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Wednesday, July 24, 2019

Angry Orchard fires manager and employees who Black couple of shoplifting during marriage proposal

Angry Orchard has fired the manager and several employees who harassed a Black couple and wrongly accused them of stealing a $28 tee-shirt from their brewery during their marriage proposal.

READ MORE: Security guards accuse Black couple couple of shoplifting during marriage proposal at Angry Orchards Brewery

The company admitted that the confrontation between a Black doctor and her fiancé was mishandled and they’ve apologized and cleaned house after learning that employees confronted the happy couple in the middle of a marriage proposal.

“We reached out and spoke directly with the guest involved to express our sincerest apology and offered to make it right,” Angry Orchard said in a statement obtained by PEOPLE. “We badly mishandled the situation and our team overreacted.”

The company said they have fired the manager on duty who allowed security members to confront Cathie-Marie Hamlet and her fiancé and six friends without stepping in.

“We’re extremely embarrassed this happened and have taken the immediate steps to remove the manager who was on-duty from her role and replace members of the security team.”

Angry Orchard now says it will improve practices and train staff with sensitivity training.

“Everyone on our team, from cidermakers to security, [has] additional training in the areas of security awareness and unconscious bias to prevent something like this from happening in the future.”

“We’re deeply sorry that our guests were mistreated. The situation doesn’t reflect our values of respect for all and creating a welcoming environment for all our guests,” the statement concluded.

In an exclusive interview with TheGrio, Hamlet and her fiancé Clyde Jackson said they were supposed to have had a surprising, happy moment at the Angry Orchard brewery, but instead the false accusation ruined it.

“As a Black person in a White environment, you always tend to have a heightened awareness because you know people are going to perceive you differently, and not always in a positive way,” Hamlet said in an email interview with theGrio.

The couple had been together for three years, when Jackson led Hamlet out to a lawn area to propose in front of their loved ones, she didn’t see it coming. But what should have been one of the most beautiful moments of her life, quickly turned ugly as an Angry Orchard security official stormed over to the couple and said to Jackson, “‘I’m sorry sir, but I have to check your back pocket. I was told that you stole a T-shirt from the gift store.’ ”

“I was shocked and bit annoyed, but I brushed it off,” Hamlet said of that initial encounter, determined to focus instead on the man she loved.

Video of special needs girl brutally beat by bullies goes viral with #JusticeforJanise

But even after Jackson, “emptied all of his pockets, while still trying to keep the ring box hidden,” dismissing the guard to get back to the matter at hand, the overzealous security guard chose to return again “mid-proposal,” and asked her to empty her bags as well.

“The way they relentlessly approached us I think was telling, especially with us knowing we did nothing wrong,” Hamlet recalls.

“I emptied my entire bag in front of her, and since this was the SECOND time she had walked over, I said, ‘I know you’re just doing your job, but I can’t help but wonder if this is because we’re Black. We’re the only Black people here at your establishment.’ “

“Of course, she said that that wasn’t the case,” Hamlet continued.

But after soon the couple successfully finished the proposal and their guests started cheering in celebration, security came back over to harass them and this time shouted out, “Call the police!”

“I have never been so humiliated in my life, myself and some of my friends left Angry Orchard in tears,” Hamlet added. “On what was supposed to be one of the best days of my life, I was chased out of Angry Orchard by security who followed us all the way to the parking lot.”

The post Angry Orchard fires manager and employees who Black couple of shoplifting during marriage proposal appeared first on theGrio.



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Ugandan pop star Bobi Wine to run against Yoweri Museveni

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Rep. Maxine Waters eyes impeachment hearings after Mueller’s hearing ‘Impeachment first, prison next!’

U.S Rep. Maxine Waters continued to scrutinize President Donald Trump and took to Twitter on Monday to remind Democrats to keep their eye on the prize of a possible impeachment as former special counsel Robert Mueller testifies before Congress Wednesday.

Washington Post reporter brings receipts, busts Trump in a lie

Mueller spoke to the House Judiciary Committee Wednesday and re-confirmed that Trump is not clear of obstruction as he seems to think he is.

On Monday, Waters asserted in a series of tweets that the Judiciary Committee members are armed with “a good plan to force more info out of Mueller when he testifies before the committee”, The Daily Mail reports.

“If this works, this will give us the ammunition we need to start impeachment immediately,” she added.

“Michael Cohen is serving 3 yrs [sic] for the crimes that he committed w/ and for the President of the USA. Many are wondering why this case was closed,” Waters said in a follow-up tweet.

