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Friday, January 10, 2020

Four Black Teens Locked Inside Of A Virginia Beauty Supply Store

black teens beauty supply store

Four black teens from Chesapeake, Virginia, were wrongfully detained inside of a beauty supply store after the owner thought they were thieves, according to Blavity

Based on the account of the store owner, the case of mistaken identity was allegedly rooted in a Dec. 28 incident where a group of black teens supposedly stole more than $1,000 worth of beauty supplies. Using footage from the store’s surveillance, the owner of Coco’s Beauty Supply created and distributed flyers with a picture of the alleged perpetrators among the other businesses in the strip mall where the store is located, including a Subway sandwich shop a few doors down.

Reubin Houston, father of one of the girls illegally detained, said a manager at the Coco Beauty Supply in the Parkview Shopping Center locked his daughter and her friends inside the store earlier this month because they thought that they were the group of girls who were previously recorded stealing the merchandise.

After the girls were locked inside the beauty supply store, Chesapeake Police arrived and investigated the accusations against the girls and determined that the 16-year-old and her friends were not involved in the robbery back in December and released them. Houston then filed a police report claiming the group was racially profiled.

A Chesapeake police spokesman said the girls should not have been locked in the store. Police are consulting with the city commonwealth’s attorney to see what should be done including the possibility of abduction charges.

The store manager has since apologized for the mistake and she is saying that she was acting on the instructions of the security guard, while the guard is denying this although he did help to distribute the flyers created by Coco’s Beauty Supply owner. Instead, the guard has blamed his involvement on a Subway employee who called him to report that he saw the girls and thus took action to inform the store manager.

A written statement from the Subway employee read: “Served the girls then security brought us a picture of the suspects, noticed one was sitting eating and alerted security and dialed 911,” reports WAVY.



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Donald Trump says he should have won Nobel Peace Prize not Ethiopia's Abiy Ahmed

He implied that he saved Ethiopia from war but Ethiopia's leader received the peace prize instead.

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15 Memorable Moments from the Women of Power Summit

women of power

Imagine walking into a room of leading women and being embraced by hundreds of smiles and hugs.

The Women of Power Summit is a one-of-a-kind experience. The amount of intentionality woven into every detail of the event is a standard that was set 15 years ago by the late and incomparable Barbara Graves. After identifying the need for black women to have an intimate space where they could show up authentically; get the tools they need to build as they climb the corporate ladder; build community, and be celebrated—the then Women of Power Leadership Summit, now affectionately known as the Women of Power Summit, was born!

Each year, women come with great expectations looking to build lifelong professional and personal bonds and to gather to celebrate themselves. Over the past 14 years, thousands of women have gathered to celebrate one another’s accomplishments, network, and honor themselves by investing in their personal and professional development.

Related: Black Enterprise Celebrates 15 Years of Honoring the Power and Legacies of Black Women

In addition to the sisterhood, Black Enterprise has also had the distinguished honor of having a host of phenomenal women speak at the Summit. As we approach the 15th Annual Women of Power Summit hosted by ADP at the Mirage in Las Vegas, we are highlighting some of the most memorable moments.

Take a look for yourself. And, don’t forget to grab your tickets today so that you don’t miss out on the opportunity to make new memories with us this year!

15 Unforgettable Moments

 

1. The legacy of Mrs. Barbara Graves, Creator of the Women of Power Summit


In the earliest years, watching my mother-in-law, who was by then a grandmother technically retired, truly step into her own power and helm an event, was amazing. She had worked at BE for years but always shunned the spotlight and did not even like it when my father-in-law introduced her from the stage. Yet she was passionate about these women, the uphill battle they faced and how determined they were. She was so proud of them, of their ambitions and accomplishments. I think she must have wondered at times how her own career might have been different if she’d been 20 years younger. She brought all of that to bear each time she spoke, and her genuineness resonated deeply with the audience. They looked up to her, and that was beautiful to see. —Caroline V. Clarke, Chief Brand Officer, Women of Power

 

2. The Women of Power energy.

The best parts of the Summit for me though, truly, don’t happen on stage. It’s in the hallways, the bathroom, or an airport when women approach me, sometimes tearfully, to tell me what the Summit has meant to them, to talk about what it’s done for them, how it’s made all the difference in their confidence, in their understanding of what it takes to level up, in their sense of what’s ultimately possible for them, or what’s next. They make true and lasting friends at the Summit. They find mentors and prayer partners, discover strengths (and weaknesses) they didn’t know were there. They get bolder, stronger, better because they get poured into from all directions. Some leave with a new vision for their lives; some get new jobs as a result of coming. There’s no end to the possibilities of what you leave the Summit with, if you arrive with an open heart, ready to give and receive. —Caroline V. Clarke, Chief Brand Officer of Women of Power

