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Friday, August 7, 2020

Kelly Rowland slams cancel culture: ‘Try to remember not to judge others’

In a post shared on Instagram, the singer noted that no one has the ‘authority’ to judge others. 

Kelly Rowland is urging fans to be kind and stop trying “to be God” amid cancel culture. 

In a post shared on Instagram, the 39-year-old singer noted that no one has the “space nor authority” to judge others. 

“In this ‘cancel culture’ we live in, I am SO grateful God NEVER canceled me, And I’m sure he could’ve many-a-times,” her post began.

“Let us TRY to remember NOT to judge others. We HONESTLY don’t have the space nor authority too!” Rowland wrote. “Let us remember to lead With love & kindness, the world has enough negativity, for you to pour more into it!”

Read More: Kelly Rowland opens up about reuniting with long lost father

She concluded the post urging fans to “stop tryin to be god,” and asking followers in the caption: “So what light are you bringing into the world?”

Rowland’s thoughts on cancel culture come a month after she opened up about living in the shadow of her Destiny’s Child bandmate Beyoncé.

Speaking to The Voice Australia contestant Chris Sebastian about going solo after the group parted ways, Rowland said “Can you imagine what it’s like being in a group with Beyoncé?”

She continued: “I would just torture myself in my head. Like, I can’t wear this dress because they’re going to say it’s like B. Or I can’t have a song like that because it sounds too much like B. They’re gonna compare anyways.

“I would be lying if I said no, it’s never bothered me. That’s bull,” she added.

“There was a whole decade, if I am being completely honest, a decade, where it was like the elephant in the room. It was the thing that would constantly be on my shoulder,” she admitted.

Read More: Kelly Rowland on Ahmaud Arbery killing: ‘If it happens to one of us, it happens to all of us’

30th Annual Stellar Awards
LAS VEGAS, NV – MARCH 28: Singers Michelle Williams, Kelly Rowland and Beyonce. (Photo by Erik Umphery/Getty Images for Parkwood Entertainment)

Last year, Beyonce’s father Mathew Knowles, former manager of Destiny’s Child, came forward with claims that members of 90s R&B group Jagged Edge had “harassed” Rowland and his daughter when they were minors.

He specifically recalled an incident that took place in the later 90s while Jagged Edge and Destiny’s Child were touring together, and sharing the same bus, theGRIO previously reported. 

“Now, remember the girls are minors: They’re 16-years-old, the guys are 21- and 22-years-old,” said Knowles.

“I got a call from Kelly and Beyoncé … saying that they were constantly being harassed by two of the members in Jagged Edge,” he continued. “I couldn’t have that. I literally had to put the guys off the bus in Baton Rouge, La.”

Knowles chose not specify exactly which two members of Jagged Edge he was talking about, but said the incident “began all of this drama” which led to former Destiny’s Child members LaTavia Roberson and LaToya Luckett getting new reps and ultimately leaving the group in 2000.

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Cuomo announces all New York schools can reopen this fall

The state’s 700 school districts have the ‘flexibility’ to offer both in-person classes, alongside remote learning.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo says all school districts in the state can reopen for in-person classes in the fall. 

The state’s 700 school districts have the “flexibility” to offer both in-person classes, alongside remote learning, and students will be required to wear masks throughout the school day, ABC 7 reports.

Citing success in battling the potentially deadly virus in what was once the heart of the pandemic in the U.S, Cuomo said districts still need to address the safety fears of parents and teachers, per The Associated Press.  

Read More: New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo is leading the vanguard on police reform

“Everywhere in the state, every region is below the threshold that we established,” Cuomo told reporters Friday.  

“If any state can do this, we can do this,” he said. School districts are allowed to “do in-person school, but it is up to them.”

“We’re giving flexibility to the school districts,” he added. “Like the economic reopening, there is no one size fits all,” he said.

As of August 7, the infection rate in the state was reportedly at 1%, with 5 deaths, according to the report.

“We are probably in the best situation in the country right now,” the governor said. 

“We will reopen safely,” Mayor Bill de Blasio tweeted Friday. “If COVID-19 positivity rate goes above 3%, we will not open.”

Read More: Gov. Cuomo warns non-compliant New Yorkers as state reopens

New York Governor Cuomo Holds Briefing In New York
(Photo by Jeenah Moon/Getty Images)

The mayor and NYC Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza have developed a “Blended Learning” plan for the city’s 1.1 million schoolchildren.

De Blasio says the plan aims to preserve “health and safety while maintaining an understanding that the best way to educate our kids is in the classroom.” 

Cuomo tweeted Friday that School districts have until the end of next week to submit reopening plans to NYS for review.

Parents also reportedly had mere hours on Friday to notify the education department if they want their child enrolled in virtual learning this fall.

“It will not be easy but I think most parents feel strongly that even some time in school is a lot better for their kids than none,“ Mayor de Blasio said at a separate briefing on Friday.

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NFL’s Derrius Guice cut by Washington after domestic violence arrest

Law enforcement are investigating three assaults that took place at the athlete’s home between February and April. 

The Washington Football Team released running back Derrius Guice on Friday after news broke about his arrest on domestic violence charges.

