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Friday, November 8, 2019

Michelle Obama and her “voting squad” are ready to get out the vote

Michelle Obama, our forever FLOTUS, has unveiled her “voting squad,” a celebrity dream team aimed at getting more Americans to vote in 2020.

“Last year, we went big. Millions of new voters made their voices heard for the first time. Now the stakes are even higher,” Obama says in a video that she tweeted out on Nov. 7. According to The Hill, this effort is a part of her When We All Vote campaign.

READ MORE: New poll shows Michelle Obama voted most admired woman by Americans

Obama shares, “That’s why I’ve been reaching out to some friends to expand my voting squad for the year ahead.”

Those friends include Shonda Rhimes, Tracee Ellis Ross, Kerry Washington, Janelle Monáe, Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson, Hamilton’s Lin-Manuel Miranda, NBA baller, Chris Paul, YouTuber Liza Koshy and professional soccer star, Megan Rapinoe.

READ MORE: Obama told y’all to stop ‘canceling’ every damn body and there’s a good reason why

“It all starts with you. You’re the only person that can have that conversation with your family and your friends and your girlfriends and even with your community to get them registered and ready to vote,” the celebrity squad tells viewers in the video.

Added Washington in the video: “Because when we squad up, we can change the world.”

Rapinoe also told viewers that they possessed the power to “change the game.”

The former first lady has been actively involved in getting out the vote since leaving the White House. Last July, she launched a voter registration drive to get folks registered to vote in the mid-term elections. Her efforts then launched the When We All Vote nonprofit, designed to “start a conversation on the responsibilities that we all have in shaping our country’s future through the ballot box.”

READ MORE: Files expose how North Carolina Republican systematically stopped Black people from voting

This year, the nonprofit is hoping to spark a commitment from Americans to “organize their own squads, volunteer groups aimed at getting friends, family, classmates and community registered and ready to vote,” according to the video.

I’m know I’m ready with my squad. Are you ready with yours?

The post Michelle Obama and her “voting squad” are ready to get out the vote appeared first on theGrio.



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Caf 'cancels' US$1 billion TV and marketing deal

The Confederation of African Football 'cancels' its US$1 billion TV and marketing deal as Lagardere Sports fights to enforce the contract.

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NYC Socialite allegedly can say the ‘n-word’ since she’s Alicia Keys’ friend

Lisa Marie Falcone, whose husband is a billionaire hedge fund manager, reportedly told her former personal chef that she could use the n-word because her “Black friend” Alicia Keys would be okay with it.

The chef, Brian Villanueva, made the claims in a lawsuit filed in Manhattan federal court on Wednesday against Falcone and her husband, Philip Falcone, according to Page Six.

READ MORE: Alicia Keys set to release new memoir ‘More Myself’ this Autumn

According to court documents, Falcone grew defensive when a comment she made about Villanueva’s girlfriend, who is Black, wasn’t received well.

Villanueva’s girlfriend was in the Hamptons and helped prepare food for the Falcones’ dinner party, according to the suit. The next morning, Falcone spoke to Villanueva about the way the girlfriend talked.

“Your girlfriend speaks very well. She seems educated,” Falcone reportedly told Villanueva, according to Page Six. “I would describe her as a chocolate-covered marshmallow.”

Falcone then allegedly asked the chef if he uses “the word ‘n—-‘ at home with your girlfriend?”

After the question, Villanueva reportedly grew defensive when she noticed that Villanueva’s expression change. She allegedly said she meant the question as a compliment, and that her friend, Alicia Keys, doesn’t speak “eloquently.” Villanueva also said Falcone told him that it’s okay for her to use the n-word because “I’m Puerto Rican and grew up in Spanish Harlem, so I can speak like that.”

READ MORE: Shocked Harlem grandmother receives $6 million IRS bill for her daycare

Keys and her husband, Swizz Beats, had attended the Hamptons dinner party the evening prior.