Women of Power

 

3. Donna Brazile, 2018 Legacy Award winner, telling her truth from the main stage!

If you know anything about Donna Brazile, you know that she does not play any games! At the 2018 Women of Power Summit, she took the stage for a powerful one-one-one conversation with Caroline Clarke, chief brand officer of Women of Power, about her journey (as a veteran Democratic political strategist and former chair of the Democratic National Committee) that left women in awe. Her realness and sense of humor when it came to being a black woman with political power coupled with her story about her journey was admirable. Whether you were in the room, watching the livestream, or retweeting the gems she was dropping on Twitter, here are 10 takeaways from Brazile’s moment center stage.

4. Bishop Vashti’s powerful sermon and dancing from the stage.


5. Kamala Harris’ 2019 address.

In the annals of leadership, there is no higher office than the president of the United States and perhaps no tougher moment during which to seek that office than now. Interviewed by fellow lawyer Star Jones, Harris, the first black woman candidate to run in almost 50 years talks about “The Truths We Hold,” and the hopes she harbors as she steps into the biggest race of her storied career.


6. Stacey Abrams for president 2024?

Big takeaways from some of the boldest and most historic campaigns of our time. Meet the women who despite tough odds and high stakes had the tenacity and temerity to seek power.


7. Iyanla Vanzant’s powerful keynote.

8. Honoring Amsale Aberra as a 2012 Legacy Award winner.

Amsale Aberra is an Ethiopian American fashion designer and entrepreneur. A designer of couture wedding gowns, she opened her flagship store on Madison Avenue in New York City. In 2012, Black Enterprise honored her with its Women of Power Legacy award.


9. Cynt Marshall’s riveting fireside chat!

Legacy Award Honoree Cynt Marshall walked into a raging #MeToo fire at the Dallas Mavericks after being handpicked by owner Mark Cuban to put it out. Find out how this AT&T veteran and the Queen of HASU (Hook a Sister Up!) transitioned into a role she never saw coming and is leading an organizational transformation that is being eyed as a template for the entire NBA and beyond, all in the last 12 months.


10. Honoring Ruby Dee as a 2008 Legacy Award winner.

The Emmy Award-winning actress Ruby Dee has credits that include The Jackie Robinson Story, A Raisin in the Sun, and Do the Right Thing. She also earned an Oscar nomination for her performance in American Gangster. In 2008, Ruby Dee earned a Black Enterprise Women of Power Legacy Award.


11.  Ursula Burns keeping it real about corporate America!

Ursula Burns, former chair and CEO of Xerox tells her journey to the C-suite that makes her the first African American woman to run a top, publicly traded corporation.


12. Honoring Dorothy Height as a 2008 Legacy Award winner.

Dorothy Height was a civil rights and women’s rights activist who focused on improving the circumstances and opportunities for African American women. In this candid discussion, she talks about her humble upbringing, her involvement in activism, and her many accomplishments throughout her illustrious career. In 2008, Height earned a Women of Power Legacy Award.

13. Michelle Obama’s welcome address during the Summit!


 

14. Caroline Clarke’s powerful ode to black women at the 2019 Women of Power Summit.

women of power

Caroline Clarke, Chief Brand Officer of Women of Power

The Women of Power Summit is your center of calm in the midst of the storm. We are, fittingly, at The Mirage and for those of you who are often isolated in your life and work, being here may feel like just that—an illusion of paradise in the midst of a barren desert—almost too good to be true. But I assure you this is no figment of your imagination. This room, these women, and this Summit are every bit as real as they seem and this week will be as life-changing as you allow it to be.

 

So keep calm and claim this moment and everything that is here for you. Keep calm and tap into the core of what you need and what you offer. Keep calm and trust yourself, trust each other, and trust that you will leave here with everything you hope for, and more than you imagined possible. Keep calm, and carry on with your head held high, remembering that there’s a crown on it. And even if no one else sees it, your sisters do. We do.

Read the full transcription from her speech! 

15. The sisterhood. 

There would be no Women of Power Summit without the sisterhood of women that has grown exponentially over the last 15 years! Join our Women of Power Facebook community and engage with thousands of incredible women!

Women of Power

We can’t wait to see you in Vegas to create more memories! 