The team learned on Thursday about his arrest in Loudoun County, Virginia. Law enforcement tells TMZ Sports that they are investigating three assaults that took place at the athlete’s home between February and April. 

Guice, 23, faces one felony count of strangulation, three counts of assault and battery and one count of destruction of property. The incidents occurred on Feb. 14, Mar. 3 and Apr. 17, but authorities weren’t informed about the allegations until Jul. 22.

Read More: NFL team Washington Redskins change name of franchise

Guice turned himself in on Friday and was released on a $10,000 unsecured bond, according to the report.

“On Thursday we learned of a potential domestic violence related incident involving RB Derrius Guice,” the team said in a statement. “We immediately alerted the National Football League and have continued to work with them during this process. We then met with Derrius to inform him that he was excused from all team activity pending a review of this matter.”

The statement went on to say, “upon review of the nature of these charges and following internal discussions, we have decided to release Derrius immediately.”

The former LSU star was drafted by The Washington Football Team in the second round of the 2018 NFL Draft. He missed his rookie season due to multiple knee injuries. Guice has only played five games in two seasons, according to CBS Sports

Read More: Over 60 NFL players opt out of 2020 season citing coronavirus concerns

New York Jets v Washington Redskins
(Photo by Will Newton/Getty Images)

Guice’s arrest is the latest scandal to rock The Washington Football Team.

Days after changing its former name following outcry that was a racial slur, the team hired a law firm last month to conduct “an independent review of the team’s culture, policies and allegations of workplace misconduct,” after 15 women claimed they were sexually harassed by several top executives.

In a statement to The Washington Post, the team said they take “issues of employee conduct seriously,” and noted that allegations of misconduct are “promptly” addressed. 

The accusations reportedly do not include team owner, Dan Snyder, but the accusers believe he was aware of the harassment.

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Jay-Z’s Roc Nation Partners With LIU to Open Music, Sports and Entertainment School

Shawn Jay-Z Carter

Entertainment powerhouse Roc Nation has announced this week that it will be collaborating with Long Island University to open the Roc Nation School of Music, Sports & Entertainment based in Brooklyn, New York. The newly formed school will specialize in undergraduate degree programs in music technology, entrepreneurship, sports management, and more. The school also promises to help students graduate debt-free and will provide scholarships reserved for 25% of the enrolled students.

The school will also be offering exclusive lectures and workshops for students to learn more about how to navigate the industry. For Spring 2021, the school plans to launch a summer residential camp aimed at high schoolers and Saturday programs for younger kids.

“Our proximity in and around New York City’s epicenter of music and sports clearly positions us to offer unparalleled experiential learning and access to professional opportunities that will launch students to success,” said LIU President Dr. Kimberly Cline in a press statement, according to Hip Hop N’ More. “We look forward to joining with Roc Nation to offer an unprecedented educational resource that opens up the entertainment and sports world to a new and eager generation.”

“Pursuing higher education is an investment in one’s future. This partnership, envisioned alongside LIU President Dr. Cline, is a true investment in our community and young people in Brooklyn, in New York City and beyond,” said Desiree Perez, CEO of Roc Nation in a press statement, according to Hip Hop N’ More.

“We’re excited that the Roc Nation School of Music, Sports & Entertainment will provide unique insight, knowledge and experiences for students and introduce the world to the next generation of unmatched talent.”

Applications are now open for Fall 2021



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Stedman Graham doesn’t ‘define’ himself by relationship with Oprah

The businessman says that he is focused on his own development

Stedman Graham has always been his own man, and now he’s letting it be known that he’s never seen himself as just Oprah Winfrey‘s partner.

Recently, the enigmatic businessman sat down to do an interview with The Kyle & Jackie O Show from Sydney, Australia. During the chat, Graham cleared up what he believes are misconceptions about him and his longtime partner, media mogul Winfrey.

Read More: Oprah Winfrey calls for justice with 26 Breonna Taylor billboards

87th Annual Academy Awards - Show
HOLLYWOOD, CA – FEBRUARY 22: Oprah Winfrey (L) and Stedman Graham onstage during the 87th Annual Academy Awards at Dolby Theatre on February 22, 2015 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

“I’m defined a lot by my relationship with Oprah, but it has nothing to do with me. That’s how you define me! That’s not how I define myself,” he explained.

“Which is why I can maintain equality in a relationship with someone who is unbelievable because I’m not focused on their development as a way to equalize and create freedom. I’m focused on my own development. I’m developing a process of continuous improvement every day based on my skills, talents, abilities, purpose and passions. That’s what makes me happy.”

Read More: Ted Cruz slams Oprah for race ‘lecture,’ calls it ‘racist BS’

He also noted why the couple has stayed together for the last 30 years.

“We think the same, we’re in the same business. The difference is, she does it in the air, I do it on the ground, so I’m grassroots,” he said.

“The thing about our relationship is I want the best for her,” he said of his choice to honor Winfrey’s decision not to get married.

The businessman added that he was “dedicated” to her happiness.

“I want her to be the best she can possibly be and she’s done a pretty good job of doing it. For me, I’ve been able to find my own happiness, and develop my own skills, my own talents, my own abilities and I’m satisfied with that,” he said.

“So, the combination, when you have a good partner that’s able to self-actualize their potential and you’re able to self-actualize yours, one and one equals about six.”