“It ain’t over until it’s over & it ain’t over until Trump is held responsible for all of his crimes. Impeachment first, prison next!”

Donald Trump writes racist tweet about congresswomen of color

It’s up to Congress now to take Trump to task, and Waters is ready.

“The impeachment question is going to play heavily in the 2020 elections. Over 70 percent of Democrats polled want Trump impeached. Dems have the support. Let’s go for it! Let’s stop fiddlin’ while Rome is burning!”

The post Rep. Maxine Waters eyes impeachment hearings after Mueller’s hearing ‘Impeachment first, prison next!’ appeared first on theGrio.



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A New Law Makes Bots Identify Themselves—That's the Problem

California's so-called 'bot bill,' which aims to protect users from automated bots on Twitter and other platforms, is noble, flashy, intriguing...and inept.

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Broadway actress Audra McDonald slams theater-goer who took photo of graphic nude scene during play

Audra McDonald, who stars in the Broadway production of “Frankie and Johnny” blasted a theater-goer who dared to take a photo during a graphic sex scene when she was nude while performing on Sunday in New York.

Security guards accuse Black couple couple of shoplifting during marriage proposal at Angry Orchards Brewery

McDonald, 49, reportedly felt violated by the offense, especially since no flash photography is allowed by audience members during the performance.

McDonald stars as Frankie in the play and there is a graphic sex scene between the two main characters, McDonald and her co-star Michael Shannon’s character at the beginning of the production.

The actress took to Twitter to call out the offender, who unfortunately wasn’t caught in the act, Deadline reports.

“To whoever it was in the audience that took a flash photo during our nude scene today: Not cool. Not cool at all.”

Six-time Tony-Award winner McDonald admits performing the scene is something she still hasn’t gotten used to.

“Maybe strippers get real used to it, but for me, there’s nothing normal about that,” she told the NY Times last month. “So there’s nowhere in my mind that I can drift off and let this just kind of happen because everything about it is demanding that you be present.”

Even though the whole ordeal is no laughing matter to McDonald, comedian David Alan Grier just couldn’t help himself from joking about the situation.

The play will continue to run through Sunday July 28 at the Broadhurst Theater in New York City.

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The post Broadway actress Audra McDonald slams theater-goer who took photo of graphic nude scene during play appeared first on theGrio.



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Video of special needs girl brutally beat by bullies goes viral with #JusticeforJanise

A triggering video was shared on social media on Monday showing a group of teen girls in Chicago beating and punching a 15-year-old special needs girl who had reportedly asked them for train directions.

Georgia mother charged with murder after dropping her 3 month old baby during fight

Janise Harris is the victim on a now viral video who is seen being pummeled by a group of girls on her face and back. As the teens beat on Harris, some could be heard saying that she was going to call the cops on them. They throw her to the ground and continue their assault, The Daily Mail reports.

Harris’ friend posted the video on Twitter.

“These girls jumped my friend Janise Harris who has a mental disability that has been progressing since the passing of her mother, I know this won’t blow up since I’m a small account but please, share and rt! I want justice for my friend, she didn’t deserve any of this,” wrote the girl who goes by “Tyla” on Twitter.

 

Harris reportedly was looking for help to get to the Red Line train station.

After the posting of the brutal assault another video appears to show the girls who beat Harris crying and apologizing saying they are receiving death threats and begging for everyone to stop threatening them.

“Everybody I’m sorry,” one girl cries out in the video and she screams out her location to what seems to be her mother on a cell phone trying to get her current location. Social media sleuths also identified several other girls.

Another video was shared showing that Harris was found and was safely with her family.

The horrifying video did gain traction and has been viewed more than 5.1 million times and it caught the attention of Chicago chief communications officer Anthony Guglielmi.

“This is beyond disturbing to watch and this young girl deserves far better,” he said in the tweet.

Security guards accuse Black couple of shoplifting during marriage proposal at Angry Orchards Brewery

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GM’s Cruise Rolls Back Its Target for Self-Driving Cars

The automaker’s unit has raised billions from Softbank, Honda and others and has 1,500 employees. What it doesn’t have yet is service on the streets.

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Sony WF-1000XM3 Review: The Perfect Travel Companion

The new premium earbuds from Sony have multiple noise-canceling modes, and it switches between them automatically depending on your environment.

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Caf ExCo member Bility banned by Fifa for 10 years

Fifa bans Confederation of African Football executive committee member Musa Bility for 10 years for misappropriation of funds.

