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Friday, July 12, 2019

Republicans run racist Colin Kaepernick ad with darkened skin for Trump 2020 campaign

As Donald Trump revs up his 2020 re-election campaign, ads launched from the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) taking aim at Colin Kaepernick.

And it appears the former NFL player and activist’s skin color was darkened.

O.J. Simpson at odds with Colin Kaepernick over canceled ‘Betsy Ross’ Nikes

Critics blasted the NRCC for sending out a fundraiser email featuring Trump standing next to a Betsy Ross flag, The Daily Mail reports. Kaepernick, the former San Francisco 49ers quarterback who=kneeled during the national anthem in protest, looks like he’s a few shades darker for some reason.

The email said: “WHO DO YOU STAND WITH? DONALD TRUMP AND THE BETSY ROSS FLAG OR ANTI-AMERICAN FLAG COLIN KAEPERNICK.”

The NRC denies that the photo was tampered with.

“’The photo was not darkened,” NRCC communications director Chris Pack said in an email to Yahoo News.

As Dems debate busing, southern schools slowly desegregate

“Dear @GOPLeader Kevin McCarthy: I served with you in the California legislature and now in Congress. I do not believe you are a racist. If the below is true, then I hope you will fire those who were responsible,” wrote Congressman Ted Lieu.

The email was also sent to face-off with the famed athlete for his recent activism, convincing Nike to ditch Betsy-Ross emblazoned sneakers since they are considered offensive because of ties to the Revolutionary war era and slavery.

The brand listened and decided to opt out of selling the Air Max 1 USA shoe. Their stock also reportedly went up two per cent immediately following backlash from conservatives.

The post Republicans run racist Colin Kaepernick ad with darkened skin for Trump 2020 campaign appeared first on theGrio.



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An Amazon Phishing Scam Hits Just in Time For Prime Day

Some deals are too good to be true, even on the most made-up holiday of all.

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Can Sci-Fi Writers Prepare Us for an Uncertain Future?

Businesses and public policy makers are tapping novelists to imagine the path forward. But how much stock should we put in the predictions of storytellers?

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How Elite Tennis Players Crank Out Serves at 150 MPH

Serve speeds have been climbing for decades—topping out at 163.7 mph. Here’s how players store all that energy in their bodies to release it in a coordinated strike.

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Amazon Is Making a 'Lord of the Rings' MMO Game

Soon anyone will be able to play in J.R.R. Tolkien's world.

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Viral bagel shop guy says he’s not racist but uses n-word and he’s the MLK of short people

A short man who went nuts in a New York bagel shop and started ranting about how women treat him because of his diminutive stature, is still holding fast to his hateful beliefs about them.

Cardi B claps back at Jermaine Dupri over ‘stripper rappers’ comments

Chris Morgan is the little man with the big mouth who got tackled in a now viral video for trash-talking about women, screaming at employees and complaining they mistreat him on dating websites because he’s not a tall drink of water.

The 5-foot hot-head got his behind handed to him when he went off in the Bagel Boss in Long Island and started ranting and spewing outbursts at employees.

Olivia Shea recorded the video on Twitter saying:

“So in bagel boss this morning, the misogynistic d—-ebag seen in the video was degrading almost all of the female staff as well as other patrons. F— this guy.” The video has since gone viral with more than 20 million views.

“He just went totally nuts. He said ‘why are you smiling at me?’” a manager of the shop told the Post. “He started saying it’s because ‘I’m short and nobody wants me.’”

The man has gotten some fame from his shortcomings, and appeared on Hot 97 to further offend people by calling himself “the modern Martin Luther King” of short people.

He also claims he’s not racist nor a homophobe and he only uses the n-word in certain situations, TMZ reports. He says he feels the way he does about women because he’s been burned by them.

O.J. Simpson at odds with Colin Kaepernick over canceled ‘Betsy Ross’ Nikes

Let’s hope Napoleon gets some therapy for his short-man complex.

The post Viral bagel shop guy says he’s not racist but uses n-word and he’s the MLK of short people appeared first on theGrio.



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Logitech G Pro X Review: A Classy Gaming Headset

With professional build quality and robust sound, the G Pro X headset runs circles around many 3.5mm gaming headsets, especially on PC and Mac.

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Why the Momo Challenge Film Might Beat the Meme Movie Curse

There's a good chance the movie featuring the taut-skinned, bulgy-eyed freak won't be the next 'Slender Man'.

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Gulf Fisheries Are Under Siege—Now Comes Tropical Storm Barry

Surges of polluted water have decimated crab, oyster, and shrimp populations and killed hundreds of dolphins. To fishermen, Tropical Storm Barry is very bad news.

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Cardi B claps back at Jermaine Dupri over ‘stripper rappers’ comments

As Dems debate busing, southern schools slowly desegregate

This small Mississippi Delta town serves as a reminder that fierce debates over the integration of black and white students are not a thing of the past.

Two rival high schools in Cleveland, one historically black and the other historically white, had to be merged just two years ago after a judge determined that all-black student bodies in the 3,400-student district were illegal vestiges of segregation. It is one of scores of school districts around the U.S. still facing federal desegregation mandates, and the decision followed a fight over the town’s segregated schools that dates back to 1965.

