $75 million in cash and $25 million in media that will be distributed over the next three years, in addition to the existing commitments our company currently makes to thousands of organizations supporting underrepresented communities through our Comcast NBCUniversal Foundation and social impact programs.

 



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‘Love & Hip Hop Atlanta’ Star Sierra Gates Is Helping Women Leap Into Entrepreneurship Amid COVID-19

Sierra Gates - Love and Hip Hop Atlanta

Sierra Gates, the owner of The Glam Shop in Atlanta, is known for being supportive of other women entrepreneurs. As a reality star on Love & Hip Hop Atlanta, Gates is committed to using the platform to put black women entrepreneurs in the spotlight and inspire others who have had the odds stacked against them to level up. Now, as a businesswoman, Gates is helping other women leap into entrepreneurship during the COVID-19 pandemic by teaching them her micro-blading beauty techniques, offering access to vendors as they purchase products to sell items online, and a variety of courses.

In a recent interview with Gates, she shared her journey to ownership and why it is important to help others reach their dreams during the pandemic.

For those who don’t know you outside of reality TV, who is Sierra Gates the woman and entrepreneur?

Sierra Gates is a black girl, born and raised in Atlanta, Georgia, from the west side of Atlanta who just made the best out of her situation. I had my daughter at 15 and I was told by a white woman that I wasn’t going to be anything. She tried to get me to have an abortion. And I just made the best out of it. I was homeless. All types of odds were against me that I beat. So, that’s really who Sierra is; somebody that didn’t take no for an answer.

Tell me more about the classes and the work that you’re doing to uplift women during the pandemic? 

People always ask me, ‘how did I get where I am’? For the last two months, I was able to sit down and get in touch with the people that have been trying to get in touch with me. That’s when I started my vendor’s list and webinars.

Over 500 women have started their companies outside of micro-blading during the pandemic. My mind has been blown away by how God is moving in the midst of this whole situation. Some women are making $5,000 and $6,000 a day. I hired over 100 customer service reps in China to communicate with women to help them understand the vendor’s list. So not only with the vendor list, I’m giving out the plugs. They don’t really know how to connect and talk to these vendors and understand how it works.

Related: Women Are Experiencing Higher Rates of Job Loss Amid COVID-19

What made you decide to teach women your techniques as a businesswoman?

I found my purpose. A long time ago, I found my purpose when I was broken, and I didn’t have any money. And then I did my first client and I see how she got up and she cried, and she felt amazing and it made me feel better.

I always say the girl next to me is not my competition. She is my sister. I came from nothing. The projects. And now, all of those girls look up to me. So, me having a voice and pulling my sisters up is encouraging to them. If I can do it, and I have a 10th-grade education, you can do it.

What people really don’t know is the more that you are a blessing to other people the more that God will shed light on you and bless you. I can’t get all the money. The beauty industry is a trillion-dollar industry. So why not share it with my sisters?

What are some of the ways that you’ve been able to maintain staying power?

Just by being consistent. Every time I see someone, I always tell them to be consistent and that you have to believe in yourself. A lot of people you know don’t succeed in the beauty industry because they don’t have any faith.

As an entrepreneur, we all have ups and downs. I’ve been in business for 13 years. If I would have given up and said I can’t do this anymore when it was hard, or when my car was repossessed in front of my salon when I was 18 years old, I wouldn’t be who I am today. I wouldn’t have been able to make my first million when I was 27 years old.

You have to be consistent.

To learn more about Gates and the Glam Shop ATL, click here.



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Just How Historic Is the Latest Covid-19 Science Meltdown?

Don't blame last week's journal retractions on the scary pace of the pandemic. "Once-in-a-lifetime” scandals like this seem to happen all the time.

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5 Raspberry Pi Alternatives: Rock64, PocketBeagle, Banana Pi, Odroid

If you're working on a project that a Pi can't tackle, here are five single-board computers that power any DIY demand.

