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Sunday, August 23, 2020

An asteroid is heading to Earth just before Election day

The last time an asteroid hit Earth was in 2013.

The year 2020 is full of disasters. In addition to dealing with a pandemic, high tensions in political discourse, and a recession of the likes the world has not seen in over 100 years, an asteroid is coming close to the Earth.

The asteroid in question is called 2018VP1, and this celestial object is due to arrive near Earth on November 2, according to the Center for Near Earth Objects Studies at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, CNN reported.

READ MORE: Astronauts successfully land on Earth after trip to International Space Station

The asteroid was first identified back in 2018 by the Palomar Observatory in California, and it might not pose a threat to the people of Earth.

“Asteroid 2018VP1 is very small, approximately 6.5 feet, and poses no threat to Earth. If it were to enter our planet’s atmosphere, it would disintegrate due to its extremely small size,” NASA said in a statement.

“NASA has been directed by Congress to discover 90% of the near-Earth asteroids larger than 140 meters (459 feet) in size and reports on asteroids of any size.”

There is a 0.41% chance of the object hitting Earth, CNN reported.

On a scale of 0 to 9, with the latter being nondangerous, experts are saying they give this impending asteroid a 7, CBS News reported. The asteroid reportedly has a diameter of about 6 feet.

READ MORE: NASA almost sent first Black man into space, new documentary reveals

On February 15, 2013, a similar asteroid was spotted approaching Russia’s southern Ural region.

The Chelyabinsk meteor entered the Earth’s atmosphere and exploded while in space. The force of the explosion and the falling debris caused windows to break when it landed.

Astronomer Mike Murray says that the 2018 VP1 will probably break apart or explode like the Chelyabinsk meteor did.

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Trump announces plasma treatment authorized for COVID-19

An emergency use authorization is not the same as full FDA approval.

President Donald Trump announced Sunday the emergency authorization of convalescent plasma for COVID-19 patients, in a move he called “a breakthrough,” one of his top health officials called “promising,” and other health experts said needs more study before it’s celebrated.

The announcement came after days of White House officials suggesting there were politically motivated delays by the Food and Drug Administration in approving a vaccine and therapeutics for the disease that has upended Trump’s reelection chances. 

On the eve of the Republican National Convention, Trump put himself at the center of the FDA’s announcement of the authorization — it makes it easier for some patients to obtain the treatment — in a news conference Sunday evening.

The blood plasma, taken from patients who have recovered from the coronavirus and rich in antibodies, may provide benefits to those battling with the disease. But the evidence so far has not been conclusive about whether it works, when to administer it and what dose is needed.

READ MORE: Trump touts another unproven coronavirus cure backed by a top donor

In a letter describing the emergency authorization, the chief scientist for the FDA, Denise Hinton, noted: “COVID-19 convalescent plasma should not be considered a new standard of care for the treatment of patients with COVID-19. Additional data will be forthcoming from other analyses and ongoing, well-controlled clinical trials in the coming months.”

An emergency use authorization is not the same as full FDA approval.

In the authorization letter, FDA officials emphasized convalescent plasma is still under investigation. “COVID-19 convalescent plasma should not be considered a new standard of care for the treatment of patients with COVID-19. Additional data will be forthcoming from other analyses and ongoing, well-controlled clinical trials in the coming months,” it said.

But Trump had made clear to aides that he was eager for a piece of good news on the battle of the pandemic, and the timing allowed him to head into the convention with momentum. He and aides billed it as a “major” development and utilized the White House briefing room to make the announcement.

Trump also displayed some rare discipline in the evening news conference, sticking to his talking points, deferring to the head of the FDA, Stephen Hahn, and only taking three questions from reporters.

The White House had grown agitated with the pace of the plasma approval, but the accusations of a slowdown, which were presented without evidence, were just the latest assault from Trump’s team on the “deep state” bureaucracy. White House chief of staff Mark Meadows did not deal in specifics, but said that “we’ve looked at a number of people that are not being as diligent as they should be in terms of getting to the bottom of it.”

“This president is about cutting red tape,” Meadows said in an interview Sunday on “This Week” on ABC. “He had to make sure that they felt the heat. If they don’t see the light, they need to feel the heat because the American people are suffering.”

The push on Sunday came a day after Trump tweeted sharp criticism on the process to treat the virus, which has killed more than 175,000 Americans and imperiled his reelection chances. The White House has sunk vast resources into an expedited process to develop a vaccine, and Trump aides have been banking on it being an “October surprise” that could help the president make up ground in the polls.

“The deep state, or whoever, over at the FDA is making it very difficult for drug companies to get people in order to test the vaccines and therapeutics,” Trump tweeted. “Obviously, they are hoping to delay the answer until after November 3rd. Must focus on speed, and saving lives!”

Earlier this month, Mayo Clinic researchers reported a strong hint that blood plasma from COVID-19 survivors helps other infected patients recover. But it wasn’t considered proof.

More than 70,000 patients in the U.S. have been given convalescent plasma, a century-old approach to fend off flu and measles before vaccines. It’s a go-to tactic when new diseases come along, and history suggests it works against some, but not all, infections.

There’s no solid evidence yet that it fights the coronavirus and, if so, how best to use it. 