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Black voters say they won’t forget Trump’s racist tweets

Robin D. Stephens lived through Jim Crow and thought the worst days of racism were behind her. Then President Donald Trump told four American congresswomen of color to “go back” to where they came from.

“It was very hurtful to see the person who is the leader of the country that I live in and that I respect and love, speak that way to U.S. citizens,” said Stephens, a 61-year-old retired public defender who lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

But Stephens is tired of talking about Trump’s racist tweets. She is ready to take her pain to the polls.

“What I want to talk about now to people and to get people excited about and to get people wanting to go out to vote about now is the fact that this came from the White House,” Stephens said. “We can change that. And the way we change that is by voting.”

Democratic presidential candidates gathering in Detroit on Wednesday to address the annual NAACP convention will need voters like Stephens to keep that passion heading into next year’s election. Trump is gambling that his attacks on the congresswomen, which he revived on Tuesday, will help him secure another term in the White House by galvanizing his most fervent, overwhelmingly white supporters.

But dozens of black leaders, activists and voters in pivotal swing states said they’re just as motivated to vote and won’t forget Trump’s actions.

“I see more people engaged and responding to the comments, people who aren’t political, friends of mine who vote more casually, they are responding,” said Wisconsin Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes, who is black and from Milwaukee, where Democrats will meet to declare their nominee at the party’s convention next summer.

In 2016, black turnout was down about 7 percentage points nationally compared with 2012, according to census estimates. Barnes said the president’s comments are resonating with people “in a more real way” than past statements he’s made, which could translate into increased turnout next November.

“The most important thing that we can have happen is the president needs to keep talking because he’s showing his true colors, he’s showing how he really feels,” said David Bowen, a Wisconsin state representative from Milwaukee who is black.

“These overt racist incidents are going to wake people up and remind them that four more years of the president is not going to benefit this country, not benefit African Americans.”
Angela Lang, who started Black Leaders Organizing for Communities after Trump’s 2016 victory, agreed.

“This is all hands on deck,” she said in response to Trump’s comments. “We can’t tolerate this. I think people are fed up. It’s agitating people in a way to engage them to do whatever they can for 2020.”

Woke Vote founder DeJuana Thompson said it’s a sentiment she has been hearing as she has worked to expand voter turnout in states like Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania. Thompson said that regardless of the race of the candidates, there is an expectation from voters of color that 2020 Democrats must confront racism on the campaign trail.

“There’s not a different standard being applied,” Thompson said. “The standard is justice. The standard is equity. And if you’re not saying those things, it is landing — particularly on people of color’s ears — very differently than it ever has before.”

Some African Americans are still weighing Trump’s actions and how it might influence their vote. Michael Brown, a 34-year-old who lives in Philadelphia, said he believes the country is increasingly divided along racial lines, but he isn’t sure whether he’ll vote next year. If he does go to the polls, racism won’t be a factor in his decision.

He said he isn’t sure whether the president is racist, though Brown said “it appears like he could be” based on some of his past statements.

“For me, I would have to hear ‘I hate black people, I hate Asians, I hate Hispanics,’ to be like, OK, he’s a racist,” he said, adding that he understands why some would take Trump’s comments about the congresswomen as racism.

Reggie Hall Jr. saw the president’s tweets and talk differently and said Trump’s rhetoric has only escalated since he took office.

“I think he went too far from the beginning, but him condemning the four congresswomen . if you’re looking for a final straw, that could probably be it,” said Hall, 32, of Philadelphia.
Hall, who backed Democrat Hillary Clinton in 2016, participates in most elections and said that he’s “extremely motivated” to vote in 2020. While race and racism aren’t the sole factors in his decision of whom to support among the Democratic primary candidates, Hall said he does want to hear from them on matters of race.

“If you’re going to try to weave this coalition together, you need to address the fact that race is a factor in a lot of things,” Hall said. “Whoever comes out of the Democratic primary, their response to race and race relations, for me personally, is going to be better than anything Trump has said.”

The post Black voters say they won’t forget Trump’s racist tweets appeared first on theGrio.



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Facebook Knows More About You Than the CIA

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High Drama: Cannabis Biotech Firm Phylos Roils Small Growers

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Tuesday, July 23, 2019

When religion meets secularism in urban planning

One of Babak Manouchehrifar’s favorite places in Cambridge, Massachusetts, is a city block on Prospect Street that hosts residences, a mosque, a synagogue, and a church. This is unsurprising considering that the fourth-year PhD candidate’s research centers around the relationships between urban planning, secularism, and religion.