Villanueva decided to quit shortly after the incident. He said he approached the Falcones’ while they were out on the beach and told them as much, but that Lisa Falcone didn’t take it well.

“Rather than accepting Plaintiff’s resignation, Defendant Lisa Falcone asked Plaintiff not to resign and stated ‘talk to my Black friends’ (Keys and Swizz were reportedly on the beach with the Falcones at the time), and stated ‘they will tell you that I am not racist.’”

Villaneuva claims the Falcones’ owe him $4,230.76 in back pay. He is also alleging that the couple said they would only pay him if both he and his girlfriend signed a confidentiality agreement prohibiting them from telling anyone what Falcone had said. Villanueva and his girlfriend refused to sign the agreement.

READ MORE: Trump’s Black friends want A$AP Rocky to publicly thank president for Swedish prison release

This isn’t the first time the Falcones have been sued. Their former butler, who is gay, sued them alleging Lisa once grabbed his genitals and told him that a “good f–k to turn him straight” was all he needed.

As of now, Keys has not publicly commented on the allegations.

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Bike Safety Means Having New Lanes and Helmet Laws, US Says

A government panel wants officials to build better cycling infrastructure, but its call to mandate helmets is already rankling cyclingadvocates. 

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Ecosia's Search Engine Plants More Trees With Every Web Search

The search engine Ecosia is trying to slow climate change by funneling profits into organizations that plant trees in deforested areas.

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Oprah Winfrey joins fight to save Rodney Reed’s life

Oprah Winfrey lent her voice to the rallying cry for Texas Gov. Greg Abbott to stop the Nov. 20 execution of Rodney Reed.

In an interview on CBS This Morning, Winfrey urged Abbott to take a deeper look into the Reed case, and the reason why so many Americans want his execution halted.

READ MORE: Free Rodney Reed: Celebrities come to the aide of death row inmate headed for execution

“At least the governor has to pause and look at the 2 million people who have signed a petition,” she said. “Two million voices saying listen to us, something is off here. Something needs to be done. Governor, if you’re watching, hello. I think this is a sign you’re supposed to at least not execute, but look at it,” she said.

The signatures she is referring to were collected on freerodneyreed.com. Change.org also created a petition and collected more than 300,000 signatures.

In addition to Oprah and Gayle King, celebrities such as Rihanna, Beyoncé, LL Cool J, and Kim Kardashian West have spoken out regarding Reed. Religious leaders like Bishop Joe S. Vásquez, head of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Austin, have joined the chorus of voices urging the governor to take beat and reconsider his decision on his case, and dozens of Democratic and Republican state lawmakers have put aside party politics to ask Gov. Abbott to stop the execution.

Reed, 51, was sentenced to die for the 1996 rape and strangulation murder of 19-year-old Stacey Stites. He has been on death row since 1998 and has maintained his innocence from the very beginning. His lawyers, who come from The Innocence Project, have argued that Reed was denied a full and fair trial on multiple counts. Another key point that the lawyers want to be reviewed that could possibly clear is name is that the belt use to strangle Stites has DNA evidence on it that was never tested.

READ MORE: HBO doc ‘True Justice’ explores lawyer Bryan Stevenson’s defense of death row inmates and his lynching memorial

Multiple people have come forward implicating Stites’ ex-fiancé, Jimmy Fennell, in her death. He was a former police officer who was released from prison last year. He pled guilty in 2008 for kidnapping a woman he met while on duty. That woman said he had also raped her.

Reed’s DNA evidence was found on Stites body, but Reed said he and Stites were having an affair, which is why his DNA was on her. Some believe Fennell knew of the affair.

Arthur J. Snow Jr., a former member of the Aryan Brotherhood, a white supremacist prison gang, said in a sworn affidavit last month that he served time in prison with Fennell and he personally heard him confess to the murder of Stites, according to The New York Times. He said Fennell bragged about killing his fiancée because she had cheated on him with a Black man. In the affidavit, Snow said he thought Fennell confessed to the killing to try and impress him and other gang members, whom he had sought out for protection.