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New York State Assembly Passes The Eric Garner Anti-Chokehold Bill

new york police officers

Following the recent protests behind the deaths of Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, and George Floyd, many have been calling for a complete overhaul of policing practices across the country as well as defunding police departments. The New York State Assembly passed the Eric Garner Anti-Chokehold Act.

The bill is named after Eric Garner, who was killed in 2014 after New York City Police Department (NYPD) officer Daniel Pantaleo placed him in a chokehold during an arrest in Staten Island. Garner was allegedly selling individual cigarettes in front of a grocery store. In a video recording of the incident, Garner is seen crying out “I can’t breathe” almost a dozen times before passing out.

The video went viral on social media generating widespread national attention. Since then, politicians in the state have been working at pushing a bill to make use of the chokehold by law enforcement illegal in the state of New York.

The bill was overwhelmingly supported by New York Assembly members in a 140-3 vote. Gov. Andrew Cuomo has already promised to sign the new legislation once it arrives at his desk.

“We’re going to make sure next time this happens in New York State, police officers will be going to jail,” said Assembly Member Walter Mosely, who sponsored the bill, to Patch. “They are here to enforce the law, not to be above it.”

In addition to the chokehold bill, several other pieces of legislation were also passed surrounding police reform including a bill that will create a civil penalty for the biased misuse of emergency workers including racially-biased 911 calls.

“New York should have passed this a long time ago,” Rev. Al Sharpton said at a Foley Square press conference last week according to Patch. “Maybe the police would not have thought they could have gotten away with it with Floyd if they saw the signal in New York.”



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IoT Security Is a Mess. Privacy 'Nutrition' Labels Could Help

Just like foods that display health information the package, researchers are exploring a tool that details how connected devices manage data.

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These Bacteria Ate Their Way Through a Really Tricky Maze

Microbes are well known for working together in stressful environments. Scientists wanted to see how they would fare at a labyrinthine brain teaser.

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Monday, June 8, 2020

Learning the ropes and throwing lifelines

In March, as her friends and neighbors were scrambling to pack up and leave campus due to the Covid-19 pandemic, Geeticka Chauhan found her world upended in yet another way. Just weeks earlier, she had been elected council president of MIT’s largest graduate residence, Sidney-Pacific. Suddenly the fourth-year PhD student was plunged into rounds of emergency meetings with MIT administrators.

From her apartment in Sidney-Pacific, where she has stayed put due to travel restrictions in her home country of India, Chauhan is still learning the ropes of her new position. With others, she has been busy preparing to meet the future challenge of safely redensifying the living space of more than 1,000 people: how to regulate high-density common areas, handle noise complaints as people spend more time in their rooms, and care for the mental and physical well-being of a community that can only congregate virtually. “It’s just such a crazy time,” she says.

She’s prepared for the challenge. During her time at MIT, while pursuing her research using artificial intelligence to understand human language, Chauhan has worked to strengthen the bonds of her community in numerous ways, often drawing on her experience as an international student to do so.

Adventures in brunching

When Chauhan first came to MIT in 2017, she quickly fell in love with Sidney-Pacific’s thriving and freewheeling “helper culture.” “These are all researchers, but they’re maybe making brownies, doing crazy experiments that they would do in lab, except in the kitchen,” she says. “That was my first introduction to the MIT spirit.”

Next thing she knew, she was teaching Budokon yoga, mashing chickpeas into guacamole, and immersing herself in the complex operations of a monthly brunch attended by hundreds of graduate students, many of whom came to MIT from outside the U.S. In addition to the genuine thrill of cracking 300 eggs in 30 minutes, working on the brunches kept her grounded in a place thousands of miles from her home in New Delhi. “It gave me a sense of community and made me feel like I have a family here,” she says.

