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Tuesday, May 5, 2020

Trevor Noah is Paying His Furloughed Crew’s Salaries Out of Pocket During COVID-19 Crisis

Trevor Noah

If only more bosses were better leaders! Comedian and talk show host Trevor Noah is paying the salaries of his furloughed workers while the ongoing coronavirus pandemic continues to hurt the economy, according to The Daily News.

The Daily Show with Trevor Noah host is doing his television show remotely but he is making sure that the crew of 25 that works with him are being paid. He is doing so by paying the staff members out of his own pockets while everyone waits for the rest of the world to return to some type of normalcy. Although all 25 crewmembers aren’t working with him remotely, he is still paying their normal salaries.

Noah had informed his crew members that he will continue to pay their current salaries until production begins to ramp back up in the television industry.

“These are the people who have been on the show with Trevor from day one and help him put on the show,” a source reportedly told Variety magazine. “Trevor is personally covering their salaries until the production business opens again. He respects his crew tremendously and feels it’s only right that they get through this together.”

Comedy Central announced last week that, as long as he films The Daily Social Distancing Show with Trevor Noah from inside his apartment, the show will be 45 minutes long instead of its traditional half-hour. It is the first time in the franchise’s history that it has expanded beyond its typical half-hour format.

The Daily Show with Trevor Noah currently reigns as the No. 1-rated show in late-night among viewers in the 18-34 age range. Noah’s March 26 interview with Dr. Anthony Fauci has garnered more than 43 million views.

Back in 2014, Noah became the senior international correspondent for The Daily Show, and in 2015, he took over when long-time host Jon Stewart left. Noah is signed on to remain in this position until 2022.



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PAC committee seeks to draft Michelle Obama as Biden’s VP nominee

A new political action committee is working to build “substantial grassroots support for a potential Michelle Obama candidacy and help garner media attention for a vice-presidential nominee who has the power to beat Donald Trump.”

The Committee to Draft Michelle Obama filed a Statement of Organization last month with the Federal Election Commission. The group is headed by a small group of liberals with experience in politics. According to their website, DraftMichelle.org, “Millions of Americans support Michelle Obama as the Democratic Party’s VP Nominee. We’ve assembled a group of advocates who are on the forefront of the initiative.”

READ MORE: Biden says he’d pick Michelle Obama as his VP ‘in a heartbeat’

In a comprehensive statement, the group states that it “firmly believes that Ms. Obama will not only benefit the Democratic ticket this November but also help lead this country to be more just and caring.”

Michelle Obama theGrio.com
CHICAGO, IL – NOVEMBER 13: Former first lady Michelle Obama kicks off her “Becoming” book tour with a signing at the Seminary Co-op bookstore on November 13, 2018 in Chicago, Illinois. In the book, which was released today, Obama describes her journey from Chicago’s South Side to the White House. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

The group says that they think that November’s presidential election is “a historic battle to reclaim the soul of America,” and explains that the havoc wrecked by the coronavirus epidemic means that the Democratic Party must nominate a vice-presidential nominee “who has the trust of the American people, a vision to lead our nation forward and empathy for the challenges faced by all Americans.”

Further, they go on to say that they, “believe that Mrs. Obama’s perspective will go a long way towards building an honest, people-centered campaign this year as well as positively informing policy in the White House in years to come.”

READ MORE: Michelle Obama ‘Becoming’ doc set for Netflix on May 6

While all of that is true, Mrs. Obama has stated, emphatically, that she has no desire to run for public office. In fact in her memoir, “Becoming” she wrote: “I’ll say it here directly: I have no intention of running for office, ever.”

However, while The Committee to Draft Michelle Obama may have one person in mind for vice-president, they said in their statement that, “However strongly we support Ms. Obama as former Vice President Joe Biden’s running mate, we will transfer our resolve to whoever joins the ticket to defeat the most dangerous incumbent in the history of our nation.”

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Young Men and Boys of Color Can Now Receive Free Remote STEM Content and Literacy Support

Free Remote STEM and Literacy Content

Millions of students are out of school, but class is still in session. And as students log on to online portals, a number of educational leaders are doing their part to ensure that black boys do not get left behind.

The Sims-Fayola Foundation recently announced that they are partnering with FYR is LIT (Fueling Youth Reading is Leaders in Training) to provide online tutoring services for young men anywhere in the country whose literacy development has been impacted by school closures or e-learning due to COVID-19.