The Mayo Clinic reported preliminary data from 35,000 coronavirus patients treated with plasma, and said there were fewer deaths among people given plasma within three days of diagnosis, and also among those given plasma containing the highest levels of virus-fighting antibodies.

But it wasn’t a formal study. The patients were treated in different ways in hospitals around the country as part of an FDA program designed to speed access to the experimental therapy. That “expanded access” program tracks what happens to the recipients, but it cannot prove the plasma — and not other care they received — was the real reason for improvement.

Administration officials, in a call with reporters Sunday, discussed a benefit for patients who were within three days of admission to a hospital and were not on a respirator, and were given ‘high-titer’ convalescent plasma containing higher concentrations of antibodies. They were then compared to similar patients who were given lower-titer plasma. The findings suggest deaths were 35% lower in the high-titer group.

There’s been little data on how effective it is or whether it must be administered fairly early in an illness to make a significant difference, said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious diseases expert at Vanderbilt University.

Aiming to ward off a possible a run on convalescent plasma after the announcement, government officials have been working to obtain plasma and to team with corporate partners and nonprofit organizations to generate interest among previously infected patients to donate.

Hahn, who called the development “promising,” said Trump did not speak to him about the timing of the announcement, which comes just before a pivotal week for the president’s reelection chances. Hahn said “this has been in the works for several weeks” and came after a data validation for which the agency had been waiting. 

But some health experts were skeptical. Benjamin Corb, of the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, called it “conspicuous timing.”

“President Trump is once again putting his political goals ahead of the health and well-being of the American public,” Corb said.

Rigorous studies underway around the country are designed to get that proof, by comparing similar patients randomly assigned to get plasma or a dummy infusion in addition to regular care. But those studies have been difficult to finish as the virus waxes and wanes in different cities. Also, some patients have requested plasma rather than agreeing to a study that might give them a placebo instead.

READ MORE: Los Angeles mayor wants DIY coronavirus kit

Former FDA commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb dismissed the suggestion of a slowdown.

“I firmly reject the idea they would slow-walk anything or accelerate anything based on any political consideration or any consideration other than what is best for the public health and a real sense of mission to patients,” Gottlieb told CBS’s “Face the Nation.”

Hundreds of drugs are currently being developed as possible treatments against the coronavirus infection, taking a range of approaches.

Trump, in news conferences, “has made all kinds of therapeutic suggestions” that have not proven to be supported by science — and are even dangerous, Schaffner said. That includes statements about the possible value of treating COVID-19 patients with ultraviolet light and disinfectant. Trump reportedly also recently became enthusiastic about oleandrin, a plant extract derived from a toxic shrub that scientists immediately warned against.

But the president is perhaps best known for his early and ardent embrace of the malaria drugs hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine. 

Earlier this month, Hahn emphasized that routine evaluation procedures will remain in place to evaluate COVID vaccine candidates.

“I think this administration has put more pressure on the Food and Drug Administration than I can remember” ever happening in the past, Schaffner said.

“Everybody is just a little bit nervous,” he said.

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Black firefighter dies after saving three drowning girls

His 10-year-old daughter was one of the last people to see him before he died.

At around 9 p.m. on Friday night, off-duty firefighter Sivad Johnson helped rescue three girls who were drowning in a river near Michigan’s Belle Isle.

When Johnson noticed the disturbance, he spun into action, giving his phone and keys to his daughter, Hayden, 10, so that he could provided assistance.

Although the girls were returned safely back to their homes, Johnson was not as fortunate.

READ MORE: The US Navy names a carrier after a decorated Black war hero

When Hayden noticed the girls were safely brought back to shore, she called 911 after she was unable to find her father, The New York Times reported

A search team was called in that night, but was called off by 4 a.m. to be reinstated the following day.

Detroit’s fire and police departments recovered Johnson’s body from the river on Saturday afternoon near the Detroit Yacht Club, and he was pronounced dead at the hospital shortly afterward, Deputy Fire Commissioner Dave Fornell said.

According to WDIV, an NBC Detroit news affiliate, Johnson might have gotten weighed down and buried underwater by a rip current.

The 48-year-old Detroit native served as a firefighter for more than 26 years. He had a long history with the fire department as a second-generation firefighter, following his father and brother’s footsteps, NBC News reported.

READ MORE: Meet the Black man who could have saved the US Postal Service

In a speech from 2018, Johnson said that being a firefighter is like being surrounded with family.

“My brother was a firefighter for 11 years, and we are both second-generation because our father served for 20,” Johnson said.

“That is actually a very proud thing for me to say,” he continued. “I’ve met a lot of great men and women on the job, and through some of the things we’ve been through and shared, we’ve grown close like a family.”

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The FDA Just OK'd Emergency Use of Plasma for Covid-19

Sick people can already get the treatment, and the data is inconclusive. But the president is super into it.

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Major companies leading the way in Singapore's economic recovery

The coronavirus has hamstrung global economies, but some big businesses are trying to step up, from leading crisis relief efforts to increasing digitization. CNBC Make It's Karen Gilchrist looks at multinational corporations in Singapore.

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How big businesses in Singapore are managing the challenges of coronavirus

From leading crisis relief efforts to supporting other companies, CNBC Make It looks at how multinationals from three of Singapore's leading industries are trying to spark economic recovery for businesses — and to bring the community along with them.