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Tina Knowles Lawson gets real on ‘Girlfriends Check In’

Beyonce’s mom will be joined by Vanessa Bell-Calloway, Lynn Whitfield, and Beverly Johnson

Tina Knowles Lawson is about to get real on the upcoming episode of OWN’s Girlfriends Check In.

The Queen Mother will be joined by her real-life homies, Vanessa Bell Calloway, Lynn Whitfield, and Beverly Johnson, on a special “Sexy, Sixties, and Savage” episode of the reality show.

Read More: OWN’s ‘Girlfriends Check In’ sees celebrity women chat through quarantine

theGrio has an exclusive sneak peek of Saturday’s episode that features Whitfield and Knowles-Lawson hosting an evening with their fun and fabulous girlfriends.

It’s nonstop conversation and antics when the ladies take on every topic from sex to family to activism. The ladies make it clear and show you that they are still in the game. Whitfield shares one of her favorite go-to beauty items, while Johnson gives up the tea on the many private uses for avocado oil. Knowles-Lawson shows her fashion savvy when she surprises the ladies with a custom T-shirt made just for them.

The ladies share how special it is to have daughters and talk about what life’s like as a sexy grandma, while Knowles-Lawson shares an emotional and touching moment about how her daughters were there for her at one of her lowest moments. Whitfield is excited at Calloway’s suggestion that she and Greenleaf’s “Lady Mae” might need to have a First Lady reunion, until Calloway reminds her that her First Lady role is that of a killer.

Later, Johnson announces she and her beau just got engaged! The ladies are elated and happy to know that love still reigns, and are delightfully shocked to learn that one of them learned all about sex from a call girl! It’s an evening of fun, family, friendship, and sisterhood.

Read More: Tina Knowles-Lawson calls out Anna Wintour following British Vogue’s historic September cover

Check out the exclusive sneak peek:

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Home Office Setup Guide: The Best Gear for Working at Home

Do you need a monitor, desk, webcam, laptop, microphone, or pair of headphones? Here's our ultimate laundry list of recommended gear to improve your new home office.

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Black Americans Now Account For The Highest Increase In Gun Sales Of Any Demographic

Black Guns Matter

The spread of COVID-19, or the novel coronavirus pandemic, has changed the way normal life functions in America. Compounded by the national protests over racial injustice and police brutality, many Black Americans have been advocating for the purchase of firearms for protection amid the current political climate.

Overall, gun sales have been surging across the United States. According to The Brookings Institution, nearly 3 million firearms had been purchased since March when the public health crisis caused the shut down of major cities across the U.S. The research also shows that since March 13, when Trump first declared the viral outbreak a national emergency, firearm sales increased significantly over the next two weeks climbing as high as 176,000 orders on March 16 alone. In the month of March, there were an additional 700,000 firearms bought more than usual. The data showed that the number increased again with a 50% increase for June sales around the time the protests over police brutality began to take over the nation.

Gun ownership statistics
Image via The Brookings Institution

 

The protests over the death of George Floyd and others at the hands of law enforcement have sparked a surge in gun sales among Black Americans who have seen the highest increase since the beginning of the year.

“The highest overall firearm sales increase comes from Black men and women, who show a 58.2% increase in purchases during the first six months of 2020 versus the same period last year,” wrote Jim Curcuruto, National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF) director of Research and Market Development, in his report according to AOL News. “Bottom line is that there has never been a sustained surge in firearm sales quite like what we are in the midst of.”

Groups like the Black Gun Owners Association have been said to experience a tremendous spike in interest and online traffic since the protests started. “Whether it was fear of a food shortage, lack of a grocery store, the short response times for law enforcement or whether people were just fearful they were going to be attacked, I don’t know,” said Derrick Morgan, national commander of the Black Gun Owners Association, to Politico.

“A lot of people are reaching out to us, mainly new gun owners and people who wouldn’t have considered owning a gun or firearm for their protection, have been lining up to purchase firearms and access information from our website.”



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Bill Gates on Covid: Most US Tests Are ‘Completely Garbage’

The techie-turned-philanthropist on vaccines, Trump, and why social media is “a poisoned chalice.”

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A ‘Covid Slide’ Could Widen the Digital Divide for Students

As coronavirus cases rise, many school districts will begin the year with at least some online learning. Students without tech access could fall further behind.

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How Bloomberg's Digital Army Is Still Fighting for Democrats

With expensive data and tech heavy hitters, Hawkfish is backing the former mayor's promise to take on Donald Trump.

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Bashtop – A Resource Monitoring Tool for Linux

Bashtop is a terminal-based resource monitoring utility in Linux. It’s a nifty command-line tool that intuitively displays statistics for your CPU, memory, running processes, and bandwidth to mention just a few. It ships with

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Mahmoud Dicko: The popular imam taking on Mali's president

Imam Mahmoud Dicko has emerged as the leader of a movement seeking President Keita's departure.

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Yes, Emissions Have Fallen. That Won't Fix Climate Change

The drop in carbon pollution will only cool the planet a tiny bit. So how about this: Revive the economy and the Earth by pouring money into green tech.

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'I taught myself 3D fashion using google search'

Covid-19 is inspiring young creatives to find new ways of showcasing their talents using technology.