Also, Jim Clampit, a former sheriff’s deputy, alleges that at Stites’ funeral, Fennell looked at her body and said, “You got what you deserved,” according to The Times.

READ MORE: Black man released from prison after serving more than 40 years on death row for wrongful conviction

With all of this new evidence, the fair and just thing would be for Abbott to stop Reed’s execution – or he might be responsible for killing an innocent man.

The post Oprah Winfrey joins fight to save Rodney Reed’s life appeared first on theGrio.



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'Emergency unfolding' in flooded South Sudan

People are finding it increasingly difficult to cope with the aftermath of the flooding, the UN says.

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Paris Ends an E-Scooter Melee With New Rules of the Road

France is moving to crack down on scooter sharing, but questions linger about how micromobility affects cities and citizens.

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Kamala Harris Proposes Legislation To Extend School Day To 6 p.m

On Tuesday, Kamala Harris introduced legislation seeking to have schools extend the public school day from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.  The bill would propose a pilot program aimed at helping working parents.  The Family Friend Schools Act would help to “align the school day with the work day to better support working families,” according to the democratic senator from California and presidential candidate.

“With the vast majority of schools closing at or around 3 pm, two hours short of the standard full-time work day, parents are often left in a bind,” Harris said in a press release. “Additionally, summer breaks present a challenge; in fact, three in four parents report at least some difficulty finding child care during that time period.”

The bill would provide $5 million in funding to 500 elementary schools over a 5-year period.  The funding would be used “to develop high-quality, culturally relevant, linguistically accessible, developmentally appropriate academic, athletic, or enrichment opportunities for students from at least 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday during the school year, with no closures except for Federal holidays, weekends, and emergencies” says Harris’ senate website.

“My mother raised my sister and me while working demanding, long hours,” said Harris. “So, I know firsthand that, for many working parents, juggling between school schedules and work schedules is a common cause of stress and financial hardship. But, this does not have to be the case. My bill provides an innovative solution that will help reduce the burden of child care on working families. It is time we modernize the school schedule to better meet the needs of our students and their families.”

Last month, California became the first station in the nation to pass a law requiring later start times at public schools. The new law requires middle schools to start after 8 a.m. and high schools to start after 8:30 a.m.



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New Emoji Are So Boring—but They Don't Have to Be

A new data set on the popularity of emoji reveals a problem with Unicode's approval process, along with a way to fix it.

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A Scientist's Tiny Black Hole Brings the Cosmos Into the Lab

Single-purpose quantum computers are helping physicists build simulations of nature's greatest hits and observe them up close.

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Locust invasion: UN warning for Ethiopia, Kenya, Eritrea and Sudan

The infestation devouring tonnes of crops in Ethiopia threatens neighbouring countries, the UN says.

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Equatorial Guinea appoint Sebastien Migne as coach

Former Kenya boss Sebastien Migne is the new coach of Equatorial Guinea ahead of the 2021 Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers.

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Thursday, November 7, 2019

Gerald Moore Sr.: Committed to Preparing Black Boys For Careers in STEM

BE Modern Man: Gerald Moore Sr.

Cyber-security engineer, entrepreneur, author; 47; Founder, Gerald Moore Online Technology School for Black Boys

Twitter: @geraldmoore360; Instagram: @geraldmooreunplugged

My latest startup is the Gerald Moore Online Technology School for Black Boys. I have a goal of educating 10,000 young black men and boys ages 8-16 per year online. The school’s primary focus will be preparing black boys for STEM professions, by teaching computer science, coding, mobile app development, and website development. I also have a background in basic electricity which I will also be included. Registration includes the Black Boys Read Book Club. I’ve also just published my book, Motivate Black Boys, How to Prepare Your Sons for Careers in STEM.

I’m a cybersecurity engineer and in this line of work, or any of the engineering sciences, black men are not very well represented. In my 20 year career, I’m typically the only black man in the room. I have not seen much growth in black male representation over that time, but I have seen the tremendous growth of black women in engineering and information technology. This is why my personal focus is on preparing black boys and young men for success in STEM.