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Earl Thomas terminated from the Baltimore Ravens

Thomas was set to receive $10 million through 2022.

On Sunday, Earl Thomas’ contract with the Baltimore Ravens was terminated due to his “personal conduct.”

“We have terminated S Earl Thomas’ contract for personal conduct that has adversely affected the Baltimore Ravens,” the Ravens tweeted.

This announcement is following an incident between Thomas and a fellow teammate during the Raven’s 2020 training at their campsite.

READ MORE: NFL’s Earl Thomas held at gunpoint by wife after caught cheating: report

Chuck Clark and Thomas got into a fight on Friday, causing Thomas to be sent home. However, Thomas was told to stay at home during practice the following day as well, according to Bleacher Report.

Safety Earl Thomas III #29 of the Baltimore Ravens (L) and safety Chuck Clark #36 of the Baltimore Ravens train during the Baltimore Ravens Training Camp at Under Armour Performance Center Baltimore Ravens on on August 18, 2020 in Owings Mills, Maryland. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)

According to NFL Network‘s reporter Tom Peliserro, the Friday fight “began with a mental error by Thomas.”

As ESPN’s Adam Schefter previously reported, the Ravens were thinking about terminating Thomas and the Dallas Cowboys were said to have an interest in signing him.

Other reporters like Ian Rapoport of NFL Network have reported that the San Francisco 49ers or the Houston Texans were watching out for the seven-time Pro Bowl, Super Bowl champion.

READ MORE: NFL players lawyer up, say they have proof of innocence after being accused of robbing Florida cookout

The decision to terminate Thomas, as told by Head coach John Harbaugh, was due to Thomas’ propensity for fighting at every training session.

“It just lasted longer than it needed to for me. You’re going to have these things in training camp. I think you’re going to have tempers flare, sure,” Harbaugh said. “But I don’t like them when they extend like that and eat into our reps, and we’re going to have to find out why and make sure that doesn’t happen.”

Thomas signed a contract to receive $10 million through 2022, according to Bleacher Report. However, his guaranteed salary could be voided pending a review of his conduct.

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Segregated parks contribute to coronavirus spread in Black, Latino communities: report

Parks in Black and Latino neighborhoods are more crowded than those in white communities, leading to coronavirus outbreaks in minority areas, a study finds

The disproportionate rate that Black Americans and Latino Americans have been affected by the coronavirus pandemic has been well documented.

Turns out, segregated parks in the country have contributed to the virus’ spread in those communities, whose members have less access to local parks than their white counterparts, according to reporting by USA Today.

A study by Trust For Public Land, a land-access advocacy group, found that parks in Black and Latino neighborhoods are half the size of those in white neighborhoods and five times more crowded.

READ MORE: Universities scramble to deal with coronavirus outbreaks

Black and Latino children are also at a higher risk of contracting COVID-19, the deadly disease caused by a novel coronavirus outbreak, according to findings by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

With the lack of park space, cases of COVID-19 are exacerbated in those communities, due to lack of space for fresh air and opportunity for exercise. This is particularly crucial, given the fact that Black Americans are more susceptible to high blood pressure, asthma, diabetes and obesity.

READ MORE: New data confirms Black and Latino communities hit hardest by coronavirus pandemic

These aforementioned preexisting conditions make individuals more likely to be hospitalized with serious coronavirus complications.

While experts like Dr. Panagis Galiatsatos, an assistant professor of medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, say it’s too early to determine if there’s a definitive link to the lack of park space and contracting COVID-19, the professor hopes it helps address the segregation.

“I’m hoping that the disparities we’ve been identifying result in a commitment to resolve them,” Galiatsatos said in USA Today. “If this virus can teach us one thing, it’s that disparities are here and present. We have control over ending both the pandemic and the disparities. The pandemic will end eventually, and we will need to figure out how to remove the disparities.”

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As Californians weigh repeal, report finds affirmative action ban has harmed Black, Latino students

The University of California system saw Black and Latino enrollment decline one year after preferential treatment was outlawed in the state

California’s longtime ban on affirmative action has brought challenges to Black and Latino communities at one of the world’s leading public university systems, according to research by the University of California Berkeley out Friday.

The new study concluded that the ban on preferential treatment, voted into law in 1996, negatively impacted Black and Latino students at University of California campuses by greatly reducing enrollment and graduation rates, along with future earnings power.

The University of California system covers 10 institutions, including the University of California Berkeley campus.

Asian-American and white students who did not gain admission to UC, on the other hand, were not negatively impacted by the affirmative action ban imposed by Proposition 209. It was found that those students had enrolled in universities of equal merit, which was reflected in their subsequent high earnings.

Read More: Proposition 209 puts emphasis on supporters and detractors of affirmative action

“This study presents several complementary pieces of evidence that suggest that the benefits provided by affirmative action to Black and Hispanic Californians prior to Prop. 209 substantially exceeded the costs faced by white and Asian Californians, and that those costs may have been quite small,” Zachary Bleemer, author of the study and a research associate at UC Berkeley’s Center for Studies in Higher Education, said.