Chauhan has found additional ways to address the particular difficulties that international students face. As a member of the Presidential Advisory Council this year, she gathered international student testimonies on visa difficulties and presented them to MIT’s president and the director of the International Students Office. And when a friend from mainland China had to self-quarantine on Valentine’s Day, Chauhan knew she had to act. As brunch chair, she organized food delivery, complete with chocolates and notes, for Sidney-Pacific residents who couldn’t make it to the monthly event. “Initially when you come back to the U.S. from your home country, you really miss your family,” she says. “I thought self-quarantining students should feel their MIT community cares for them.”

Culture shock

Growing up in New Delhi, math was initially one of her weaknesses, Chauhan says, and she was scared and confused by her early introduction to coding. Her mother and grandmother, with stern kindness and chocolates, encouraged her to face these fears. “My mom used to teach me that with hard work, you can make your biggest weakness your biggest strength,” she explains. She soon set her sights on a future in computer science.

However, as Chauhan found her life increasingly dominated by the high-pressure culture of preparing for college, she began to long for a feeling of wholeness, and for the person she left behind on the way. “I used to have a lot of artistic interests but didn’t get to explore them,” she says. She quit her weekend engineering classes, enrolled in a black and white photography class, and after learning about the extracurricular options at American universities, landed a full scholarship to attend Florida International University.

It was a culture shock. She didn’t know many Indian students in Miami and felt herself struggling to reconcile the individualistic mindset around her with the community and family-centered life at home. She says the people she met got her through, including Mark Finlayson, a professor studying the science of narrative from the viewpoint of natural language processing. Under Finlayson’s guidance she developed a fascination with the way AI techniques could be used to better understand the patterns and structures in human narratives. She learned that studying AI wasn’t just a way of imitating human thinking, but rather an approach for deepening our understanding of ourselves as reflected by our language. “It was due to Mark’s mentorship that I got involved in research” and applied to MIT, she says.

The holistic researcher

Chauan now works in the Clinical Decision Making Group led by Peter Szolovits at the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, where she is focusing on the ways natural language processing can address health care problems. For her master’s project, she worked on the problem of relation extraction and built a tool to digest clinical literature that would, for example, help pharamacologists easily assess negative drug interactions. Now, she’s finishing up a project integrating visual analysis of chest radiographs and textual analysis of radiology reports for quantifying pulmonary edema, to help clinicians manage the fluid status of their patients who have suffered acute heart failure.

“In routine clinical practice, patient care is interweaved with a lot of bureaucratic work,” she says. “The goal of my lab is to assist with clinical decision making and give clinicians the full freedom and time to devote to patient care.”

It’s an exciting moment for Chauhan, who recently submitted a paper she co-first authored with another grad student, and is starting to think about her next project: interpretability, or how to elucidate a decision-making model’s “thought process” by highlighting the data from which it draws its conclusions. She continues to find the intersection of computer vision and natural language processing an exciting area of research. But there have been challenges along the way.

After the initial flurry of excitement her first year, personal and faculty expectations of students’ independence and publishing success grew, and she began to experience uncertainty and imposter syndrome. “I didn’t know what I was capable of,” she says. “That initial period of convincing yourself that you belong is difficult. I am fortunate to have a supportive advisor that understands that.”

Finally, one of her first-year projects showed promise, and she came up with a master’s thesis plan in a month and submitted the project that semester. To get through, she says, she drew on her “survival skills”: allowing herself to be a full person beyond her work as a researcher so that one setback didn’t become a sense of complete failure. For Chauhan, that meant working as a teaching assistant, drawing henna designs, singing, enjoying yoga, and staying involved in student government. “I used to try to separate that part of myself with my work side,” she says. “I needed to give myself some space to learn and grow, rather than compare myself to others.”

Citing a study showing that women are more likely to drop out of STEM disciplines when they receive a B grade in a challenging course, Chauhan says she wishes she could tell her younger self not to compare herself with an ideal version of herself. Dismantling imposter syndrome requires an understanding that qualification and success can come from a broad range of experiences, she says: It’s about “seeing people for who they are holistically, rather than what is seen on the resume.”



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