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Tyler Perry offers newly released Atlanta inmate a job at his new studio

Tyler Perry has offered a newly freed Georgia prisoner a job with his studio and soundstage.

In 1991, Darrell Hall was sentenced to life in a Georgia prison for possessing a tiny amount of cocaine – equivalent to two sugar packets – and planning to distribute it. It was his second felony, and in the early 1990s, Georgia law required a life sentence for a second felony, according to CNN.

READ MORE: Tyler Perry reveals his work ethic secret: ’I have no writers room. I write it all.’

Hall became the first inmate to be freed as part of the Fulton County District Attorney’s Office Conviction Integrity Unit, which evaluates prior sentences by today’s sentencing guidelines to determine which ones stand out as unjust, according to a news release.

Upon learning of Hall’s release last month, Tyler Perry reached out to him via District Attorney Paul Howard Jr.’s Office to offer him a job.

“Hall was released from prison in December and was able to spend the holidays with his family,” Howard’s office said in a statement released to CNN. “In addition to his freedom, Tyler Perry Studios and Mr. Tyler Perry agreed to offer Hall a job so he can rebuild his life and move forward as a productive citizen of Fulton County.”

Had Hall been tried today for the same level offense that he was convicted of in 1991, he would have likely received a drug court program sentence that emphasized rehabilitation and treatment, according to Howard’s office.

Given that disparity, Fulton County Superior Court Judge Henry Newkirk vacated Hall’s sentence and resentenced him to time served, Howard’s office said.

Created last April, the Conviction Integrity Unit is the first of its kind in the southeastern US, according to Howard’s statement. Among its goals, the office will reexamine the October 1960 arrest of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. as he led a sit-in inside of an Atlanta department store.

READ MORE: Tyler Perry opens up about disciplining his son for disrespecting the nanny

“Dr. King was unjustly incarcerated more than 29 times during his lifetime. And not once did any district attorney or any prosecutor make one step forward to assist Dr. King or to exonerate him,” Howard said, according to CNN. “Those days of prosecutorial neglect, at least here in Fulton County, those days are over.”

The post Tyler Perry offers newly released Atlanta inmate a job at his new studio appeared first on TheGrio.



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Jackson National Life Insurance settles EEOC racial and sexual discrimination, will pay $20.5 million

Jackson National Life Insurance will pay Black and female employees in Denver and Nashville $20.5 million for racial and sexual discrimination, which represents the largest discrimination settlement ever reached in the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s Denver and Phoenix office.

READ MORE: Two Black executives file lawsuit against McDonald’s alleging racial discrimination

The 21 employees filed the EEOC complaint about receiving less pay than their white colleagues and after being passed over for promotions, reported The Denver Post. The employees also complained that they were subjected to sexual harassment and were referred to by slurs, including “lazy” and “resident streetwalkers.”

The complaint details how one manager routinely made comments about workers’ breasts and another instructed a Black woman to get on her knees as he held a bottle of vodka over her as to pour it on her, according to the complaint. In one instance, employees made clicking noises around an Ethiopian man. A white vice president says he was fired for refusing to give a bad evaluation to two Black employees who complained.

In total, 13 Black employees, seven white women and the white male vice president who was fired were claimants in the suit. The four-year consent decree that Jackson National settled with the employees outlines that the company pays $15 million to the 21 claimants and the remainder will cover attorney fees and other related costs, according to The Denver Post.

An EEOC lawyer said she hopes the settlement “sends a message to the whole financial industry.”

“This is an industry where there are very well paying jobs and it’s long been the domain of white males. We hope this sends a message to the financial industry to take discrimination against people of color and women seriously,” Mary Jo O’Neill, EEOC regional attorney, told The Denver Post.

Patrick Rich, a spokesman for Jackson National Life Insurance, told the newspaper that the company settled so they could “move forward.”

READ MORE: NYC comptroller pressures Comcast to settle racial discrimination case with Byron Allen

“While there has been no finding by a court or jury that Jackson violated any laws, we are humbled and recognize that the associates who made claims, in this case, believe they were not treated fairly or in a way that aligns with Jackson’s core values,” Rich said. “This is concerning to us, as it is not consistent with who we strive to be.”

The post Jackson National Life Insurance settles EEOC racial and sexual discrimination, will pay $20.5 million appeared first on TheGrio.