With the Nov. 3 election approaching, California voters will consider another proposal on changing the rules again, the Los Angeles Times reports. The measure, Proposition 16, proposes a constitutional amendment to repeal the 24-year-old prohibition on affirmative action in public education and employment based on race, ethnicity or gender, the outlet said. It’s a change that overseers of the UC system support.

The UC Board of Regents in a June statement unanimously endorsed the repeal of Proposition 209, amplifying the widespread support within the university system to restore affirmative action.

Read More: USC alum creates ‘The Big Homie Project’ to connect students with powerful mentors

Enrollment rates of underrepresented groups, defined as Black, Latino, Pacific Islander or American Indian students, dropped from 20% in 1995 to 15% in 1998, while the enrollment of Asian American and white students increased significantly, the statement read.

The Los Angeles Times reported that those in opposition of the repeal, including some Asian Americans, have expressed concern over the possibility of a return to “racial favoritism.”

Bleemer, however, disagreed, stating that Asian-American and white students were not significantly disadvantaged by affirmative action and did not particularly benefit from its repeal. He said that Proposition 209 set off the most massive reshuffling of college students in U.S. history as it upended the admissions process for hundreds of thousands of students in both UC and CSU systems.

“Suddenly all these universities stopped using this policy. It seemed like a great opportunity to understand what affirmative action was doing for thousands of students in California. And the answer looks pretty bleak for those students,” Bleemer said.

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Kenya Barris, Janet Mock give inspiring speeches at AAFCA TV Honors

Black Hollywood comes together virtually to celebrate African American excellence in TV and film

Some of Hollywood’s biggest names gathered virtually to celebrate the 2nd annual AAFCA TV Honors on Saturday.

John Legend, Viola Davis, Sterling K. Brown, Mindy Kaling, Rashida Jones, Josh Gad, and Leslie Odom, Jr. were among the long list of celebrities in attendance of the event that honored visionary creatives including the night’s special honorees, Janet Mock and Kenya Barris

Presenters like Octavia Spencer and William Jackson Harper handed out 11 awards at the event hosted by actress/comedian Aida Rodriguez and sponsored by Morgan Stanley. 

Rashida Jones presented the ICON Award to her #BlackAF costar, Kenya Barris, who delivered a touching speech highlighting why this award was particularly important to him. 

“Right now, we are living in a time of a lot of pain, particularly for African Americans — Black pain. And I think that during this time, I’ve often looked at ‘What is the place of comedy? And is this a place and a time for comedy?’” he said during his acceptance speech.

Read More: Viola Davis, LeBron James among honorees at AAFCA TV Honors

NEW YORK, NY – MAY 21: Kenya Barris speaks onstage at The 75th Annual Peabody Awards Ceremony at Cipriani Wall Street on May 21, 2016 in New York City. (Photo by Mike Coppola/Getty Images for Peabody Awards)

“Comedy is best presented when it comes from pain. It’s the medicine that allows you to take in, with a spoonful of sugar, what we’ve gone through. I think that as Black people it’s what we have been best at doing. And I think that being able to receive this award from my peers and from my family, during this time, is more impactful to me than it could be ever, and will ever be for me at any other time.”

Janet Mock, who wrote and directed on the hit FX series, Pose, shared inspirational remarks when she accepted the AdColor Creative Breakout Award. 

Read More: Janet Mock to direct Jeremy Pope as Sammy Davis Jr. in ‘Scandalous!’

“As we continue to struggle for Black people, we must also include Black trans people, Black queer people, Black disabled people, all of the Black people, my people…There are many ways to go about doing this work and I aim to do my part by wielding my pen, my vision and my voice like a weapon against racism, sexism, transphobia, ableism and the erasure of Black and indigenous people,” she said.

(Photo by Amy Sussman/Getty Images for AFI)

“I truly believe that telling our stories is a revolutionary act. Stories have always helped me; they’ve always been my refuge. I wrote my books, my scripts direct my projects solely focused on centering myself in ways no other book or show had done before. I create for the girl I once was, longing and searching for herself in the creation of others on screen.”

The star-studded event put on by the African American Film Critics Association celebrates the excellence, innovation, and diversity in television over the past year. The virtual event also took time to honor the important work done by government leaders, first responders, reporters, and others by featuring these local heroes as presenters during the show. 

A portion of the proceeds were donated to the NABJ COVID-19 Relief Fund.

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Jennifer Williams responds to Tami Roman’s hit on Tim Norman case: ‘Tami is classless’

‘I’m saddened a Black woman is tearing another one down,’ the ‘Basketball Wives’ star says in a response to cast mate Tami Roman

Tami Roman drew a sharp response from fellow VH1 “Basketball Wives” star Jennifer Williams after poking fun at Tim Norman‘s serious legal charges.

Roman spoke on Norman’s recent arrest in an Instagram video Thursday under her Bonnett Chronicles profile, which features video clips of her waxing humorous poetic about situations while wearing a hair bonnet and bathrobe.

Norman, who starred in the OWN reality series “Welcome to Sweetie Pie’s” faces murder-for-hire charges in the killing of his nephew over a $450,000 life insurance policy.

READ MORE: Tami Roman says ‘Basketball Wives’ ruined friendship with Shaunie O’Neal

Despite posting “May his family find peace and his nephew rest in Heaven” in the caption, she took an opportunity to talk down to her reality show foe Williams, who split with Norman in 2018.