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Thursday, August 6, 2020

Coronavirus cases pass one-million mark in Africa

South Africa accounts for more than half of all cases, while Tanzania's lack of data is a "concern".

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The luxury sector has been hit hard by the virus. And what consumers value has changed

With fewer places to see and be seen, shoppers are slowing their spending, with an estimate from consultancy firm McKinsey forecasting the global luxury goods market will contract by 35% to 39% in 2020.

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Residents who host large parties can have utilities shut off, LA mayor says

This enforcement will primarily focus on the ‘people determined to break the rules, posing significant public dangers to all of us.’

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti has authorized the Department of Water and Power to shut off utilities to homes or businesses that host “large” parties during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The mayor made the announcement on Wednesday, Aug. 5, amid reports of a rise in house parties that are in violation of public safety orders. Garcetti described such parties as “super-spreader” events, per Los Angeles Daily News

“These large house parties have essentially become nightclubs for the hills,” Garcetti said during a press conference, Deadline reports. “By turning off that power, shutting off that water, we feel we can close these places down.”

Read More: LA mayor announces ‘big step forward’ with new LAPD community bureau

The mayor said this enforcement will primarily focus on the “people determined to break the rules, posing significant public dangers and a threat to all of us.”

“Starting on Friday night, if LAPD responds and verifies that a large gathering is occurring at a property, and we see these properties offending time and time again, they will provide notice and initiate the process to request that DWP shut off service within the next 48 hours,” Garcetti said.

“We will not act lightly, but we will act,” he added. “You’re breaking the law. Just as we can shut down bars breaking alcohol laws, in places that are in criminal violations, we can shut them down … We can actually do the power or water shutoff after a first violation, but we like to educate, not enforce.”

The L.A. County Department of Public Health said in a statement that violating the health officer is “a crime punishable by fine, imprisonment, or both,” 

“While we have already closed all nightclubs and bars, these large house parties have essentially become nightclubs in the Hills,” Garcetti said. “Many times, the homes are vacant, or used for short term rentals, and beyond the noise, the traffic and nuisance, these large parties are unsafe and can cost Angelenos their lives.”

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The Philippines, the US, and a century of military alliance

For a few nights in late 1991, a 74-year-old army veteran, newly arrived in Los Angeles and looking for family members, needed to sleep outside. Pastor Amarillento was a recently naturalized Filipino American, based on a 1990 law granting citizenship to Philippine Army soldiers from World War II. Amarillento had fought at Bataan. But after being naturalized in San Francisco, his money had been stolen on the bus down to Los Angeles.

Thus Amarillento had “marched under General Douglas MacArthur, only to find himself, 50 years later, sleeping in MacArthur Park,” writes MIT historian Christopher Capozzola in a new book about the unique relationship between the Philippines and the United States.

Amarillento soon found relatives in Orange County, thanks to help from a shelter in the Filipinotown neighborhood, near downtown Los Angeles. Still, this episode symbolizes some contours of the larger Filipino American experience. Filipinos have long been staunch U.S. military soldiers, sailors, and servicemembers while receiving modest, belated rewards for their efforts. The countries’ ties have led to extensive immigration — there are 4 million Filipino-Americans in the U.S. — but even for decorated veterans, entry into U.S. society has not always been easy.

Capozzola’s new book, “Bound by War: How the United States and Philippines Built America’s First Pacific Century,” published by Basic Books, details both the military relationship between the countries, from the U.S. conquest of the Philippines in 1898 onward, and the way that military engagement shaped social connections between the nations.

“This is not a book about foreign policy, but foreign relations,” Capozzola says. “Not just what generals and presidents were doing, but what ordinary soldiers and immigrants were doing.”

New beginnings

After winning the Spanish-American War in 1898, the U.S. was granted control of the Philippines, a long-time Spanish possession. Then it squelched a Philippine independence movement, in what Capozzola calls a “very intense and brutal war.” It was a huge imperial leap across the Pacific for the U.S., which eventually installed over 20 military bases in the Philippines and ruled the land as a colony until 1946.

“This is really the heart of the relationship between these two countries,” Capozzola says.

Before long, Filipinos started enlisting in the U.S. army and navy, and Filipinos soon had new immigration opportunities as well. For a spell after 1924, the Philippines was the only country in Asia from which the U.S. allowed immigration. The number of Filipinos in the U.S. swelled from 5,600 in 1920 to about 56,000 in 1930, with substantial Filipino-American communities springing up near San Diego, in the Bay Area, and around Norfolk and Virginia Beach — close to Navy bases.

But while many Filipinos had come to the U.S. hoping to acquire more education and better work, they often landed on farms, in fisheries, or in service jobs, as Capozzola documents.

“When Filipinos migrated to the United States in the early 20th century, they faced the same forms of discrimination that most Asian immigrants did: restrictions on housing and education and the professions, [while] being relegated to low-status, low-paying jobs,” Capozzola says. “It could have been otherwise. And that’s a running theme throughout the book as well. There is a series of broken promises.”

Still, as Capozzola writes, the military service of many Filipino men gave their familes “a language of patriotism and sacrifice — and therefore of equality.” That sense of belonging helped spur battles for civic justice. It was Filipino grape pickers who initiated what became famous as the United Farm Workers strike of the 1960s.