“I’m interested in the peaceful coexistence of communities with differing views on religion and secularism through urban planning initiatives,” says Manouchehrifar, who left his home country of Iran to study at MIT’s Department of Urban Studies and Planning (DUSP). “This interest comes from my professional as well as social experiences, before and after coming to the U.S. To me, this is part of what MIT calls ‘building a better world.’”

According to Manouchehrifar, planners deal with various aspects of religion and secularism in their daily practices considerably more often than they do in their academic training. On the job, planners work with communities of differing viewpoints, such as when a host community opposes certain secular proposals or practices of different faith groups, or when a group of citizens requests religious exemption from zoning laws.

At the same time, these planners must work within the legal and political structures that authorize their work, such as the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Person Act of 2000, which bars planners from burdening a person’s free exercise of religion.

“My research aims to spur further discussion on what I see as a practical dilemma, namely, how should planners deal with religious differences when their professional code of conduct calls for a particularly ‘indifferent’ approach,” Manouchehrifar says.

In his research, including a paper recently published in the journal “Planning Theory and Practice,” which was selected as one of the five best papers published in the field of planning in 2018, Manouchehrifar critiques the conventional view that there is a clear, simple distinction between religion and secularism in the practice of urban planning.

“My goal is to transcend the secular-religious dichotomy through the planning perspective. I aim to show that these two categories are in fact inextricably linked and deeply entangled in planning practice; they depend on each other for meaning,” he says.

Early constraints and the passion for a better world

Through his work, Manouchehrifar hopes to promote a better understanding of the religious differences of global communities away from the adversarial rhetoric of war or conflict. This hope is rooted in his childhood experiences.   

Born in Iran at the brink of the Iranian Revolution and right before the Iran-Iraq War, Manouchehrifar’s childhood took place in a world in conflict. He recalls thinking war was normal because he didn’t have another frame of reference with which to compare his environment. But he and his family did imagine a different world, one in which he would run outdoors to soccer fields instead of bomb shelters.

“It was quite a difficult time, but I was part of a lucky generation because when I became a teenager, things began to be more stable,” he recalls. The war ended when Manouchehrifar was almost 10, but his wartime experience sparked his passion for contributing to a more peaceful world.

Before coming to MIT, Manouchehrifar received a bachelor’s degree in civil engineering and surveying from Isfahan University and a master’s degree in urban and regional planning from Shahid Beheshti University (SBU), both in Iran. His first job after college was as a surveying engineer in Isfahan, where he worked on a highway project that was cutting through a low-income neighborhood.

He was presented with an ethical dilemma when he was told that homes would have to be demolished and their residents be displaced in order to clear the way for the construction of the highway. When he brought his concerns to his project manager, he was told that it wasn’t his job as an engineer to worry about the social impact of the work. This led Manouchehrifar to quit his job and pursue a career in urban planning, believing that it would allow him more knowledge and power to consider the social impacts of urban projects.

After working as a planner and teaching at SBU for seven years, Manouchehrifar and his wife, Pegah, moved to Cambridge in 2013 so he could pursue a master’s degree in urban planning and international development at MIT. He completed the program in 2015 (their daughter, Danna, was also born at MIT at this time) and has since been working on his PhD. Studying in the U.S., and at the Institute in particular, has been a highly positive experience for Manouchehrifar, but it hasn’t been without its difficulties.

New constraints — and new possibilities

Manouchehrifar was halfway through his PhD when the White House imposed its travel ban in 2017. His initial research centered around the relationship between religion and planning in Iran, meaning that he had to do his fieldwork there. But Manouchehrifar was unsure as to whether or when he would be able to come back to the States and finish his studies if he left.

Although it wasn’t easy, he redirected his research project to focus on the U.S. instead. “I was rather forced to change course, but the results have also been fruitful for my research because it has enriched my understanding of the topic and given me a more nuanced comparative lens,” he says. On a personal level, the impact of the travel ban has been much harder for Manouchehrifar and his family to handle: “The disruption of research is something that we can manage one way or another. The disruption of family life, on the other hand, is quite unsettling and oftentimes paralyzing.”

Manouchehrifar says such constraints have motivated him to work harder in his studies.