“Jennifer, you escaped it girl… If he would do that to his nephew, bitch you didn’t have a chance,” Roman said in the video. “And he probably wouldn’t have got caught because no one would’ve gave a f–k.”

Williams, in a statement to Page Six, wasn’t pleased with the video.

READ MORE: Sweetie Pie’s owner charged in murder for hire plot in nephew’s death

“I don’t talk to Tami and I don’t know why she is making fun of a horrific situation where a life was lost.”

“Tami is classless, and it was done in poor taste while a family is trying to come to terms with the ultimate betrayal from one of their own,” she said. “That’s all I have to say about Tami’s tacky ass… With everything going on in the world and the climate within the Black community, I’m saddened a Black woman is tearing another one down.”

Norman allegedly hired Waiel “Wally” Yaghnam to perform the murder on 21-year-old Andre Montgomery in 2016, according to Riverfront Times.

Yaghnam, who was charged with one count of conspiracy to commit wire and mail fraud, helped produce numerous songs on Nelly‘s 2002 multi-platinum album Nellyville, including the hit single “#1.”

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Black-owned bookstores want action after influx in business

Phoenix’s only Black-owned bookstore received more orders for books on race relations in two days than it did since opening in September

PHOENIX (AP) — A renewed focus on social justice in the wake of police killings of Breonna Taylor and George Floyd has seen sales soar at Black-owned bookstores around the country as customers seek out knowledge from their own communities.

The stores have always served as a community space for Black people to gather and educate themselves and their communities about their culture and history.

Sales increased exponentially after calls on social media in June encouraged people to spend their money at Black-owned businesses amid national tension.

Ali Nervis, the owner of Grassrootz Books and Juice Bar, Phoenix’s only Black-owned bookstore, said in two days his store received 200 orders for books on race relations, more than all they had received since opening in September 2019.

“People have this sense to be educated on what is happening in the country and what led up to this point,” Nervis said of protests and community tension in Phoenix. “We carry a lot of books about social commentary, history and books written by Black authors. I think that is part of the reason why we’ve seen a dramatic increase in our book sales.”

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Nervis has since caught up with an increase in sales and has taken time to reflect on what is happening in society, like other Black leaders in the industry.

“It’s wonderful that Black people are wanting to support Black people — it’s not new, but support has expanded, interest has increased and more people have taken it on,” said Paul Coates, owner of Black Classic Press, a Black-owned publishing and printing company based in Baltimore.

“I’ve seen increases in demand before. There was a bump during the Civil Rights Movement and during the Black Power Movement. People were searching for information. There was interest around the time Roots came out too.”

“Roots,” written by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Alex Haley, became a wildly popular nine-hour miniseries that gripped the country in 1977. Haley based the epic tale on his own family history from his ancestors’ enslavement though several generations to their liberation.

Black Classic Press has operated as a publisher for 42 years and a book seller for eight years, Coates said, adding that he has seen books help power movements for decades.

Donya Craddock, co-owner of The Dock Bookshop in Fort Worth, Texas, said she could attest to the correlation.

“Every time we have a community crisis, the bookstore is a place for people to vent on,” she said. “We have created a space for people to gather, and talk about their frustrations.”

She has always seen parallels with what is going on in the community and in the bookstore because it energizes people. “People want to share their emotions, people are hurt, and everybody don’t want to go to a bar believe it or not,” she said.

Craddock opened The Dock Bookshop with her sister, Donna, in 2008. The store serves to educate people about Black history and culture through books, in-person events and other programs. It is one of the largest Black-owned bookstores in the Southwest.

The owners not only want to educate their communities, but also encourage people to use what they learn to take action against systemic racism.

The owners of Turning Page Bookshop have said Goose Creek, South Carolina, does not have a large African American community, but they provide and serve surrounding communities, such as Charleston and Summerville since opening in June 2019.

“From June 2 until about July 25 we received from 75 to 150 orders a day,” said VaLinda Miller, who runs the store with her best friend Arrylee Satterfield.

She said some of the biggest sellers included “White Fragility,” “Me and White Supremacy” and “How to Be an Antiracist.”

Miller said she didn’t want people to just buy the books because they were popular, but to help them understand how the system has made them the way they are. “I don’t want you to stop learning after reading the book. I want you to take that book and go out and look for something else to listen to and learn from.”

There has to be some action that follows the education, Nervis said, adding that he is not optimistic interest will last much longer. “That’s why we continue to do what we do and ask for the support. Not just our bookstore, but everyone doing work in Black communities.”

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Lakers, California county to honor Kobe Monday for ‘Kobe Bryant Day’

Basketball and Kobe Bryant fans are celebrating the birthday of the Laker great for the first time since his untimely death earlier this year

Sunday, Aug. 23 was supposed to be the day Kobe Bryant celebrated his 42nd birthday.

It was supposed to be a day he could reflect on what he had to look forward to: his former team, the Los Angeles Lakers, making a playoff run for another championship and prepping his acceptance speech for the 2021 Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame ceremony.

Sadly, he never got the chance, as he, his 13-year-old daughter Gianna and seven others tragically lost their lives in a late-January helicopter crash. Still, those who knew him best continue to celebrate him.