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Ricky Fountain: Chief Academic Officer Positions Schools To Win

Ricky Fountain, chief academic officer

BE Modern Man: Ricky Fountain

Education administrator, college lecturer; 44; Chief Academic Officer, Southfield Public Schools

Fortunately, I have been afforded the opportunity to work with and engage teams within urban school systems for the majority of my adult life. I have been a kindergarten teacher, a high school AP teacher, a college writing lecturer (ongoing), a K-8 and 6-8 school principal, an assistant superintendent, and a chief academic officer (the post I currently hold). Due to the collaborative work within the field and with fellow committed colleagues, schools and students have been the recipients of a few significant acknowledgments during my time as a school or district leader, including a $100,000 Skillman Grant to the Detroit Service Learning Academy (where I was school principal) in 2005 and recognition of Nolan Elementary School as the 2016–2017 Turnaround School of the Year, during my current tenure as chief academic officer.

The overall impact of the work has been measurable opportunity and access for numerous students and staff. Students being positioned to win, survive, and thrive is what resonates for me to this day and what will represent the most salient impact for me personally ad infinitum.

WHAT ARE YOU MOST PROUD OF IN LIFE?

Kahlil Gibran once wrote that “Work is love made visible.” In my role as a chief academic officer, I’m most proud, professionally, of being able to put in the work within the field of education that has been and continues to be a byproduct of the “beautiful struggle” [rapper, entrepreneur, and activist] Talib Kweli refers to so eloquently. I take sacred pride in and am proud of my work as a dad, a husband, and a brother, which represents the core of my contribution to legacy. I’m proud of the innumerable students and staff who have turned growth opportunities into actuality. I beam with pride, great pride, when I look at a few texts that have been published by Max Carrie, my pseudonym, who seeks to give and receive through the power of the written word. And most importantly, and without further ado, I take great pride in the fact that God has seen me for me, for an entire lifetime, knew my struggles and travails, and still took a risk on this tiny grain of sand. All praises due to my Heavenly Father—so much glory. I am so proud and thankful.

HOW HAVE YOU TURNED STRUGGLE INTO SUCCESS?

Primarily, my life’s work has been turnaround work in schools. Most schools I’ve worked for and/or districts I’ve worked within have been in literal struggle circumstances relative to academic achievement, institutional health, and well-being, etc. Therefore, I have tried to align systemic practice with earnest humanity to collaborate with others for the purpose of rapid transformation.

If I had to choose one explicit example of this, I could rest on an experience working at Nolan Elementary School as the school leader. Upon arrival, Nolan was ranked 908 out of the 913 accredited schools in the state of Michigan. So, as the saying goes, “the struggle was real.” However, there was an opportunity to rewrite our story and we rewrote the story together. My job was to establish a standard of action and build a sustainable model. It was a jolt to the system to ask people to go beyond the basics and to work for a verifiable purpose. My job was to take the proverbial “body blows” necessary to create and demand institutional design.

There was real pain along the way to progress. People were fired. No one was “let go,” because letting go of cancer is weak. We had to obliterate cancerous people—and we did. We had to install a system of practices, which was met with opposition from internal and external forces. But the biggest struggle was the mindset of the adults.

However, we quickly conquered the struggle with a dogmatic approach to reporting, data delivery, and accountability. People struggle when they lack clarity of purpose. So, we integrated consistent and clear check-ins with all stakeholders to keep them informed every step of the way. The struggle became success over time and through a strategic plan. Once the school went from bottom feeder to turnaround model, mindsets changed regarding the possible.

And that was the greatest success of the entire work: measurable outcomes gained from a place of immeasurable skepticism and doubt.

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

My greatest role model on this earth is Dr. Ralph Story. Dr. Story is a legend; he functioned as a quasi-father to many students of color, including me, while he served as a professor as well as an administrator at the University of Michigan for over 30 years. Dr. Story recently retired from the University of Michigan, but his presence and potency remain. He is a role model, with the emphasis on model, because he showed thousands of students of color over the years how to flourish at a highly competitive university, but more importantly, how to succeed in life at large.

I learned and still learn from him that mental dexterity and social capacity are powerful partners that, when in sync, propel one to fantastic possibility. Dr. Story taught me and still teaches me to edify myself not for personal success but community uplift. Dr. Story taught and still teaches me to take pride in breaking barriers, as he broke barriers as a black professor and poet decades ago. As a chief academic officer and educator, it is impossible for me to not think about all he has taught me.

That is why I am a shameless and appreciative member of the Dr. Story fan club. And, it just makes sense, that his nickname is “The Truest,” because he is the truest man I have ever met.