Coaching youth sports is another way I am preparing black boys for success. I have been fortunate over the years to have many of my players go on to get degrees in the STEM fields. Many of them have stated to me that I introduced them to how even in sports, higher level math and science was involved in how we play the game. If you’ve ever played for me, you have a clear understanding of what an engineer is, and he’s not some nerd who can’t play ball and doesn’t listen to hip hop.

I have helped young black men at this point earn well over a million dollars in athletic scholarships and I’m very proud that most of them graduate and understand the importance of giving back to their communities.

WHAT ARE YOU MOST PROUD OF IN LIFE?

What I am most proud of in life is that I have become a man that is respected in my community and a father that is revered by my children.

My father used to talk to me about respect and how to earn it, and as a black man, it’s important that people respect you. He also told me to never let anyone disrespect me. Over time as life happens and I have learned the importance of having respect. This leads me to live my life a certain way that has provided me opportunities which, as a young teen on a negative path, would have never happened for me. I am very proud of the man that I have become.

I have five children. My oldest son Gerald Jr. received a full athletic scholarship to Ohio University. My oldest daughter Andrea is currently a senior in high school and has multiple full-ride scholarships for tennis and academics. My middle daughter Lauren is an extremely talented drummer and singer/songwriter; her band has won many talent competitions. My youngest are boy/girl twins also uniquely gifted; Jada my daughter is an extremely gifted dancer and Jordan is on track to follow his brother to athletic stardom. When I look at my children and all that they are accomplishing, sometimes I sit at my desk and cry, because I am so proud that I have been there every step of the way.

HOW HAVE YOU TURNED STRUGGLE INTO SUCCESS?

The best example I could give of how I turned struggle into success is becoming a teenage father at 17.

I was always smart enough to know that I did not want to be a statistic growing up, but that was once the path I was on. By 13, I had dealings with the police. By 15, I was on probation and had to do a Scared Straight program in Rochester, NY. My best friends growing up were dealing drugs and I had become a product of my environment. I was a ‘D’ student and going nowhere fast. However, I was a star athlete, and sports gave me structure and good men I respected in my life, which may have been my saving grace.

In the black community, what comes with athletic stardom? Girls. In my senior year of high school I fathered a son, Gerald Jr. To make matters more difficult, I ended up with full custody of him at three months old. This probably saved my life, as I knew at that moment that a lot of what he would be able to do with his life would be predicated on the precedent that I set. By my senior year of high school, I was getting up and getting myself together, dressing my son and dropping him of with the daycare provider every morning, going to football practice every day after school, and working a part-time job. That was a real struggle, and where I learned the definition of perseverance.

Here I am, 18 years old, living out every negative stereotype and statistic for young black males. However, growing up with a father at home, I knew that I had to make an immediate change. During my senior year of high school, I had colleges recruiting me to play football, but because of my low GPA, I was eliminated from most of those opportunities. Also with a child, how could I even make it work? I remember talking to a recruiter on the phone and he asked if I were to come to their school what would I major in. I said, “Electronics engineering,” and he laughed at me.

I graduated in 1995 with a Bachelor of Science degree in electronics engineering technology from Norfolk State University. I have a successful 20-plus-year career as an engineer. I have launched several small business startups and I have impacted many successful young black men, most importantly my first son, as I was just a baby myself when he was born. I say all the time, we grew up together. I don’t know if I would have the type of focus that I do now without him being my driving force to be successful.

WHO WAS YOUR GREATEST MALE ROLE MODEL AND WHAT DID YOU LEARN FROM HIM?

My greatest role model would have to be my father. My father was a great man with many flaws and I am grateful to have had the opportunity to learn great life lessons from his life and his words.