Current Laker and four-time NBA MVP LeBron James fostered a close friendship with Bryant while battling it out over the years on the court and winning gold medals together as teammates on the 2008 and 2012 U.S. Olympic teams.

READ MORE: Kobe Bryant memorialized during Michael Jordan’s ‘The Last Dance’ docuseries

“A day doesn’t go by where I don’t think about him,” James told USA Today.

LeBron James (L) and Kobe Bryant (R) look on during a basketball press conference ahead of the London 2012 Olympics on July 27, 2012 in London, England. (Photo by Jeff Gross/Getty Images)

Lakers All-Star Anthony Davis also played with Bryant on the 2012 Olympic team. Bryant became an active mentor to him after that.

“Not a day goes by that we don’t remember him,” Davis said to the Los Angeles Times.

Davis and James, once opponents and now Lakers teammates, want to win the title in honor of Bryant’s legacy with the team he helped lead to five championships.

“Now we have the opportunity to finish this season off and make him proud,” Davis continued. “We know that’s what he would want. He would want us to go out there and compete and bring another championship home. Any time we step on the floor, we play for his memory.”

(L-R) Anthony Davis, LeBron James, Quinn Cook and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope of the Los Angeles Lakers reacts at the end of the National Anthem during a ceremony to honor Kobe Bryant before the game against the Portland Trail Blazers at Staples Center on January 31, 2020 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

READ MORE: Lakers will wear Black Mamba jerseys to honor Kobe Bryant during playoffs

Monday, Aug. 24 has been designated Kobe Bryant Day by California’s Orange County commissioners, the county where Bryant lived with his family. This is in recognition of the numbers 8 and 24, which were Bryant’s jersey numbers during his 20-year tenure with the Lakers.

The Lakers organization will honor Bryant on that day as well, wearing Black Mamba uniforms for Game 4 of their playoff game against the Portland Trailblazers, though the game will be played thousands of miles away without fans in the NBA bubble in Florida.

“Black Mamba” was Kobe’s self-proclaimed nickname.

“We still wear 24 and 8 and the No. 2 with pride and remember how great they were,” James said in his comments to USA Today, referencing the jersey number of Bryant’s daughter, Gianna, who, like her dad, excelled at the game.

Kobe Bryant #24 of the Los Angeles Lakers and the Western Conference warms up with daughter Gianna Bryant during the NBA All-Star Game 2016 at the Air Canada Centre on February 14, 2016 in Toronto, Ontario. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)

Bryant’s devotion to Gianna and his three other daughters, Natalia, Bianca and Capri, was well documented. Lakers President Rob Pelinka, a close friend of Bryant’s, spoke fondly at Bryant’s memorial fondly about how much his kids meant to the basketball legend.

“He just loved his girls, and there was nothing in the world that meant more to him,” Pelinka said.

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Tensions heightened over fatal police shooting of Louisiana Black man

Activists in Lafayette, Louisiana are calling for an investigation after the third police-involved shooting in the city since mid-July

LAFAYETTE, La. (AP) — Community activists said they will present their frustrations and demand racial justice from the leaders of a Louisiana city on Sunday, following a night of violence that erupted after police shot and killed a Black man.

Dozens of people took to the streets of Lafayette on Saturday in response to the death of Trayford Pellerin, 31. On Friday night, officers followed Pellerin on foot as he left a convenience store where he had created a disturbance with a knife, Louisiana State Police said. Stun guns failed to stop him, and the officers shot Pellerin as he tried to enter another convenience store, still with the knife, according to a news release.

The shooting was captured on video, and the state ACLU condemned what it described as a “horrific and deadly incident of police violence against a Black person.” Both the ACLU and the Southern Poverty Law Center quickly called for an investigation.

Saturday afternoon’s protest started peacefully, but violence broke out as night fell — leading to officers clearing the crowd with smoke canisters, Trooper Derek Senegal said.

Officials said at a news conference late Saturday that fireworks had been shot at buildings and fires set in the median of a road where demonstrations had taken place.

“Our intent is not going to be to just let people disrupt our town and put our citizens and our motorists and our neighborhoods in danger,” Interim Police Chief Scott Morgan said.

READ MORE: Black man shot 11 times as he walked away from police

Arrests were made, Morgan said, but an exact number wasn’t immediately available.

“We do support people’s First Amendment rights,” Lafayette Parish Sheriff Mark Garber said. “However, when it comes to the destruction of property, we are not going to have Lafayette set on fire.”

The activists attempted to attend the news conference but were “escorted out” because Lafayette Mayor-President Josh Guillory said it was private, Lafayette NAACP President Marja Broussard said. They planned to confront Guillory on Sunday at 5 p.m. at Lafayette City Hall.

Devon Tre Norman speaks at a vigil and protest, Saturday, Aug. 22, 2020, in Lafayette, La., for 31-year-old Trayford Pellerin, who was shot and killed by Lafayette police officers while armed with a knife the night before. (Scott Clause/The Daily Advertiser via AP)

Activist Jamal Taylor said the demonstrators who caused destruction Saturday night came from out of town.

“They picked the wrong city to do this in,” Taylor said. “If you’re one of these bad actors that comes in and sets fires and throws rocks and pops firecrackers, you’re not welcome here in Lafayette.”

The activists also expressed discontent that leaders did not offer condolences to Pellerin’s family at the news conference.