WHAT’S THE BEST ADVICE YOU’VE EVER RECEIVED?

“Know your limitations…and exceed them.”

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

My biggest strategy in paying it forward, separate from the work I do in schools and in general as chief academic officer, is the maintenance of a network of black male professionals: my crew. We have established our own “old boys network,” where we look out for, support, and communicate with one another daily, weekly, monthly, etc. We are rewriting our own narrative and challenging the notions of “crabs in a barrel” and “black men can’t work together” or love one another. We care about and look out for  each other, serve as brothers for those who don’t have brothers, give advice and counsel to one another, and hold one another accountable for current success and future success regarding our children, wives, etc.

We pay it forward one conversation, chiding, and celebration at a time. And, in the process, we model black male health and relationships to our sons and daughters. This is the power in the unity.

HOW DO YOU DEFINE MANHOOD?

Manhood is the great dichotomy. A great man is complex, but communicates, leads and follows in clear and concise ways. A great man is virtuous in effort but flawed enough and experienced enough to know that judgment comes from God, and true virtue is learning to understand oneself and learning others along the way. A great man is reflective, thoughtful, but does not wait a month to solve or take action on the problems of the day. A great man knows that manhood is a staunch and stern walk, filled with real-life responsibilities and tasks, but does not reject opportunities to play with and engage his children in shameless frolic, publicly or privately, as a child’s joy is pure and shameless. A great man is learned and academic but knows that being a virgin to the destructive is what makes ignorance bliss.

Manhood is individual greatness…and if not so, it cannot be us. OUR collective manhood has endured international, global, and hegemonic attacks and we, of course, still stand with the brightest smiles and strongest spirits that allow for our dichotomy to work for us as men, black men, proud to be.

WHAT DO YOU LIKE MOST ABOUT BEING A BLACK MAN?

Frankie Beverly said it best: Happy feelings! Being a black man is a marvelous motivation for all actions. Being a black man is historic every day. When the world expects nothing save for failure, tragedy, and criminality and you give the world back production, success, and love for family, community, and black lives (and all lives) that do matter, there is a sweet satisfaction in that by itself.

I love what being a black man means historically. There is such greatness and strength in our lineage. I feel it in everything I read, I see, and I hear in music, in the pulpit, on the stage, in my spirit. I was meant to be a black man. I was meant to live this life and to die proving a point and celebrating a triumph.


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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Gadget Lab Podcast: Wrapping Up CES 2020

The hosts look back at a show filled with fake-meat sliders, AI everything, and an ocean of electric scooters.

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Export Controls Threaten the Future of AI Outposts in China

As restrictions intensify, it will become more difficult for American companies to maintain labs in the talent-rich country.

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WWIII Memes, Oddly, Prove There's Hope for the Internet

Jokes about World War III aren't really funny—but they're also evidence of an engaged global debate.

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A New Law for Gig Workers Reaches Beyond Ride-Hail Drivers

AB 5 was designed to support Uber and Lyft contractors. But it also leaves therapists, truckers, and psychologists struggling to understand their new role.

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The 6 Best Toys at CES 2020: STEM, Robots, AR Board Games

At CES 2020, toy makers returned to the real world with games, bots, and AR board games. We played them all.

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Niger army base attack kills 25 soldiers

Niger and its neighbours are struggling to contain an Islamist insurgency in West Africa.

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Thursday, January 9, 2020

Africa's week in pictures: 3-9 January 2020

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

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WATCH: New York Attorney Mondaire Jones could make history in 2020 with a congressional run

 

Lawyer, nonprofit leader, and activist Mondaire Jones is in the running to become the next Democrat to represent New York state’s 17th Congressional District. Jones — who grew up in Rockland County, about 30 minutes north of New York City —  is very proud to be running a campaign in his area and determined to create policies that will benefit the community. If elected, he will be the first openly Black gay Congressman.

READ MORE: Julian Castro’s exit is latest blow to diversity of 2020 presidential candidate field

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During an interview with theGrio, Jones, a Democrat, revealed that because he was Black, gay, and from a low-income household, he never thought he would make it to the House of Representatives.

“It wasn’t something that was in my future,” says Jones. “I thought that when people learned the authentic Mondaire, that wouldn’t be something that they would accept. I’ve been really grateful to see the changes in public opinion and in our society over the past couple of years.”

According to a report by The Victory Institute, Nationwide,  there are just 698 openly LGBTQ elected officials. LGBTQ elected officials who identify as Black, African American, and/or Afro-Caribbean rose 43.3 percent (from 30 to 43). In 2019, 10 openly LGBTQ people were sworn into the 116th Congress U.S. but none were Black.