My father had a saying: “Do as I say, not what I do.” Somehow I got this message, as my father has had his struggles with alcoholism and drug addiction. To date, I have not done either. The most important thing that my father did for me is showed me how to work hard. I don’t remember a time where my father was not working. He went to work from 7:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m., then came home and worked until midnight in his own auto shop in our garage. From him, I learned how to work hard, the value of hard work and how to provide for my family.

My father was musically and technically gifted. These gifts have filtered through me and onto my children. My dad said to me, “It’s not the responsibility of the school to educate you, because the school does not know [you] nor can [it] cater to your interests.” This was really important as I learned to teach myself the things that I wanted to learn, which meant I did a lot of reading on my own and enjoyed absorbing knowledge of things that I was interested in. I was a ‘D’ student in high school and none of the teachers knew that I was putting in this type of work on my own and had far surpassed what they were teaching. I was reading engineering books in 9th grade and designing and installing complex audio systems by 10th grade.

My dad past away last July at age 70. I am grateful to have had him in my life and the opportunity to learn from his wisdom and his shortcomings. Definitely my greatest role model.

HOW ARE YOU PAYING IT FORWARD TO SUPPORT OTHER BLACK MALES?

I believe that I have a responsibility to give back to the community that birthed and nurtured me. I am nothing without all of the black men that poured into me especially my father, uncles, and coaches. These people are the reason I have been so successful. They are a big part of the why behind my mission of preparing black boys to succeed in life.

Therefore, the Gerald Moore Online Technology School for Black Boys—and its mission to develop a new generation of computer scientists, engineers, app developers, and designers—is how I pay it forward. Also, my Black Boys Read Book Club and its mission to make it cool for black men to read. I have several young men that I mentor. I have helped many young black men get scholarships to college. I’m all about preparing black boys for success.

HOW DO YOU DEFINE MANHOOD?

My definition of manhood is a simple one: It’s that point where you take total control of your own life, taking full responsibility for your actions and are accountable to those who depend on you for support and stability.

Now, this happens at different ages and stages for men. Some, very few, reach this point at 18. Some never reach this point. I feel I really achieved manhood at age 27, when I first felt in total control and in command of my life and where I was headed.

WHAT DO YOU LIKE MOST ABOUT BEING A BLACK MAN?

There is a certain power and mystique that I love, that comes with being an intelligent black man. It’s really hard to quantify but I feel it when I enter a room; it’s that “IT” factor. Being a black man also comes with a struggle of having to do, be and give more, and still not be considered equal. However, I thoroughly enjoy breaking the stereotype of what or who the black man is perceived to be.

What I love most about being a black man is having the love and adoration of a black woman. There is nothing more powerful than how I feel with the support of the black woman in my life. When I say I am going to do something and she says, ”Baby, you can do it,” I’m invincible in that moment.


BE Modern Man is an online and social media campaign designed to celebrate black men making valuable contributions in every profession, industry, community, and area of endeavor. Each year, we solicit nominations in order to select men of color for inclusion in the 100 Black Enterprise Modern Men of Distinction. Our goal is to recognize men who epitomize the BEMM credo “Extraordinary is our normal” in their day-to-day lives, presenting authentic examples of the typical black man rarely seen in mainstream media. The BE Modern Men of Distinction are celebrated annually at Black Men XCEL (www.blackenterprise.com/blackmenxcel/). Click this link to submit a nomination for BE Modern Man: https://www.blackenterprise.com/nominate/. Follow BE Modern Man on Twitter: @bemodernman and Instagram: @be_modernman.

 



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Kenya: Mobile camel clinic providing healthcare to nomads

The hardy animals are delivering health services for communities that would otherwise be cut off.

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Flexible yet sturdy robot is designed to “grow” like a plant

In today’s factories and warehouses, it’s not uncommon to see robots whizzing about, shuttling items or tools from one station to another. For the most part, robots navigate pretty easily across open layouts. But they have a much harder time winding through narrow spaces to carry out tasks such as reaching for a product at the back of a cluttered shelf, or snaking around a car’s engine parts to unscrew an oil cap.