“Josh Guillory is lower than a dog for that,” Taylor said.

Tensions surrounding the fatal shooting follow a global reckoning over police tactics and racial injustice that stem from the death of George Floyd on May 25 under the knee of a white Minneapolis police officer.

Protesters take to the street and block traffic at the intersection of Willow Street and Evangeline Thruway after a vigil held Saturday, Aug. 22, 2020, in Lafayette, La., for 31-year-old Trayford Pellerin, who was shot and killed by Lafayette police officers while armed with a knife the night before. (Scott Clause/The Daily Advertiser via AP)

National civil rights attorney Ben Crump said he was representing Pellerin’s family, and that he and Baton Rouge attorney Ronald Haley have begun their own investigation by interviewing witnesses.

“The officers involved should be fired immediately for their abhorrent and fatal actions,” Crump said in a statement Saturday.

Pellerin’s mother said her son was intelligent, shy and had sought therapy for social anxiety. Pellerin became anxious in groups and may have been frightened by the officers, Michelle Pellerin told The Advocate. He had sought professional help earlier this year, she said.

The family believes Pellerin may have been having a mental health crisis, Crump said.

Lafayette police asked state police to investigate — standard procedure in the state for shootings by local officers.

Rikasha Montgomery, who took a video of the shooting, told The Advertiser that a man holding what looked like a knife kept walking down the highway while some officers fired stun guns at him. Officers holding guns shouted at him to get onto the ground, said Montgomery, 18.

READ MORE: Louisiana Supreme Court refuses to review life sentence for Black man imprisoned for stealing clippers

She said they fired when the man reached the door of a Shell gas station.

A makeshift memorial lies on the ground at a Shell station, Saturday, Aug. 22, 2020, in Lafayette, La., for 31-year-old Trayford Pellerin, who was shot and killed by Lafayette police officers while armed with a knife the night before. (Brad Kemp/The Advocate via AP)

“When I heard the gunshots, I couldn’t hold my phone like I was first filming,” she said. “I feel kind of scared about it. I’m traumatized. You’re so used to hearing about this, but I never thought I would experience it.”

The incident was the third shooting by Lafayette police since mid-July. State police said a man was critically wounded last month after being shot during an altercation with police. Another man was in stable condition after being shot during a burglary investigation earlier this month.

Haley told The Advocate that he and Crump will be seeking reform and policy changes in the police department as well as damages.

“We want policy changes as well, so that Ben and I are not in the living room with another family in Lafayette dealing with this,” Haley said.

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Trump’s eldest sister makes damning claims about brother in surfaced audio: ‘Donald is cruel’

Maryanne Trump Barry says Donald Trump ‘was a brat’ and ‘has no principles’ in a newly released interview

Mary Trump, with her best selling tell-all-book, has been the only relative of Donald Trump to criticize the president publicly.

That’s no longer the case, now that secretly recorded audio clips, featuring words from the sister of the businessman-turned-politician, have surfaced.

In preparation for the release of “Too Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created The World’s Most Dangerous Man,” Mary Trump, the president’s niece, interviewed her aunt Maryanne Trump Barry in 2018 and 2019. Mary Trump shared audio from the 15-hours worth of their conversation with the Washington Post to help corroborate claims that she made about her uncle.

READ MORE: Mary Trump says Trump is ‘virulently racist,’ has used racial slurs

In the clips, Trump Barry, 83, made damning statements about her brother.

“He was a brat,” Trump Barry, a former U.S. circuit judge, said of her brother, claiming she did his homework and “drove him around New York City to try to get him into college.”

Donald Trump prides himself on having an Ivy League education, touting the Wharton Business School at the University of Pennsylvania as his alma mater, but Mary Trump and Barry both question that merit.

The two say that Donald Trump attended a hand full of classes at the prestigious school, but attended different colleges, under nefarious circumstances.

“He went to Fordham for one year [actually two years] and then he got into University of Pennsylvania because he had somebody take the exams,” Trump Barry said.

Trump Barry even recalled Joe Shapiro, who she said took her younger brother’s college entrance exam, though this claim has not been verified, according to Washington Post.

READ MORE: College Cheating Scandal: Aunt Becky’s kids will be fine, but what about the deserving Black kids who never get a shot?

The statements, however, corroborate similar claims Mary Trump makes in her book, which was released in July. Mary Trump said her uncle, worried that he did not have the strongest grades to get into the college that he wanted, paid someone to take the standardized college admission test for him.

“To hedge his bets he enlisted Joe Shapiro, a smart kid with a reputation for being a good test taker, to take his SATs for him,” Mary Trump wrote. “That was much easier to pull off in the days before photo IDs and computerized records.

Those allegations come public in the midst of court rulings in the wide-reaching college admissions scam that led to charges against more than 50 people across the country. Lori Loughlin of “Full House” and husband Mossimo Giannulli, a fashion designer, on Friday were fined and sentenced to months in prison for helping their daughters pose as athletic recruits on their applications to get into the University of Southern California, Reuters reports.

In regards to his job as president, Trump Barry sharply condemned “what they’re doing with kids at the border,” in reference to the child separation policies the Trump administration enforced on families crossing the U.S.-Mexico border.

She stated that his actions and rhetoric were only to incite his supporters.