The Sims-Fayola Foundation is a Denver-based nonprofit with a mission to improve the life outcomes of young men and boys of color and to increase the capacity of those who work with them. Through this online offering, young men will be encouraged to continue their learning and be introduced to STEM.

Related: Barack Obama and Eric Holder Address Challenges Young Men of Color Face Amid COVID-19

As outlined by the organization in a statement:

Individual tutoring sessions led by LIT Tutors will be tailored to the students’ literacy and reading needs based on their intake assessment conducted by master teacher, Dr. Leslie Hamdorf, and Orton Gillingham, an associate candidate.

Tutoring sessions last for 40 minutes and will use the Zoom software to connect the LIT Tutor and the student. The Orton Gillingham approach is both diagnostic and prescriptive, so the format of the session will be as follows: letter annunciation and phoneme awareness, spelling rules, writing practice, and read aloud.

Tutoring Step-by-Step Sign-Up Process:

  • Step 1: Submit an inquiry by emailing us using the button below.
  • Step 2: Virtual intake assessment conducted by Dr. Hamdorf. This assessment lasts between 25-45 minutes.
  • Step 3: Match student with a LIT Tutor and agreement for the number of sessions decided.
  • Step 4: Begin online tutoring sessions with LIT Tutor.

If you are interested in literacy tutoring for a young man you know, click here to submit an email request to the Sims-Fayola Foundation.

 



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House Democrats Propose Widespread Student Loan Forgiveness Bill Due To COVID-19

Ayanna Pressley and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez

The COVID-19, or the novel coronavirus, has caused severe economic fallout that has crippled the lives of Americans around the country. While the Senate has passed a stimulus package with initiatives to help Americans through this outbreak, many feel that the current package does not do enough to curb long-time economic side effects as a result of the massive job loss from the pandemic. Now House Democrats have come together to propose a new way to save the economy from the pandemic’s effects by canceling student loan debt for millions of borrowers.

Many student loan borrowers have been greatly impacted by the coronavirus and are left with no income to pay off their debt. While service providers provide some limited options such as interest rate freezes and temporary forbearance, many are not eligible for various reasons. Depending on how long the quarantine goes, it can have severe consequences on borrowers.

The Student Debt Emergency Relief Act has now been sponsored Rep. Ayanna Pressley and others to address the mounting student debt that has been crippling Americans. “During this unprecedented crisis, no one should have to choose between paying their student loan payment, putting food on the table or keeping themselves and their families safe and healthy,” said Pressley according to Yahoo Finance. “We must prioritize debt cancellation for the 45 million student loan borrowers who are struggling to pay off their debt during this difficult time.”

The bill would cancel $30,000 in federal student loans and how student loan forgiveness to be tax-free, meaning debt cancellation would not be taxed as income. It would also give the government power to assume borrower’s monthly payments so users would have more options to remain on track for their loan payoff in addition to suspending all involuntary collections such as wage garnishments.



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Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo 15 First Look: Two Too Many Screens

With two screens and powerful hardware, this gaming laptop is somehow less than the sum of its parts.

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Coronavirus: Do not use untested remedies, WHO Africa warns

The statement comes as Madagascar is promoting a product that has not gone through clinical trials.

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The Relentless Startup Fast-Tracking Ford’s Self-Driving Cars

Meet Brian Salesky and the team of resourceful engineers at Argo, the little company trying to crack a big problem: safe autonomous driving.

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Everything We Know About Covid-19 Antibody Tests (So Far)

Should you take a test, and what does it mean for immunity? You’ve got questions, but we’ve got … more questions.

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What Is Net Neutrality? The Complete WIRED Guide

ISPs shouldn't be able to block some sorts of data and prioritize others—here's what to know about the struggle to treat information on the internet the same.

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The Best Distraction From News and Social Media? Foreign Films

Being forced to read subtitles means you can't read Twitter—a gift at a time when it's nearly impossible to escape into a theater.

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Monday, May 4, 2020

Robots help some firms, even while workers across industries struggle

This is part 2 of a three-part series examining the effects of robots and automation on employment, based on new research from economist and Institute Professor Daron Acemoglu. 

Overall, adding robots to manufacturing reduces jobs — by more than three per robot, in fact. But a new study co-authored by an MIT professor reveals an important pattern: Firms that move quickly to use robots tend to add workers to their payroll, while industry job losses are more concentrated in firms that make this change more slowly.

The study, by MIT economist Daron Acemoglu, examines the introduction of robots to French manufacturing in recent decades, illuminating the business dynamics and labor implications in granular detail.