Now MIT engineers have developed a robot designed to extend a chain-like appendage flexible enough to twist and turn in any necessary configuration, yet rigid enough to support heavy loads or apply torque to assemble parts in tight spaces. When the task is complete, the robot can retract the appendage and extend it again, at a different length and shape, to suit the next task.

The appendage design is inspired by the way plants grow, which involves the transport of nutrients, in a fluidized form, up to the plant’s tip. There, they are converted into solid material to produce, bit by bit, a supportive stem.

Likewise, the robot consists of a “growing point,” or gearbox, that pulls a loose chain of interlocking blocks into the box. Gears in the box then lock the chain units together and feed the chain out, unit by unit, as a rigid appendage.

The researchers presented the plant-inspired “growing robot” this week at the IEEE International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS) in Macau. They envision that grippers, cameras, and other sensors could be mounted onto the robot’s gearbox, enabling it to meander through an aircraft’s propulsion system and tighten a loose screw, or to reach into a shelf and grab a product without disturbing the organization of surrounding inventory, among other tasks.

“Think about changing the oil in your car,” says Harry Asada, professor of mechanical engineering at MIT. “After you open the engine roof, you have to be flexible enough to make sharp turns, left and right, to get to the oil filter, and then you have to be strong enough to twist the oil filter cap to remove it.”

“Now we have a robot that can potentially accomplish such tasks,” says Tongxi Yan, a former graduate student in Asada’s lab, who led the work. “It can grow, retract, and grow again to a different shape, to adapt to its environment.”

The team also includes MIT graduate student Emily Kamienski and visiting scholar Seiichi Teshigawara, who presented the results at the conference.

The last foot

The design of the new robot is an offshoot of Asada’s work in addressing the “last one-foot problem” — an engineering term referring to the last step, or foot, of a robot’s task or exploratory mission. While a robot may spend most of its time traversing open space, the last foot of its mission may involve more nimble navigation through tighter, more complex spaces to complete a task.

Engineers have devised various concepts and prototypes to address the last one-foot problem, including robots made from soft, balloon-like materials that grow like vines to squeeze through narrow crevices. But Asada says such soft extendable robots aren’t sturdy enough to support “end effectors,” or add-ons such as grippers, cameras, and other sensors that would be necessary in carrying out a task, once the robot has wormed its way to its destination.

“Our solution is not actually soft, but a clever use of rigid materials,” says Asada, who is the Ford Foundation Professor of Engineering.

Chain links

Once the team defined the general functional elements of plant growth, they looked to mimic this in a general sense, in an extendable robot.

“The realization of the robot is totally different from a real plant, but it exhibits the same kind of functionality, at a certain abstract level,” Asada says.

The researchers designed a gearbox to represent the robot’s “growing tip,” akin to the bud of a plant, where, as more nutrients flow up to the site, the tip feeds out more rigid stem. Within the box, they fit a system of gears and motors, which works to pull up a fluidized material — in this case, a bendy sequence of 3-D-printed plastic units interlocked with each other, similar to a bicycle chain.

As the chain is fed into the box, it turns around a winch, which feeds it through a second set of motors programmed to lock certain units in the chain to their neighboring units, creating a rigid appendage as it is fed out of the box.

The researchers can program the robot to lock certain units together while leaving others unlocked, to form specific shapes, or to “grow” in certain directions. In experiments, they were able to program the robot to turn around an obstacle as it extended or grew out from its base.

“It can be locked in different places to be curved in different ways, and have a wide range of motions,” Yan says.

When the chain is locked and rigid, it is strong enough to support a heavy, one-pound weight. If a gripper were attached to the robot’s growing tip, or gearbox, the researchers say the robot could potentially grow long enough to meander through a narrow space, then apply enough torque to loosen a bolt or unscrew a cap.