The federal government’s role in integrating schools came into the national spotlight following an exchange during the 2020 Democratic presidential debate between Joe Biden and Sen. Kamala Harris. The former vice president was attacked for his work as a senator in the 1970s to oppose federally-ordered busing to achieve a racial balance in schools. Harris pointed to the fact that she was a beneficiary of a busing program that allowed her to attend an integrated elementary school in California.

The clash proved to be a stumbling block for Biden’s campaign, but the debate’s focus on 1970s-era busing — when the practice was at its peak — belied the fact that federally ordered integration efforts still exist in many places.

Joseph Wardenski, the Justice Department’s lead lawyer during the 2015 trial, said Cleveland is an example of why school desegregation isn’t “ancient history” and said he was surprised at comments made by Biden in the debate that indicated a lack of support for court-ordered busing.

“There is still very much of a role for courts and the federal government to get the job done,” said Wardenski, who is now in private practice.

Since Cleveland’s consolidated high school opened in 2017, there have been some points of tension, including a pair of lawsuits claiming administrators unfairly altered grade-point-averages to give white students valedictorian and salutatorian honors. But many see the consolidation as progress.

“It’s better that they brought the schools together as far as having the races interact,” said Allison Tyler, whose 16-year-old daughter, Valecia, is black and a junior at the high school.
The district’s majority-white school board resisted the merger for several years, despite federal pressure, with some predicting white flight to private schools.

Indeed, the district’s white student enrollment has dropped sharply since the 2014-2015 school year, the last before changes were ordered, even though Census figures show Cleveland’s number of white children has held steady. White enrollment that had been around 30% has fallen three years in a row, to 23% last year, according to reports filed in the case.

The two sons of Carmen Oguz are among the white children who have stayed to attend Cleveland Central High School this fall. Oguz said the family chose to remain in the district, in part because her younger son wanted a more competitive football team. She said she’s also happy with the academics.

“We pay tax dollars. We wanted the public school system to work,” she said.
However, Oguz said that most of her younger son’s friends made a different choice on graduating from a magnet elementary school and left the district. “He was definitely in the minority,” she said.

Currently, an estimated 150 to 200 school districts nationwide are operating under desegregation orders, according to Erica Frankenberg, a Pennsylvania State University professor, who said nobody keeps a precise count.

Schools in the South are better integrated racially than those elsewhere because of desegregation plans implemented in the 1960s and 1970s, Frankenberg said. And while every district is different, she said “what we can say pretty definitively is that desegregation has been shown to have a wide range of academic and social benefits.”
Districts released from court orders have tended to relax their integration efforts, a major factor in the resegregation of many schools nationwide, according to Sheneka Williams, an associate professor at the University of Georgia.

Communities may support desegregation in the abstract, but “oftentimes, they don’t want to shuffle their kids around for racial balance,” Williams said. “They think it’s a good idea on the whole, but as an individual, do they really want to go through all it takes to maintain it? That answer is no.”

In districts released from federal desegregation orders, as well as districts that were never under court order, the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that race can’t be used as the driving factor in assigning students to public schools, whether to integrate or segregate them. However, a 2016 Century Foundation report found at least 100 districts and charter schools nationwide have voluntary desegregation plans that work around the ruling by mixing students from families with different incomes or educational levels, factors often associated with race. Those plans may consider race as one factor, using magnet schools or voluntary transfers to try to achieve balance.

Through earlier integration efforts, Cleveland High and its neighboring middle school, once all-white, were by 2011 about half white and half black. But East Side High School and its associated middle school, once all-black by law, remained almost entirely black. The school district and even some African-Americans defended the two sets of schools, pointing to community pride in East Side’s athletic teams and traditions.

The district began operating a new Cleveland Central High School based at the former Cleveland High in August 2017. The football team went undefeated that season before losing in the playoffs, and donations are funding an expanded program for high school students to take college classes at neighboring Delta State University.
“It’s not as bad as I thought it would be,” Valecia Tyler said as she was leaving a summer program one day last week.

But advocates are watching closely. The Rev. Edward Duvall, a Baptist pastor and part of a group of African Americans who pushed for consolidation in the district, advocated for a new high school building that could be symbolic break from the segregated past, and he’s disappointed the district chose instead to renovate old buildings.

“This is a microcosm of the nation,” he said. “How do we merge these two cultures together? If we work and put it together, we can be an example for the nation.”

The post As Dems debate busing, southern schools slowly desegregate appeared first on theGrio.



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FIFA gets tougher on racism in disciplinary code update

FIFA is doubling its minimum ban for racist incidents to 10 games, and will start inviting players to make victim statements at disciplinary hearings.

Stricter handling of discrimination allegations is a key theme of the redrafted FIFA disciplinary code which takes effect next week.

“Topics like racism and discrimination have been updated, putting FIFA at the forefront of the fight against this appalling attack on the fundamental human rights of individuals,” soccer’s world body said in a statement Thursday.

The minimum ban for players or officials rises from five to 10 games, and victims can soon be heard in person by FIFA judging panels.