READ MORE: Grio Good News Report | DaShawn Usher, Founder and Executive Director of “MOBI,” is creating a safe space for Black gay and queer men

“I’m not running to make history” continues Jones. “I’m running to fight for the people in my district. Of course, it’s important that we have representation. And honestly, if I had been able to look to somebody in Congress like myself growing up, life would have been a lot easier for me. I would have had direct evidence of the fact that things really do get better for someone like myself. So, that history is not lost on me. When Barbara Jordan died, her obituary said that she had lived with a woman for 20 years. It’s wild that a lot of our heroes were not able to be themselves.”

“I was raised by a single mom in a small working-class community of about 30,000 people called the Village of Spring Valley,” shares the Democratic candidate.

“My mom worked multiple jobs just to be able to provide for our family, even as we relied on Section 8 housing and food stamps. So for me, the economic insecurity that a lot of people are experiencing in my district and certainly all throughout this country is something that’s really personal for me. And I think that I’m the person in my race for the Democratic nomination that’s best equipped to fight for working-class families and for people of color such as myself and for low-income people.”

Watch the full interview above.

Courtesy of Mondaire Jones

For more on Mondaire Jones’s campaign, click here.

The post WATCH: New York Attorney Mondaire Jones could make history in 2020 with a congressional run appeared first on TheGrio.



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One of R. Kelly’s two girlfriends says they lied for him during Gayle King interview

In the wake of police being called to R. Kelly’s Chicago after his two live-in girlfriends got into a physical altercation caught on camera, one of them is coming forward with a stunning revelation about how truthful they have been concerning his case.

Wednesday afternoon, which happened to be Kelly’s 53rd birthday, Chicago PD arrived on the scene in response to a reported battery at Kelly’s Trump Tower condo. This took place shortly after Azriel Clary and Joycelyn Savage were seen coming to blows on Instagram Live.

READ MORE: R Kelly’s live-in girlfriends get into apparent brawl on video, police called to his condo

“The female victim and the 24-year-old offender were engaged in a physical altercation until separated by unknown individuals at the scene,” Chicago Police said, according to USA Today. “The offender fled and is not in police custody at this time.”

After the incident, Clary took to social media to tell her side.

“The skeletons is [sic] coming out. Period,” she explained. “You know what? Rob has been lying to all of y’all, and that’s the sad part about it…He been lying to all.”

READ MORE: Lifetime’s ‘Surviving R. Kelly’ sequel leads to spike in calls to sexual assault hotline

“He had people like me lying for him,” she continued, adding that she wanted Savage in jail as well.

She then dropped a bombshell about her appearance on CBS This Morning with Savage last March, where they both vehemently defended Kelly, now claiming, “That’s why we never watched the documentary. We got on Gayle King as stupid as can f**king be.”

READ MORE: Family of R. Kelly’s alleged victim outraged at Gayle King for giving singer a platform

Wednesday evening TMZ confirmed that Savage had surrendered to Chicago PD and was booked for misdemeanor battery for the incident at the entertainer’s condo. She is set to face a judge Thursday and face the charge in court on Feb. 6.

Authorities say Clary claims she was punched in the face with a closed fist and had to go to the hospital to be treated for redness and swelling of her left eye. When asked for a comment, Savage’s parents shared they solely blame R. Kelly for this week’s incident between the two women even though he is currently behind bars.

The post One of R. Kelly’s two girlfriends says they lied for him during Gayle King interview appeared first on TheGrio.



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Taraji P. Henson Launches Her Own Haircare Line in Target

Taraji P. Henson

If Taraji P. Henson wasn’t an award-winning actress, then you may have ended up sitting in her salon chair.

Although it’s hard to imagine the Empire star giving clients sew-ins and blowouts, the Howard alum revealed that she used to do hair back in college to earn extra money. And now, she’s revisiting that side hustle with the launch of her own haircare line.

“I know that if I didn’t go into acting, I would have been a cosmetologist,” Henson told People in an exclusive interview.

Henson, who says that she’s never lost her passion for hair, has been working on her new hair collection, TPH by Taraji, for 10 years. “I was like a mad scientist,” said the Golden Globe winner about creating the line, which she started concocting in her kitchen.