Auto maintenance is a good example of tasks the robot could assist with, according to Kamienski. “The space under the hood is relatively open, but it’s that last bit where you have to navigate around an engine block or something to get to the oil filter, that a fixed arm wouldn’t be able to navigate around. This robot could do something like that.”

This research was funded, in part, by NSK Ltd.



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Black cop fatally shot white woman after she approached him with scissors

A white woman in Louisiana who brandished scissors and called a Black police officer the n-word, was shot and killed after she refused to drop the shears.

On Oct. 25 at 5:45 a.m., Officer Patrick Edmonds Jr. responded to a report that there was a “disorderly person” at the La Quinta Inn in Bossier City, Louisiana. According to The Sun, this is when he encountered an erratic acting Shannon Rupert talking on the telephone in the hotel lobby area.

READ MORE: Black policeman says he was fired for being in an interracial relationship with colleague

“Ma’am, put those scissors down,” Edmonds repeatedly told Rupert, according to The Sun. The officer’s bodycam recorded Rupert yelling a racial slur at Edmonds. And she never dropped the scissors.

“You’re gonna have to shoot me, n—-,” Rupert reportedly could be heard saying.

According to The Sun, Rupert approached the front desk lobby to hang up the phone, and that is when the officer pulled his gun out, flashing a light into her face.

“Hey, if you come over here, I will kill you!” Officer Edmonds Jr. warns her, according to The Sun.

Rupert, with scissors in hand, walks toward Edmonds and he fires twice. The officer then calls for help for the woman, as she lay groaning on the ground.

Since the incident, Edmonds has been on administrative leave. An investigation conducted by the Bossier City Police Department and a separate review by the District Attorney’s Office have called the shooting “justified.”

READ MORE: Black police detective who worked for NYC mayor files $10 million discrimination suit

“No crime was committed by the officer as his actions constituted justifiable homicide,” the district attorney wrote in a letter on the incident, adding that Edmonds had a “reasonable belief that he was in imminent danger of losing his life.”

Rupert’s family is now left to grieve her loss.

Her cousin, Melinda Peterson, told KSLA-TV that Rupert has battled drug addiction.

“I knew she had been into drugs really bad. I tried helping her,” Peterson told the news station. “I tried talking to her to see if maybe we could get her some help, a recourse. Getting her into rehab or anything like that. She was just out of it.”

The Internal Affairs Division, per police department policy, is now investigating the incident to see if any department polices were violated.

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Rap Snacks, ‘The Official Snack of Hip Hop,” is Now Available in Walmart, Announces Partnership With Slutty Vegan

Rap Snacks, the popular potato chip brand that features the faces of rappers like Cardi B, Migos, and Fabolous, has secured another bag. Last month, the company announced that it is expanding from local delis and convenience stores into 4,200 Walmart stores around the country. In addition, it is partnering with Slutty Vegan to launch two new vegan chips later this year.

Known as “The Official Snack of Hip Hop,” CEO James Lindsay founded Rap Snacks Inc. in 1994 and began packaging the chips with a cartoon image of rap stars in 2003 after signing a deal with Universal Music Group. Each rapper is also given their own distinct chip flavor. Now, more than two decades later, Rap Snacks are being distributed via the highest-grossing company in the world.

“I am extremely excited to work with Walmart. If you think about the overall Walmart consumer options, as it related to food, Rap Snacks and Patty Pies are really the only African American branded products in Walmart,”  he told BLACK ENTERPRISE in an email. “I am also excited to expand the overall brand, potentially opening up doors for other consumer product companies owned by African Americans to follow the same path.”

Lindsay says he landed the deal with Walmart about two months ago after a buyer at the retail giant reached out to his team. “She said that she had been seeing the brand and had actually reached out to my team on LinkedIn, wanting to put us in stores.”