“All he wants to do is appeal to his base,” Barry said. “He has no principles. None. None. And his base, I mean my God, if you were a religious person, you want to help people. Not do this.”

Trump Barry told her niece that the President was not to be trusted and has been narcissistic most of his life.

“Donald is out for Donald, period,” Trump Barry stated.

“It’s the phoniness of it all. It’s the phoniness and this cruelty. Donald is cruel,” she said.

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Hollywood Makeup Artist Gives Back to Community Through Nonprofit Triumphant Transitions

LaTrice L. Edwards of Triumphant Transitions

Triumphant Transitions Inc. was was founded by Gary, Indiana, native and Ball State University graduate LaTrice L. Edwards. It is a true revelation of purpose for the celebrity makeup artist and entrepreneur.

The impact of the organization’s service has resulted in client testimonials of increased self-esteem, job readiness, and improved relationships. Triumphant Transitions has also partnered in various community service efforts including: back to school rallies, spa days for Hurricane Katrina survivors, and wig drive sponsorships supporting the American Cancer Society.

It has served several hundred clients directly and indirectly, with grassroots efforts for 15 years. Clients have experienced its unique community and empowerment services in Gary-Northwest and Indianapolis, as well as Chicago. Triumphant Transitions has also supported African missions in Abuja, Nigeria, and the United Republic of Tanzania.

What made you start your nonprofit?

Triumphant Transitions Inc. is actually a God-given idea I wrote on a Post-it note one night 16 years ago. So it started from obedience to answer the call to serve my community. I want to encourage and empower those in need by putting God’s love in action through serving.

Why is it so important for you to give back?

I am really doing what I grew up watching my parents do. I always saw my parents serving in ministry, teaching, giving back to the community, helping our family and people in need. So, I guess you can say it’s in my blood, it’s in my DNA to serve and it’s important to keep their legacy going.  I also base the importance of serving on one of my favorite quotes from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., which states, “Everybody can be great … because anybody can serve. You don’t have to have a college degree to serve. You don’t have to make your subject and verb agree to serve. You only need a heart full of grace. A soul generated by love.”

This quote is 1,000% true! It really doesn’t take much to serve. You can do it by volunteering, donating to a good cause, getting groceries or running errands for the elderly during this pandemic. When it comes to serving, a heart full of grace and a soul generated by love really are the best tools to start with.

What are some of the highlights of your organization in the last 15 years that you want people to know about?

Wow, there are so many wonderful memories through the years, from pampering women overcoming domestic violence, to empowerment workshops to aid those recovering from substance abuse, to being a triage organization during Hurricane Katrina in Illinois and Indiana, plus our community health events. As well as merging my career in film/TV with my youth empowerment program to supporting African missions and seeing girls in Tanzania in my empowerment shirts. However, I think my most favorite highlight is when a woman, who was a part of my very first program in February 14, 2005 and a client of the women’s shelter we served, noticed my mother and I at an event. I will never forget her excitement when she saw us. She reminded me of who she was and that she had been through my program a few years prior. After sharing her triumphant progress with us, she then hugged my mother and thanked her for having me. She said it was because of my mother that I am here to help women like her.

What are you doing to stay afloat during COVID-19?

I am actually doing what I always do … serve. Triumphant Transitions Inc. has operated on a volunteer/donation base over the last 15 years. Donations solely support our mission and projects, so COVID-19 really has not had a negative impact on the organization. If anything, it’s revealed and motivated me to address greater needs in the community and to expand my service projects beyond the Midwest region. In April, I started a COVID-19 relief initiative by feeding ER, maintenance, and security staff that worked the night shift in the Gary/Northwest Indiana region. In May, I did a community giveaway where we gave out diapers, wipes, masks, and sanitation products. It was during this event God revealed a greater need to me. The diaper giveaway was totally a “God idea.” I didn’t realize how scare diapers were in my community during this time. The residents were so appreciative. We will have our next diaper giveaway Aug 29. This time we are including household goods as well as partnering with other organizations.  I will do more as God leads me to do them.

 


Dr. Jessica Mosley is a serial entrepreneur who loves teaching fellow CEO women how to show up in their truth and power. As steward owner of MizCEO Entrepreneurial Media Brand, Sovereign Care Home Care, Sovereign Care Medical Training Center, and Deborah’s Place for Battered Women, Jessica is busy making moves that impact her community and those connected to her.



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A New Botnet Is Covertly Targeting Millions of Servers

FritzFrog has been used to try and infiltrate government agencies, banks, telecom companies, and universities across the US and Europe.

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A Fleet of Computers Helps Settle a 90-Year-Old Math Problem

By translating Ott-Heinrich Keller’s conjecture into a computer-friendly search, researchers confirmed a conjecture about seven-dimensional space.

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How to Rid Your Phone of Those Default Apps You Never Use

Even the best phones come with bloatware, preinstalled apps that take up precious storage space. Here's how to remove them and speed up your device.

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Police Want Your Smart Speaker—Here's Why

Requests are rising from law enforcement for information on the devices, which can include internet queries, food orders, and overheard conversations.

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What Causes Mascne (Face Mask Acne), and How to Treat It

Just in case you needed more to worry about, mask-related acne is also breaking out nationwide. Here's what's causing it and how to get it under control.

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