In the sphere of veteran’s rights, 64,000 of the 76,000 prisoners on the Bataan Death March had been Filipinos, fighting for the U.S. — yet they did not receive equitable military benefits. Only after a concerted effort, including a year-long vigil in MacArthur Park in the 1990s, was compensation folded into the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

Only about 12,400 Filipino veterans realized those payments, leading one advocate for Filipino veterans to call the settlement “yet another beginning” in the battle for Filipino-American rights and benefits. There may be similar fights for inclusion in the future: In the Iraq War, about 31,000 U.S. troops were not citizens, and 20 percent of those were Filipino.

“The book is a way to think about who serves in and with and for our armed forces, [and] to ask what we owe them in return,” Capozzola says. “If we really want to understand big forces like war and globalization, we need to look at that full frame.”

With or without the U.S.?

While it explores immigration and social integration, “Bound by War” also examines politics in both countries after 1946, when the Philippines gained independence but remained in the U.S. sphere of influence.

“In many ways the Philippines enters the community of nations on the back foot,” Capozzola observes. “It’s devastated by the war, its economy is destroyed, and there is an emerging Cold War threat. This requires Philippine politicians to maintain ties to the U.S. in order to protect their country.”

But many voices have criticized that arrangement, Capozzola notes: “If there’s one central question in Philippine foreign policy that’s consistent from 1946 to the present, it is this: Are we better off with the Americans, or without them?”

President Ferdinand Marcos declared martial law in the Philippines in 1972 and ruled over a police state until the “People Power” movement ousted him in 1986 — with the U.S. only belatedly grasping the strength of opposition leader Corazon Aquino. Yet despite solid U.S. backing, Marcos actually made rhetorical overtures to China in the 1970s, perhaps trying to play off the two powers against each other. In 2016, President Rodrigo Duterte surprised the U.S. by announcing the Philippines would “realign” with China, but has not followed through on the idea.

On the ground, the U.S.-Philippines relationship evolved again in 1965 when U.S. immigration law allowed Asians back into the country — especially white-collar workers. In the 1970s, Filipinos were the second-largest group immigrating to the U.S., behind only Mexicans.

Today Filipino emigration is worldwide, with workers settling in the Gulf States, elsewhere in Asia, and some parts of Europe. Overall, Filipino immigrants sent an estimated $10 billion in remittances back home in 2005.

“The core aspects of the U.S.-Philippine military relationship are remarkably unchanged from the early 20th century to today,” Capozzola says. “What has changed is the power of Filipinos themselves. The economy is substantially different and not as tied to the United States. Filipino migrations are global, and the United States is not by any means the largest recipient country. Through their everyday choices, the relationship is being remade. And I think ultimately that will shift the U.S.-Philippine military relationship.”

So while it is important to know formal military history, Capozzola thinks, it is also vital to regard military history as something more than wars and strategies.

“To understand 20th-century America, you need to understand the U.S. military,” Capozzola says. “Not only as a [fighting] force, although of course that’s what it was designed for, but also a generative force that transforms social relationships, immigration patterns, ideas about race and culture. This book is a way to bring that to the center of the story.”



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Are there medical reasons to not wear a mask? Yes, but not many

A slew of viral videos show people claiming medical exemptions to avoid wearing masks on airplanes and in grocery stories. Doctors say there are legitimate health reasons to do so, but that the list is quite short.

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Trump issues executive order banning TikTok and WeChat

The ban is set to go into effect in 45 days, if the popular short-form video app is not sold to a U.S. company.

President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Thursday banning transactions between U.S. companies and Chinese company ByteDance, the parent company of TikTok.

The order is set to go into effect in 45 days, if the popular short-form video app is not sold to a U.S. company, CNN reports.

The order prohibits after 45 days “any transaction by any person, or with respect to any property, subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, with ByteDance Ltd.”.

The White House says the ban is for security reasons.

Read More: NJ teen allegedly kills neighbor to gain TikTok fame

Thursday’s order alleges that TikTok “automatically captures vast swaths of information from its users” which “threatens to allow the Chinese Communist Party access to Americans’ personal and proprietary information — potentially allowing China to track the locations of Federal employees and contractors, build dossiers of personal information for blackmail, and conduct corporate espionage.”

The president issued a similar executive order targeting WeChat, a group chat app owned by Tencent, one of China’s largest tech companies. 

Trump told reporters Friday (Aug, 1) that he plans to ban the popular TikTok app in the United States, theGRIO previously reported. 

“As far as TikTok is concerned, we’re banning them from the United States,” the president said. His criticism of the company comes amid renewed rhetoric against China and the country’s trade practices.

Read More: Trump pauses TikTok ban to allow negotiation of Microsoft acquisition

TikTok theGrio.com
(Photo Illustration by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

On Saturday, TikTok issued a response to Trump’s remarks, making clear that “We’re not planning on going anywhere,” U.S. General Manager Vanessa Pappas said in a statement shared to Twitter. 

News also broke last week that software giant Microsoft is interested in acquiring the video platform. 