“FIFA will not let down victims of racist abuse,” FIFA said, adding the victims “may be invited by the respective judicial body to make an oral or written victim impact statement.”
“For a first offense, playing a match with a limited number of spectators and a fine of at least 20,000 Swiss francs ($20,000) shall be imposed on the association or club concerned,” FIFA said.

In recent seasons, FIFA and European soccer body UEFA have closed cases of alleged racist abuse for lack of evidence beyond testimony of the players involved.

“In the past some players have felt let down by the action taken,” said Piara Powar, executive director of the Fare network, soccer’s leading discrimination monitoring group.
Overhauling its disciplinary rules, FIFA will also impose transfer bans on clubs that default on debts in cases processed in-house and at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS).
FIFA is also preparing to open the doors of some judicial hearings, offer free legal counsel to parties, and publish more verdicts online.

“For the first time, certain types of disciplinary hearings — concerning doping and match-manipulation cases — will be open to the public if the parties request it,” FIFA said.
To modernize and improve its work, FIFA worked with London-based Fare and now includes specific language including sexual orientation as a discrimination issue, bringing it into line with FIFA’s statutes.

“We welcome the clear reference to homophobia,” Powar said. “FIFA has sanctioned acts of homophobia quite extensively in Latin America in particular, but the previous rules were not fit for purpose.”

When players are subject to abuse by fans, FIFA already has an escalating three-stage process for referees to act, leading to games being abandoned. It applies in all 2022 World Cup qualifying games, which Fare observers will attend after assessing the risk of discrimination.

FIFA has clarified that abandoned games are forfeited as a 3-0 loss by the fans’ team “unless there are exceptional circumstances.”

“Our expectation is that national Football Associations will mirror the new procedures and implement them,” Powar said of FIFA’s 211 member federations.

Transfer bans — typically imposed for breaking rules to sign youth players — will be extended to cases of defaulting on debts to players, coaches or other clubs. Previously, clubs risked a deduction of league points.

“A transfer ban has been shown to be the most effective instrument for this purpose,” said FIFA, which will lift a ban when debts are paid. Currently, teams are deducted points in about 10 mostly low-key cases per year, which are not publicized.

FIFA’s move toward more transparency will see judicial panel leaders make the final decision — to approve a request in a doping case or require it in a match-fixing prosecution — on allowing the media in and live-streaming proceedings.

This follows a European Court of Human Rights ruling last year which required CAS to relax secrecy around its traditional closed-door hearings. However, lawyers are rarely expected to recommend openness for their clients.

The post FIFA gets tougher on racism in disciplinary code update appeared first on theGrio.



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On TikTok, Teens Meme the Safety App Ruining Their Summer

Parents can use Life360 to track their teen’s location in real time. The company can use that data to sell car insurance.

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Why Dogs Now Play a Big Role in Human Cancer Research

There’s a strong chance your aging dog will get cancer—but your pupper could also help humans survive it.

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South Africa deploys army to gang-hit Cape Town

The operation is meant to recover illegal firearms and confiscate drugs, authorities say.

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Egypt's women footballers dream of reuniting national team

These footballers are fighting for the women's game to be given proper recognition in Egypt.

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Sudan crisis: Military council says it foiled a coup attempt

A spokesman says more than a dozen people were arrested, among them army and security officers.

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REPORTS: R. Kelly arrested on federal charges of sex trafficking

It looks like R. Kelly is back behind bars.

According to reports, the 52-year-old singer was arrested in Chicago on Thursday evening on federal charges of sex trafficking. NBC4 New York reported that he was picked up by Homeland Security NYPD Investigation agents and NYPD Public Safety Task Force, and he is expected to be taken to New York.

R. Kelly charged with criminal sexual abuse; no-bond warrant set by judge

U.S. attorney spokesman Joseph Fitzpatrick told the Associated Press that the 13-count indictment includes charges of child pornography, enticement of a minor and obstruction of justice. More details should come out on Friday from the Eastern District of New York.

BREAKING: R. Kelly charged with 11 brand NEW counts of sexual abuse

R. Kelly has been accused of multiple crimes against women over the past 20 years and this arrest is not even his first this year. In February, he was booked on charges of aggravated sexual abuse of four women. He plead not guilty and posted bail, prompting his release from Cook County Jail in Chicago. He was arrested in March for failure to pay $161,000 in child support. In May, a grand jury indicted him on 11 more counts of sexual abuse including aggravated sexual assault and criminal sexual assault. Up until Thursday’s arrest, he was free on $1 million bond set in February.

Chicago woman claims she was gang raped at R. Kelly’s music studio

Last year, Lifetime premiered its heartbreaking docs-series, Surviving R. Kelly, featuring commentary from several of his alleged victims.

The post REPORTS: R. Kelly arrested on federal charges of sex trafficking appeared first on theGrio.



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Thursday, July 11, 2019

President Trump Is the Latest Critic of Facebook's Libra

In a series of tweets late Thursday, the president attacked cryptocurrencies and said Libra "will have little standing or dependability."

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Africa's top shots: 5-11 July 2019

A selection of the week's best photos from across the continent and beyond.

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