“When you look at use of robots at the firm level, it is really interesting because there is an additional dimension,” says Acemoglu. “We know firms are adopting robots in order to reduce their costs, so it is quite plausible that firms adopting robots early are going to expand at the expense of their competitors whose costs are not going down. And that’s exactly what we find.”

Indeed, as the study shows, a 20 percentage point increase in robot use in manufacturing from 2010 to 2015 led to a 3.2 percent decline in industry-wide employment. And yet, for firms adopting robots during that timespan, employee hours worked rose by 10.9 percent, and wages rose modestly as well.

A new paper detailing the study, “Competing with Robots: Firm-Level Evidence from France,” will appear in the May issue of the American Economic Association: Papers and Proceedings. The authors are Acemoglu, who is an Institute Professor at MIT; Clair Lelarge, a senior research economist at the Banque de France and the Center for Economic Policy Research; and Pascual Restrepo Phd ’16, an assistant professor of economics at Boston University.

A French robot census

To conduct the study, the scholars examined 55,390 French manufacturing firms, of which 598 purchased robots during the period from 2010 to 2015. The study uses data provided by France’s Ministry of Industry, client data from French robot suppliers, customs data about imported robots, and firm-level financial data concerning sales, employment, and wages, among other things.

The 598 firms that did purchase robots, while comprising just 1 percent of manufacturing firms, accounted for about 20 percent of manufacturing production during that five-year period.

“Our paper is unique in that we have an almost comprehensive [view] of robot adoption,” Acemoglu says.

The manufacturing industries most heavily adding robots to their production lines in France were pharmaceutical companies, chemicals and plastic manufacturers, food and beverage producers, metal and machinery manufacturers, and automakers.

The industries investing least in robots from 2010 to 2015 included paper and printing, textiles and apparel manufacturing, appliance manufacturers, furniture makers, and minerals companies.

The firms that did add robots to their manufacturing processes became more productive and profitable, and the use of automation lowered their labor share — the part of their income going to workers — between roughly 4 and 6 percentage points. However, because their investments in technology fueled more growth and more market share, they added more workers overall.

By contrast, the firms that did not add robots saw no change in the labor share, and for every 10 percentage point increase in robot adoption by their competitors, these firms saw their own employment drop 2.5 percent. Essentially, the firms not investing in technology were losing ground to their competitors.

This dynamic — job growth at robot-adopting firms, but job losses overall — fits with another finding Acemoglu and Restrepo made in a separate paper about the effects of robots on employment in the U.S. There, the economists found that each robot added to the work force essentially eliminated 3.3 jobs nationally.

“Looking at the result, you might think [at first] it’s the opposite of the U.S. result, where the robot adoption goes hand in hand with destruction of jobs, whereas in France, robot-adopting firms are expanding their employment,” Acemoglu says. “But that’s only because they’re expanding at the expense of their competitors. What we show is that when we add the indirect effect on those competitors, the overall effect is negative and comparable to what we find the in the U.S.”

Superstar firms and the labor share issue

The competitive dynamics the researchers found in France resemble those in another high-profile piece of economics research recently published by MIT professors. In a recent paper, MIT economists David Autor and John Van Reenen, along with three co-authors, published evidence indicating the decline in the labor share in the U.S. as a whole was driven by gains made by “superstar firms,” which find ways to lower their labor share and gain market power.

While those elite firms may hire more workers and even pay relatively well as they grow, labor share declines in their industries, overall.

“It’s very complementary,” Acemoglu observes about the work of Autor and Van Reenen. However, he notes, “A slight difference is that superstar firms [in the work of Autor and Van Reenen, in the U.S.] could come from many different sources. By having this individual firm-level technology data, we are able to show that a lot of this is about automation.”

So, while economists have offered many possible explanations for the decline of the labor share generally — including technology, tax policy, changes in labor market institutions, and more — Acemoglu suspects technology, and automation specifically, is the prime candidate, certainly in France.

“A big part of the [economic] literature now on technology, globalization, labor market institutions, is turning to the question of what explains the decline in the labor share,” Acemoglu says. “Many of those are reasonably interesting hypotheses, but in France it’s only the firms that adopt robots — and they are very large firms — that are reducing their labor share, and that’s what accounts for the entirety of the decline in the labor share in French manufacturing. This really emphasizes that automation, and in particular robots, is a critical part in understanding what’s going on.”



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3 Questions: How MIT experienced the 1918-19 flu pandemic

Just over a century ago, the world grappled with a major pandemic when the H1N1 influenza virus infected about 500 million people in 1918 and 1919. When the virus first appeared, MIT had just relocated from Boston to its current campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and World War I was approaching its conclusion.