“If goal is to get teenagers to stop using TikTok, I’m not sure an executive order will stop them,” said Kirsten Martin, a professor of technology ethics at the University of Notre Dame. “Every teenager knows how to use a VPN (a virtual private network). They will just pretend they are in Canada.”

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Nicki Minaj on Megan Thee Stallion’s drive: ‘Megan is the perfect example’

The ‘Barbie Tingz’ rapper dotes on her mentee, saluting her for handling business with a smile, intelligence and that magic that makes her one of ‘Variety Magazine’s 2020 Power of Young Hollywood Issue’

Many people in Hip-Hop believe that women in the game cannot get along. However, one of the top female rappers, have proven the naysayers wrong.

Nicki Minaj, one of the world’s best selling artists, doesn’t have to shout people out, mentor those on the come up, or publicly salute anyone. However, when Variety Magazine hit her up about Megan Thee Stallion appearing on their “2020 Power of Young Hollywood Issue,” she did not hesitate to dote on the “Savage” superstar.

READ MORE: Meek Mill called out after posting comment about Nicki Minaj’s pregnancy

The Pinkprint mogul could have talked about Megan’s looks and her ability to push out bangers after bangers, but she noted what makes her most proud of the young rapper is focus she is on success.

“…Megan is the perfect example that we can have fun and be smart at the same time,” said Minaj.

2019 MTV Video Music Awards - Pre-Show
Megan Thee Stallion performs on the red carpet during the 2019 MTV Video Music Awards at Prudential Center on August 26, 2019, in Newark, New Jersey.
(Photo by Noam Galai/Getty Images for MTV)

Minaj’s praise, as well as the Hollywood salute, comes at the right time.

As reported by theGrio.com, Megan’s hot girl summer has been traumatic than carefree. Like most people, she too has been hit with the 2020 blues, but even more devastating than the coronavirus pandemic and unprecedented amount of civil unrest sparked by the litany of Black and Brown bodies killed by police officers, she has also been a victim of a crime.

Last month, she was shot in both of her feet while out with friends.

The Stallion tweeted, “Black women are so unprotected and we hold so many things in to protect the feelings of others without considering our own.”

The lack of support Megan Thee Stallion received following being shot has exposed a lack of support and empathy for Black women, Harpers Bazaar reported.

Sisterhood has become a more essential place for women to uplift one another, while men support and learn from women.

Minaj has been that for the Houston homegirl since the jump of her career.

Nicki Minaj appeared this version of Megan Thee Stallion’s “Hot Girl Summer” break-out single.

“One of my favorite things about Meg is her desire to further her education,” said Minaj. 

She related education to bettering the rapper’s sense of self; her decision to not be solely focused on superficial attachments. 

“It’s so important for women to feel inspired to achieve goals outside of social media, where the focus is usually placed on their bodies or who they’re dating at the time,” she said.

Draya Michelle spun the incident of Megan being shot into a love story comparing the Houston lyricist and friend, Tory Lanez, to the infamously troubled Whitney Houston and Bobby Brown

(Photo by Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images for BET/ Tommaso Boddi/Getty Images)

The jokes following Megan’s shooting were an example of people dismissing Black women and their emotions, Revolt reported.

“Women are more than just baby mamas, and we can continue to prove that by being goal-oriented, bettering ourselves, and being independent,” continued Minaj to Variety. The example Nicki Minaj is calling “perfect” — Megan Thee Stallion, a student and BET Award-winning recording artist who gives back to her community.

READ MORE: Cardi B teases new single ‘WAP’ with Megan Thee Stallion, internet implodes

Smart, talented and courageous are words that can describe. But SAVAGE is probably the one that best fit with this cover.

Her spread was styled by Jason Bolden and photos were shot by Orin Fleurimont, serving her up like the beautiful queen that she is.

And it could not come at a better time … hopefully, it reminds her that she was chosen to win.

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The Tragic Physics of the Deadly Explosion in Beirut

A blast injury specialist explores the chemistry—and history—of explosions like the one captured in videos that swept across the world.

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Fauci requests security for daughters as family gets death threats

The White House health advisor had to hire beefed-up security to protect his family.

Dr. Anthony Fauci says he and his family continue to receive death threats over his public statements about combating the COVID-19 pandemic.  

Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said Wednesday that he had to hire beefed-up security to protect his family. The White House health advisor and his wife, bioethicist Dr. Christine Grady, have three adult daughters who are catching heat over their father’s work.

Speaking to CNN’s Dr. Sanjay Gupta in an interview organized by Harvard’s School of Public Health, Fauci said the coronavirus crisis is bringing “out the best of people and the worst of people.”

Read More: Dr. Anthony Fauci says a coronavirus vaccine may be coming in 2021

Fauci and President Donald Trump have had their share of public disagreements regarding the pandemic. The potentially deadly virus has infected roughly 4.8 million people in the U.S., per CNBC.

The White House has made extra efforts to discredit Fauci’s work, which he finds “bizarre,” theGRIO previously reported. 

“I just want to do my job. I’m really good at it. I think I can contribute. And I’m going to keep doing it,” Fauci told The Atlantic. He also noted that the country can get to a better place with the right procedures.