 

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Set to officially launch in Target stores on Jan. 29, the 18-piece product line was created for every texture, from straight to wavy to curly to coily. The color-coordinated line is divided into four parts: cleansing and care, repair, treatments, and scalp-care. However, Henson told Allure that she particularly wanted to focus on scalp care products due to her own experiences wearing weaves over the years.

“The first time I went to get the weave taken out, it smelled like mildew. I was so embarrassed. I was washing my hair, but wasn’t drying the weft,” she said. “When you have a weave or an install, your hair is braided down and then sometimes they sew a hair net down on top of that and then they sew the hair tracks on top of that. My dilemma was how do I get to my scalp? How do I clean it? I didn’t ever want that mildew smell again.” Her Master Cleanse, the hero product, is inspired by a homemade concoction Henson made specifically to refresh her scalp when she wears weaves.

Henson first teased on the brand’s Instagram account back in September of 2019. The 49-year-old actress posted a recent selfie after using her products to do her natural hair.

 

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Hi y’all I did my hair with my products! @tphbytaraji #NoFilter #NoMakeup #JustMe #FreshFaceHi #TPHbyTaraji 🙏🏾💋💋💋

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Chicago mayor wants city to grow legal weed and give minorities the opportunity to ‘buy-in’

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot wants people of color to also benefit from the recreational adult-use marijuana industry.

On Monday, Lightfoot said up to $15 million that is generated by tax-increment financing could serve as seed money for Black and brown Chicago residents to learn the business and “buy into” a city plan to open a “cooperative cultivation center,” according to the Chicago Sun-Times. Most importantly, the money could help minorities overcome their largest hurdle to getting involved in the industry: capital.

READ MORE: Cannabis sales in Illinois hit nearly $3.2 million on first day of legalization

Currently, “the vast majority” of people who cultivate and run legalized marijuana businesses are white men, the mayor said.

“This is a very, very expensive business to get involved with. The basics to be a cultivator requires about a $13 million to $15 million investment. There are not a lot of people that have that, particularly in a market that a lot of banks and traditional lenders won’t touch,” Lightfoot said, according to the Sun-Times. “I think the only way to really crack this nut is for the city to invest its own resources to get engaged, get diverse entrepreneurs involved in the most lucrative part of the business, which is cultivation.”

“First of all, we’ve got to jump through the regulatory hoops. … Hopefully, we will get those roadblocks cleared. But I’m very serious about it,” the mayor added.

In December, Lightfoot first mentioned the concept of a city-owned cultivation center, in response to a threat from Jason Ervin, the City Council’s Black Caucus chairman, to delay the Jan. 1 start date for selling recreational weed in Chicago to July 1 due to lack of minority representation.

Ervin continues to be angry because Black people have paid the highest price in the war on drugs yet have “zero representation” among the owners of 11 medical marijuana dispensaries up and running on New Year’s Day.

Lightfoot believes if the city gets involved in the recreational marijuana business, it could open the doors to minority participation. “One of the things that every entrepreneur that’s a small businessperson faces is access to capital. There are some things that we can do using existing city resources to help facilitate that,” she explained, reported the Sun-Times.

READ MORE: Illinois city plans reparations fund for Black residents using cannabis revenue

“I’ve made no secret of the fact that I would like to have the opportunity for the city to create a cooperative cultivation center so we can bring a professional in, let the professionals run it. But then, people will buy into the cooperative — either with modest cash investment or sweat equity — and eventually, after they learn the business from top-to-bottom, turn that over to them,” Lightfoot added.

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Two Black executives file lawsuit against McDonald’s alleging racial discrimination

Two Black McDonald’s executives have filed a lawsuit against the Chicago-based, fast food chain claiming they were discriminated against and passed over for promotions.

The lawsuit, filed Tuesday in Chicago federal court by Victoria Guster-Hines and Domineca Neal, both of whom work out of the company’s Dallas office, claim they were passed over for raises, threatened, and subjected to racial slurs and an overall “hostile and abusive work environment,” according to The Chicago Tribune.

READ MORE: Philly teen boys brutally assault McDonald’s worker after she refuses to give them free food

The suit alleges that McDonald’s demoted Guster-Hines and Neal in July 2018 from positions of vice president to senior director positions when the company restructured under its former CEO, Steve Easterbrook. What the restructuring essentially did, according to the lawsuit, was “purge” African Americans from senior executive titles.

Easterbrook, who was fired late last year after he admitted to having a consensual relationship with an employee, is named in the lawsuit as a defendant, as well as current CEO Chris Kempczinski and Charles Strong, the west-zone president for McDonald’s.