“I think [these experiences] have reinforced my passion for building a better world through planning and international development initiatives. What I decided to do, following a period of contemplation and consultation especially with my advisor, Professor Bish Sanyal, was to try to transform such constraints into an intellectual energy to conduct research on a topic that is meaningful both for myself and for my field of study,” he says.

Manouchehrifar has served as an instructor for 11.005 (Introduction to International Development Planning) and has been a teaching assistant for four other courses. Sanyal says that Manouchehrifar’s students have praised him for creating “an atmosphere where everyone could get their thoughts out and learn, and be challenged by each other.”

When he isn’t working, Manouchehrifar spends as much time as he can with his wife and daughter. The family particularly enjoys going to parks and museums together. Manouchehrifar says he is grateful for everything his family has done for him: “I couldn’t have done my studies without their support and sacrifices, and it is really like the entire family is a getting a PhD.”



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Security guards accuse Black couple couple of shoplifting during marriage proposal at Angry Orchards Brewery

A Black doctor says her special moment was ruined when an Angry Orchard security guard interrupted her fiancée in the middle of proposing to her, just to accuse him of stealing a t-shirt from the brewery’s gift shop.

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On Sunday, Cathy-Marie Hamlet took to Facebook to recall the moment she was racially profiled at the Walden, New York brewery with her fiancé Clyde Jackson who was celebrating his 40th birthday with six friends.

But what Hamlet didn’t know is that her fiancé also had another idea in mind to pop the question. The two walked out to a lawn area as her fiancé geared up to make his big move and that’s when she said an Angry Orchard security official butted in and said, “‘I’m sorry sir, but I have to check your back pocket. I was told that you stole a T-shirt from the gift store.’ ”

Hamlet said her man “emptied all of his pockets, while still trying to keep the ring box hidden,” PEOPLE reports.

The security guard first walked away when it was clear that her fiancée didn’t have a stolen shirt tucked away. Then Hamlet let the security guard returned “mid proposal,” and asked her to empty her bags.

“[She] says to me, ‘I’m sorry, I need to check your bag. I was told that he gave it to you, and you put it in your bag,’ ” Hamlet recalled. “Mind you, my bag isn’t even large enough to fit a T-shirt.”

“I emptied my entire bag in front of her, and since this was the SECOND time she had walked over, I said, ‘I know you’re just doing your job, but I can’t help but wonder if this is because we’re Black. We’re the only Black people here at your establishment.’ “

“Of course, she said that that wasn’t the case,” Hamlet continued.

Hamlet said her fiancé finally got to propose but when their friends started cheering after Hamlet accepted security returned.

Food shopping while Black: Kroger manager profiles Black teens

The security guard to ask to check the belongings of all six of her friends.

“So at this point, the rest of security walks over and there’s 6 of them approaching us,” Hamlet wrote. “Of course my friends told them none of us stole a T-shirt from their establishment, at which point they started getting aggressive and saying that not only them, but also patrons saw my boyfriend steal the shirt and/or transfer it to me to put in my bag!! Another woman in security yelled to one of the male security, ‘Call the police! I saw you steal it.’ “

“I felt humiliated, especially after one of my white friends made a point of asking them to check her bag for the T-shirt, but they refused to do so,” Hamlet said.

“Security started taking our pictures, recording video, and took a picture of my license plate number.”

The group decided to leave before things escalated since they threatened to call the cops. She said they left, “rather than be attacked by the multiple security guards of Angry Orchard,” she said.

TheGrio reached out to Angry Orchards but no one would comment about the incident.

Story developing.

The post Security guards accuse Black couple couple of shoplifting during marriage proposal at Angry Orchards Brewery appeared first on theGrio.



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Venus Williams surprises Atlanta kids with visit to tennis center

Some future Wimbledon contenders at the South Fulton Tennis Center in Atlanta got to size up their future competition when Venus Williams surprised them at summer camp.

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Williams, who hit Atlanta to compete in the BB&T Atlanta Open, paid it forward to a group of young tennis hopefuls on Monday at the tennis center which needs help restoring at least 24 of their courts.

“I love to be out here with the kids and the kids enjoy it too. It keeps me motivated. Hopefully we see some future stars come out of this,” Williams told WSB-TV.

The experience of meeting the tennis star was simply, “the best thing ever,” said camper Ranan Givhan to WSB-TV.

“I want to get a college degree, playing tennis, so my parents don’t have to pay and I can make it easier for their lives,” Givhan said.

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Williams also was on deck to help shed a light on the need for funding to fix the tennis courts. So far the city estimates that $600,000 is needed to renovate the 24 courts.

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