“By pushing a reset button, I don’t mean everybody locking down again. We’ve got to call a time-out and say, “If you’re going to open, we’ve got to get everybody on the same team.” I’m not going to name any states—that’s not helpful—but some states did, in fact, prematurely jump over some checkpoints,” he said when asked about a solution.

Read More: Trump asks why ‘nobody likes me,’ questions Fauci’s high approval rating

Since early April, Fauci has required a security team to protect him and his family after they started being harassed over his opinions on how to best contain the coronavirus. 

“I wouldn’t have imagined in my wildest dreams that people who object to things that are pure public health principles are so set against it and don’t like what you and I say, namely in the world of science, that they actually threaten you,” Fauci explained to Dr. Gupta. .

“I mean, that to me is just strange,” he added. 

“Getting death threats for me and my family and harassing my daughters to the point where I have to get security is just, I mean, it’s amazing. I wish that they did not have to go through that,” Dr. Fauci shared.

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Facebook removes troll farm masquerading as Black support for Trump

The social media platform has removed hundreds of accounts linked to a network in Romania.

Facebook has taken action against a foreign troll farm posing as pro-Trump Black Americans. 

On Thursday, the social media platform removed hundreds of accounts linked to troll farm in Romania that pushed content on Instagram under names like “BlackPeopleVoteForTrump” and on Facebook under “We Love Our President,” NBC News reports.

A “troll farm” is an organized operation that manipulates online discourse via misinformation aimed at affecting public opinion. Troll farms are typically outsourced and purchased by foreign governments or businesses that want to push specific political propaganda.

Read More: Trump trolled as ‘Frorida’ trends on Twitter after misspelling Florida

(Photo by Pete Marovich/Getty Images)

Facebook also removed hundreds of fake accounts, pages, groups and IG profiles linked to conservative media outlet The Epoch Times. The digital network was banned from buying ads on Facebook in August 2019 after spreading conspiracy theories.

Facebook removed 35 accounts, three pages and 88 Instagram accounts for violating its policy “against foreign interference which is coordinated inauthentic behavior on behalf of a foreign entity.”

The company said the takedowns were based on “behavior, not content.”

“About 1,600 accounts followed one or more of these Pages and around 7,200 people followed one or more of these Instagram accounts,” Facebook said.

Nathaniel Gleicher, the company’s head of security policy, said the motives behind the operation are unknown. He told NBC News on Thursday that there was no “clear evidence of financial motivation” or “clear links to known commercial actors in this space.”

Read More: Marsai Martin claps back at trolls over BET Awards hair

Donald Trump theGrio.com
(Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

Facebook said the trolls used fake accounts “to pose as Americans, amplify and comment on their own content, and manage Pages including some posing as President Trump fan Pages.”

The troll farm was detected as part of its “internal investigation into suspected coordinated inauthentic behavior ahead of the 2020 election in the US.”  

Last month, Facebook removed a network of accounts tied to former Trump advisor Roger Stone, and the neo-fascist Proud Boys group. The company previously removed pages and accounts connected to the conspiracy group, QAnon.

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Uber's Now a Food Delivery Company—and It's Still Losing Money

The pandemic has slashed demand for rides and boosted orders for UberEats. Neither segment is profitable.

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Black-Owned Media Companies Call for Advertisers to Start Spending

Black media

In addition to calling for racial justice and the end of systemic racism, the Black Lives Matter movement is leading the call for black economic empowerment through the support of Black-owned businesses. In wake of the movement, campaigns like Beyonce’s Black Parade directory and “My Black Receipt” have mobilized consumers to buy Black. However, some Black media entrepreneurs say they are being left of out the conversation.

According to the Transform Finance and Ford Foundation, Black-owned media companies face a unique set of challenges when it comes to access to capital. Media entrepreneurs of color are struggling to raise funding to scale due to biases, exclusionary networks, and a lack of support. Plus, they face revenue disruptions and other uncertainties in the media industry, notes ImpactAlpha.

To tackle this issue, Devon Johnson, the founder of the men’s lifestyle publication BleuLife Media, and Rhonesha Byng, the founder of Her Agenda, are urging corporations to support Black-owned platforms. They have specifically called on companies like Target and Starbucks that have stopped advertising on Facebook due to the social media giant’s problematic policies to redirect their ad dollars to Black media. Under the umbrella of the newly-formed Black-Owned Media Sustainability Institute, the media entrepreneurs have also curated a public database of more than 75 Black-owned media companies in the country, which includes BLACK ENTERPRISE.

“Brands like Unilever, Diageo, Verizon, Ben & Jerry’s, Patagonia, The North Face, Target, Starbucks and others have pulled what’s left of 2020 advertising dollars from Facebook and other social media platforms. They’re calling it #StopHateforProfit,” reads a news release. “This has been a result of outcries from civil rights groups and consumers calling out divisive and racist content that exists unchecked on the Facebook platform. Billions of dollars already earmarked to spend on marketing efforts are now left in limbo.”