The History of Rap Snacks

Lindsay launched the company after raising $40,000 with the help of family and friends, according to RapSnacks.com. He knew the chips would be a hit after he sold 800 cases of the product in his first meeting with a distributor. Eventually, Rap Snacks grew into a 7-figure business but temporarily stopped its production from 2010 to 2015 due to the smaller size of the bags, which wasn’t as profitable for its producers. During that five-year stint, Lindsay worked as a brand manager for rapper Meek Mill, which provided him with deeper insight into the power of the artist. The brand then revamped and relaunched in 2016 with larger bags and selling for a higher price.

James Lindsay

James Lindsay, founder and CEO of Rap Snacks Inc.

The Future of Rap Snacks

Last month, Rap Snacks announced two new vegan chip flavors in partnership with Slutty Vegan, an Atlanta-based vegan burger restaurant. The new flavors will launch in December in over 100,000 stores across the country. Lindsay says the collaboration will help spread awareness about healthier food choices to underserved communities that may experience less access to vegan options otherwise.

“I am truly excited to partner with Slutty Vegan to bring our first-ever Rap Snacks vegan chip option to our customers,” he said in a press release. “Slutty Vegan has been immensely influential in introducing veganism to the culturally rich community of Atlanta and beyond. It’s always exciting to join forces with a brand that shares the same underlying mission as we do here at Rap Snacks—to push culture forward through food.”

Pinky Cole, who founded Slutty Vegan in 2018, says partnering with Rap Snacks has given her the opportunity to educate and empower disenfranchised communities. “It is especially important to me that this partnership allows Slutty Vegan the opportunity to introduce healthy vegan options to urban and underserved communities throughout the country,” she said. “Slutty Vegan and Rap Snacks complement each other perfectly, when someone walks into a Slutty Vegan restaurant they are greeted with hip-hop on the stereo and amazing food, and we can’t wait to expand our vegan movement nationwide with our new Rap Snacks line.”

Lindsay says his next goal is to make Rap Snacks into an international brand and continue to inspire people of color to become entrepreneurs. “My goal for Rap Snacks is to make it one of the biggest brands in the world. Hip-hop is one of the biggest streaming genres in the world today and our potential in that space cannot be limited. I want our community to believe that you can create momentum and brand recognition outside of just the music and expand globally.”



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Google Nest WiFi Review: Home Networking Made Easy

If you're already on the Google bandwagon, the Nest WiFi fits well with the company's vision of a connected home.

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Sen. Kamala Harris introduces bill that extends kids’ school day to 6pm

Parents spend thousands of dollars each school year in after-care expenses. Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) has proposed a bill that hopes to change this.

Harris’ proposal would extend the school day from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., which is several hours longer than a typical school day. The plan also calls for schools to only close for weekends, federal holidays and emergencies, in addition to the summers off. Her rationale is that “aligning school and work schedules is an economic growth and child development strategy,” according to Working Mother.

READ MORE: Kamala Harris campaign cuts headquarters staff, moves some to Iowa

Mother Jones reports the additional hours would not mean teachers would be mandated to instruct for longer periods or that students would be seated at their desks for longer periods. Staffers, however, would likely have to work more, and would be paid accordingly.

Harris said if the bill passes, it would first start as a pilot program in roughly 500 schools nationwide. Schools with a high percentage of low-income families would most likely be the first to participate in the pilot initiative. Participating schools would be eligible to receive up to $5 million over a five-year time period. After the pilot concludes, the Education Department would be tasked with putting together a report that analyzes student performance, teacher retention and parental employment, Working Mother reports.

 

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The bill would also require schools to secure grants and other private funding sources that could match 10 percent of the federal grant. This would be key for the idea to work in the long-term.

READ MORE: Baller Moves: LeBron James to bring transitional housing to I Promise School families in need

The bill lacks details, as Harris wants to give schools the purview to shape it in the way that works best for their school. If the bill passes, schools would be asked to fine-tune the particulars by requesting that parents, teachers and other community leaders participate in surveys after the first year to find the best approach for their school.

We will be paying attention to see how this develops, but applaud Harris for thinking of plans to help working parents.

The post Sen. Kamala Harris introduces bill that extends kids’ school day to 6pm appeared first on theGrio.



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