As the MIT community now grapples with Covid-19, the MIT Libraries' Nora Murphy has been exploring archival materials related to the 1918 flu pandemic, which similarly disrupted life at the Institute. Murphy, the archivist for researcher services in the MIT Libraries’ Distinctive Collections department, has worked with numerous MIT courses, encouraging active learning and critical analysis using the Institute’s collections. She co-teaches the MIT and Slavery class with Craig Steven Wilder, the Barton L. Weller Professor of History. Here, she shares some of what she found of life during the 1918-19 pandemic, and offers insights on documenting our current crisis for the future.

Q: What materials have you been able to find, what has stood out to you about that time at the Institute?

A: We did research on MIT’s response to the 1918 flu back in 2006, and, luckily, I have access to those notes. In 1918, the flu epidemic hit while MIT was in the midst of developing and offering training programs to prepare soldiers and officers to fight with U.S. Naval and Army forces in World War I. The Institute was balancing its normal academic program with more than seven of these war-related programs. To accommodate them, MIT was busy building temporary housing and research facilities — the buildings on the relatively new Cambridge campus were deemed insufficient for the task. Of course, that changed after the armistice was declared on Nov. 11, 1918. 

According to the 1918 Report of the President and The Tech, there was a three-week delay in the start of the fall 1918 semester at the request of federal and state authorities “due to prevalence of Spanish Influenza and Grippe which has spread throughout this section of the country.” In an Oct. 2, 1918, announcement of the postponement, The Tech editors write, “It is our aim to aid in every way possible the fight against this terrible disease which now seems to have passed its crisis.”

Q: Do you see any parallels between the 1918 flu pandemic and the current Covid-19 crisis at MIT?

A: One parallel would be social distancing efforts. Contemporary newspaper accounts show that MIT complied with emergency governmental regulations of local municipalities and delayed the start of the semester in 1918, and the opening of a newly constructed mess hall on campus was delayed to prevent the congregation of large numbers of people in one space.    

There is also a circular letter from President Richard Maclaurin to the students in the Dec. 21, 1918, issue of The Tech in which he refers to the “abnormal” conditions of the fall semester. While it’s not clear if he is referring to the effects of the flu epidemic or the wartime training programs, there did seem to be similar questions to those MIT is considering now of maintaining academic continuity during a major disruption. He writes that “[the faculty] will not adopt a policy that will involve a lowering of the Institute’s standards,” but acknowledges that the faculty would take the current conditions into account and notes some of the ways students could catch up to continue their normal academic progress.

Q: How do you, as an archivist, think about documenting this experience of the Covid-19 pandemic at MIT for the future?

A: Documenting our individual and collective experiences in these extraordinary times will help each of us and our successors to reflect on the decisions made in order to evaluate how we respond to a future “abnormal” event. It gives us the chance to acknowledge the strengths and weaknesses of our plans and the chance to share our experiences.

Currently, there are several efforts underway to document MIT’s experience with the Covid-19 pandemic, and more are likely to develop. MIT Distinctive Collections is web-archiving Institute websites and working to more broadly collect experiences across MIT. Community members are invited to submit all forms of personal reflections and firsthand accounts on our website. Debbie Douglas of the MIT Museum is leading an effort, in collaboration with members of the Class of 1970, leaders at the Institute, and Distinctive Collections, to document reflections of students in her History of MIT class, as well as those of alumni. In addition, Distinctive Collections is working with classes to find ways of incorporating documentary efforts into assignments.

We also strongly recommend that MIT academic and administrative offices record their pandemic-related responses and activities in their annual reports to the president. These reports are a wonderful resource for scholars.

The Institute Archives, which is part of Distinctive Collections, welcomes discussion of how and what to share with us, so that what the members of our MIT community are experiencing now — whether in labs on campus, at home, or wherever they have found a safe haven — is available for the future. Any questions can be sent to us at MITstory-covid19@mit.edu.



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Pulitzer Prize awarded to Ida B. Wells and NYT’s 1619 Project Author

Ida B. Wells is being honored by the Pulitzer Prize in a long-overdue recognition as an early pioneer of investigative journalism and civil rights icon that inspired others—including Nikole Hannah Jones who is also being spotlighted.

It’s about time. That’s what historians are likely saying about the honor awarded to the journalist and civil rights activist on Monday. The Pulitzer Prize, which awards excellence in journalism, music composition and literature, has been around since 1912 and encompassed Wells’ lifetime, but never honored her work. Until now that is.