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Aggretsuko: Season 3 | Official Trailer | Netflix
Retsuko’s rage rises another octave when she finds herself moonlighting with an underground idol group to pay off her debts. Premieres August 27 only on Netflix. SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/29qBUt7 About Netflix: Netflix is the world's leading streaming entertainment service with 193 million paid memberships in over 190 countries enjoying TV series, documentaries and feature films across a wide variety of genres and languages. Members can watch as much as they want, anytime, anywhere, on any internet-connected screen. Members can play, pause and resume watching, all without commercials or commitments. Aggretsuko: Season 3 | Official Trailer | Netflix https://youtube.com/Netflix


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The Voting Rights Act is still under siege 55 years later

People died to advance the cause of voting, yet disenfranchisement efforts continue

The Voting Rights Act turned 55 on August 6, commemorating when President Lyndon Johnson signed it into law to ensure voting rights for African-Americans. But in 2013, a major enforcement provision was eliminated, weakening the act.

So where does it stand now?

Read More: Postal Service backlog creates worry about November election

It was, “by far one of the most successful pieces of federal civil rights legislation” Nancy Abudu, the deputy legal director of voting rights at the Southern Poverty Law Center, told USA Today.

But weakening the act hastened efforts to disenfranchise the voters it was put into place to protect.

In 2013, the Shelby County vs. Holder case went to the Supreme Court which resulted in the removal of Section 4 of the Voting Rights Act. That was the part of the act that required southern states that had a documented history of racism to receive federal preclearance for their voting practices.

According to USA Today, those states with jurisdictions known for egregiously discriminatory voting practices were Alabama, Alaska, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina and Virginia. Locations in California, Florida, Michigan, New York, North Carolina and South Dakota were included as well.

John Lewis thegrio.com
Mourners watch as the late US Rep. John Lewis’s (D-GA) funeral procession leaves Ebenezer Baptist Church on July 30, 2020 in Atlanta, Georgia. Former President Barack Obama will give the eulogy for the late Democratic congressman and former presidents George W. Bush and Bill Clinton will be in attendance. Rep. Lewis was a fierce voting rights advocate, contemporary of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and a Georgia congressman for three decades. (Photo by Jessica McGowan/Getty Images)

James Cobb, a history professor at the University of Georgia and a former president of the Southern Historical Association, told USA Today that the Voting Rights Act was immediately effective. It led to African American voter registration improving by approximately 70% by the next election.

That factor is ironically what led to the voting law’s provision being struck down because the increase in Black voter registration supposedly meant that it was no longer needed.

But according to multiple studies, after Section 4 was eliminated, lawmakers in 25 states worked to undermine voting with everything from Voter ID laws to closing polling places to eligibility challenges.

Those issues have been realized in everything from long lines in voting precincts with heavily Black voting populations to the contentious Georgia gubernatorial race in 2018, when candidate Stacey Abrams alleged that the eventual victor, Brian Kemp, suppressed thousands of votes.

“Without that federal review process, we’ve literally seen rampant voter suppression efforts overtake parts of the country within the last several years,” Kristen Clarke, president and executive director of the National Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, told USA Today.

“States like Georgia, Texas and North Carolina top the list.”

The late Georgia congressman John Lewis was beaten on the Edmund Pettus Bridge while advocating for voting rights in Selma, Alabama in 1965 before the Voting Rights Act was passed. He fought for those rights for the rest of his life.

March in Selma
Dr Martin Luther King Jr (1926 – 1990), arm in arm with Reverend Ralph Abernathy, leads marchers as they begin the Selma to Montgomery civil rights march from Brown’s Chapel Church in Selma, Alabama, US, 21st March 1965; (L-R)an unidentified priest and man, John Lewis, an unidentified nun, Ralph Abernathy (1926 – 1990), Martin Luther King Jr (1929 – 1968), Ralph Bunche (1904 – 1971) (partially visible), Abraham Joshua Heschel (1907 – 1972), Fred Shuttlesworth (1926 – 1990). (Photo by William Lovelace/Daily Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Democratic congressmen and women want to honor his sacrifices by updating the Civil Rights Act with Section 4 intact and naming the update after Lewis. It’s unlikely to happen with a Republican-controlled Senate.

“The law he nearly died for has been gutted by the Supreme Court,” Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY), the minority leader, said on the Senate floor after Lewis’ death as reported by the NY Times.

“Congress has the power to restore it. But only one party seems interested in doing so.”

The Voting Rights Act takes on new importance this year as the coronavirus has impacted primaries all over the country with some fearful to stand in long lines in contested precincts. Many want to use mail-in ballots in November as an alternative to in-person voting.

President Donald Trump‘s attacks on the United States Postal Service and the appointment of Trump donor Louis DeJoy as Postmaster General have exacerbated those concerns. Cities around the country have experienced mail delivery slowdowns due to “efficiency” policies DeJoy recently enacted. They include the elimination of overtime and leaving mail to be delivered the next day on a postal carrier’s daily run if it comes in late.

Last month, New York Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney, the Democratic chairwoman of the House Oversight and Reform Committee, and Democratic Virginia Rep. Gerald E. Connolly, who leads the House subcommittee that oversees the Postal Service wrote to DeJoy about the change in policy. They were concerned about the impact it might have on the election.

Read More: Despite virus threat, Black voters wary of voting by mail

“While these changes in a normal year would be drastic, in a presidential election year when many states are relying heavily on absentee mail-in ballots, increases in mail delivery timing would impair the ability of ballots to be received and counted in a timely manner — an unacceptable outcome for a free and fair election,” they wrote.


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