“In shocking ways difficult to overstate, McDonald’s under Easterbrook and Kempczinski declared war against the African American community,” the lawsuit said, reported The Chicago Tribune.

In a statement, McDonald’s disputes “characterizations” in the lawsuit and said it is reviewing it for further comment.

“At McDonald’s, our actions are rooted in our belief that a diverse, vibrant, inclusive and respectful company makes us stronger,” the company statement read, according to The Tribune. “While we disagree with characterizations in the complaint, we are currently reviewing it and will respond to the complaint accordingly.”

In the statement, McDonalds also pointed out that 45% of its corporate officers and all 10 of its field vice presidents are people of color, according to The Tribune.

READ MORE: S.C. man sips McDonald’s sweet tea, but it had an ingredient most people smoke

Carmen Caruso, the attorney representing Guster-Hines and Neal, said both employees have taken a leave of absence from McDonald’s and have filed discrimination charges with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

The lawsuit alleges the employees were subjected to years of racial discrimination and seeks undisclosed monetary damages, however, it specifically notes over $2 million in lost pay and benefits for Guster-Hines and “hundreds of thousands of dollars” for Neal.

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Cory Booker: Impeachment trial could be ‘big blow’ to my campaign

By JULIE PACE AP Washington Bureau Chief
WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. Cory Booker said a looming impeachment trial and other pressing issues in Washington could deal a “big, big blow” to his Democratic presidential campaign by keeping him away from Iowa in the final weeks before the Feb. 3 caucuses.

Booker is one of five senators running for the Democratic nomination who face the prospect of spending the lead-up to the first-in-the-nation caucuses in the Senate chamber as jurors in President Donald Trump’s trial instead of barnstorming Iowa. The challenge for Booker is particularly acute, given that he has struggled to break into the top tier of candidates and needs a strong showing in Iowa to keep his campaign going.

“It’s going to be a challenging four weeks in the caucus for us,” Booker said in an interview on The Associated Press’ “Ground Game” podcast. “If we can’t raise more money in this final stretch, we won’t be able to do the things that other campaigns with more money can do to show presence.”

The New Jersey senator wouldn’t say how much money his campaign needs to raise to stay competitive in Iowa, including through television advertising, if he’s marooned in Washington during a Senate trial. His campaign has been candid about previous fundraising struggles, announcing in September that he could be forced to end his campaign unless he raised $1.7 million in 10 days. He cleared that bar and stayed in the race.

Yet Booker’s standing remains tenuous. He failed to meet the polling requirements for the last Democratic debate and has not qualified for next week’s faceoff. A poor showing in Iowa, where his campaign has plunged significant resources, would make it difficult for him to continue in the race.

“If our pathway to victory ever closes off, I’m not staying in,” said Booker, who predicted he would “upset expectations in Iowa.”

“Whether that’s one, two, three, four, I don’t know. But we will definitely upset expectations,” he said.

Booker spoke to the AP on Wednesday just after attending an all-Senate briefing with administration officials on the intelligence used to justify last week’s targeted killing of Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani. Like most Democratic senators, and a small group of Republicans, Booker said he was unconvinced by the administration’s argument that an imminent threat against Americans justified the killing.

The hastily scheduled briefing prompted Booker to cancel events in Iowa to return to Washington. His schedule for the rest of the month is also in limbo as congressional leaders haggle over how and when to launch the Trump impeachment trial.

“If this trial lasts two weeks, that is literally dozens of events we won’t be able to do,” Booker said.

Other candidates facing the same predicament are Sens. Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Amy Klobuchar and Michael Bennet.

Booker has repeatedly sidestepped opportunities to draw sharp contrasts with some of his rival candidates, saying he doesn’t want the party’s eventual nominee to be weakened by the time they face off against Trump in the general election. Booker said he also has genuine friendships with several of the candidates and has bonded with others during the course of the grueling campaign.

He singled out Joe Biden for an assist in his relationship with actress girlfriend Rosario Dawson. Booker said Dawson called the former vice president one of his “best wingmen” after Biden sang his praises when they met at a recent primary debate.

“A solid to him for being one of the most persuasive arguments that Rosario Dawson should double-down in her relationship with me,” Booker said of Biden.
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Follow Julie Pace at http://twitter.com/jpaceDC
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Catch up on the 2020 election campaign with AP experts on our weekly politics podcast, “Ground Game.”

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DR Congo jail: Inmates starve to death in Makala Prison

Seventeen people have died in the country's biggest jail where it is feared another 100 are close to dying.

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