The citation comes with a $50,000 bequest. It was not announced who will receive that bequest but it may go to the Ida B. Wells Society for Investigative Journalism that trains journalists of color in the area of investigative reporting to advance the causes of racial justice.

READ MORE: 1619 Project’s Nikole Hannah-Jones wants Black people to know the role they play in America’s democracy

Reporter Nikole Hannah-Jones attends the 75th Annual Peabody Awards Ceremony held at Cipriani Wall Street on May 21, 2016 in New York City. (Photo by Brent N. Clarke/FilmMagic)

One of the founders of that group, Jones, won a 2020 Pulitzer for editorial commentary for her introductory essay for the New York Times‘ 1619 Project that documented the varying impact of the trans-Atlantic slave trade. African-American author Colson Whitehead also won his second Pulitzer for fiction for “The Nickel Boys.”

Jomes told The New York Times that the project was “the most important work of my life.”

Wells was born a slave in Mississippi in 1862. By her 30’s, she was an educator and the editor and co-owner of the Memphis Free Speech and Headlight newspaper, which became known for its advocacy journalism. Wells specifically exposed lynching, a common practice in her era, and its use in terrorizing and controlling Black men.

In 1892, an expose on lynching led to a mob burning her press and ultimately leading her to flee the city. She relocated to Chicago, where she met renowned lawyer Ferninand Barnett. The two married and had four children together, continuing their mutual activism.


Ida B Wells (Credit: Creative Commons)

READ MORE: Janelle Monáe stars in new NYT Oscars ad for “1619 Project”

Though Wells Barnett was a suffragist who fought for the right of women to vote, her commitment to anti-lynching causes caused friction with white suffragettes, according to Women’s History. She was one of the Black women who founded the National Association of Colored Women’s Clubs which fought for suffrage and civil rights. Although white suffragettes like Susan B. Anthony and others are giving credit for finally helping secure the right for women to vote in 1920, those unheralded clubs were also essential in the process.

According to Poynter, Wells Barnett continued her activism in the city of Chicago for the rest of her life, traveling and writing acclaimed pamphlets like “Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its Phases.” She died in 1931 at the age of 68.

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Arkansas boy, 11, taken hostage and killed by ‘psycho step dad’

An 11-year-old boy from Arkansas was tragically shot and killed after being taken hostage by a man who was a father figure in his home.

READ MORE: Detective asks for help in murder of Indiana boy, 8, killed by a stray bullet

The Democrat-Gazette reports that Brent Martin, 32, was holding Jordan Roberts hostage in their home last Friday night.  Martin lived at the Karon Court residence with Roberts and his mother, Maranda Alford who’d notified police that Martin had barricaded himself with her son.

Law enforcement arrived at the scene and heard gunfire. They entered the home to find Roberts shot. Cops administered CPR to the boy and he was transported to Arkansas Children’s Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

“It’s with great sadness that we announce that our victim, 11-year-old Jordan Roberts, passed away from his injuries suffered at the hands of our suspect,” Little Rock Police Chief Keith Humphrey said at a news conference Saturday.

“So, I want to ask that we keep Jordan’s family in our thoughts and prayers.”

Martin was shot and killed at the scene by officers Scott Dettmer and Lt. Dana Jackson. An internal investigation about the use of deadly force is underway.

 

Jordan Roberts and mother Maranda Alford (Credit: Facebook)

“The officers were attempting to gain communication and wait on our SWAT team,” Humphrey said. “Gunshots were heard from inside the residence. We have now learned that those shots … were being fired by the suspect and … killed Jordan Roberts.”

Humphrey said that the priority to save Roberts was the priority during the standoff.

READ MORE: Boy, 5, dies in Houston drive-by while doing Tik-Tok with dad

“With everything going on, their main focus was to save the life of this child,” Humphrey said. “This was an imminent situation, and it happened only in a matter of seconds. They never thought about their safety.”

Dettmer and Jackson, with a combined 55 years of experience, were saddened that their life-saving measures were not successful.

“I’m telling you right now our officers are hurting,” Humphrey said. “They tried everything they could do to save that young child, and that’s something that they will remember the rest of their lives.”

Neighbors said that the couple moved in couple of months ago with Jordan.

His parents thanked the community for rallying around their son during this tragic time as a memorial was held for him.

“It touches my heart to see so many people, like people that don’t know Jordan and how it affects them just as much as it affects us,” Alford told KARK 4 News.

Greg Roberts said that his son was a “lovable” kid and enjoyed taking him to the Derby. He also had a great time spending with his sisters, friends, and cousins.

“The instant you’d see him then interact with him you’d love him. you going love his spirit, he’s just that type of child. he’s just got that about him, that love,” said Greg.

A GoFundMe has been set up to help the family pay their final respects to the pre-teen.

In 2016, Martin was charged with domestic battery against involving another person and had prior drug arrests.

“Jordan was shot and killed by a psycho step dad he thought loved him,” the family said on the GoFundMe. “Jordan was a loving kid who loved to play video games and basketball and enjoyed  his family and friends. His life was taken way too soon.”

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Atlanta woman’s death raises more questions about COVID-19 risk in prisons

An employee who worked as a case manager at the Atlanta Federal Penitentiary has died after testing positive for coronavirus despite her repeated requests that she be moved.

READ MORE: White supremacists are using coronavirus fears to recruit

Robin N. Grubbs tested positive for the coronavirus and died on April 14. She was 39. Prior to her passing, she was working in a unit where those with COVID-19 were being quarantined. According to her father, Gary Grubbs, her pleas to be transferred out of Unit B-3 were ignored as the virus continued to spread.

“She wanted to be moved. She asked to be moved,” Gary told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution in an article published Monday. “I don’t know why they didn’t listen to her.”

READ MORE: Georgia leaders say reopening state is ‘attack’ on Black people

Robin N. Grubbs (Credit: Robin N. Grubbs)

A month before her death, Robin had been promoted to another position but she was not moved to another unit. Gary last saw his daughter two days before she died after he and his wife brought her a care package which she shared to social media.

“When your parents meet you halfway to bring you a Corona Care Package. Airhugs because Corona is everywhere at this point and I don’t wanna expose my ❤️’s, especially with me going to work “essential staff” 🥴. How did a girl like me get so lucky, blessed and highly favored. Da 🐐’s,” she wrote on April 10.

When your parents meet you halfway to bring you a Corona Care Package. Airhugs because Corona is everywhere at this…

Posted by Robin N Grubbs on Friday, April 10, 2020

READ MORE: Georgia confirms 1K new COVID-19 cases in 24 hours

Gary said that Robin seemed “fine” during the visit and during a call with him the next day.

“Still seemed okay,” her father said.

The grieving father said he was determined to learn why his daughter was still in her old position at the time of her death. He also wants to know why she was not given any personal protection equipment (PPE) such as surgical masks and gloves to do her work.

“I’m trying to find out the answers,” he said.

The U.S. Bureau of Prisons acknowledged that Robin tested positive for the deadly contagion but BOP spokesman Scott Taylor maintained “there is no information or evidence relating to a cause of death.” The bureau also added that she was “successfully screened prior to entry and was asymptomatic.”

However, a federal lawsuit filed by an inmate is challenging the claims that employees and the incarcerated are being kept safe and healthy during the global pandemic. Michael Fiorito, convicted in Minnesota of mail fraud, said Robin informed him that she was not given any PPE.

Furthermore, the suit alleges that Robin asked to be removed from Unit B-3.  Fiorito, 52,  is suing to be approved for home confinement as he suffers from rheumatoid arthritis and lupus which he takes medication for.

“I meet all the criteria to be released,” he said.

READ MORE: Trump wants to reopen economy, says 100K may die of virus

The AJC was not given exact figures on inmates who may be infected but learned that several inmates eligible for release have not been tested. Of prisoners that the BOP hast tested over 70% were positive.

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Michigan security guard fatally shot after telling customer to wear face mask

A security guard at a Family Dollar in Flint, Michigan was shot and killed after getting into a verbal confrontation with a customer over wearing a state-mandated face mask.

Calvin Munerlyn, 43, died after he was shot on Friday following an argument with a woman identified as Sharmel Teague, according to WXYZ. Munerlyn asked Teague to put on a mask, which is mandatory under state guidelines to protect against the novel coronavirus.

READ MORE: Candace Owens locked out of Twitter for encouraging Michigan revolt

Surveillance video reveals Teague immediately left after the altercation in an SUV. Twenty minutes later, the SUV returned. Two men then entered the store and one of them yelled at Munerlyn for “disrespecting” his wife. The other man then shot him.

Genesee County prosecutor David Leyton identified the men as Sharmel Teague’s husband Larry Teague and her son Ramonyea Bishop. All three of them have been charged with first-degree murder.

“This is senseless. Over a mask. Over a mask?” Munerlyn’s cousin, Tina James, told WJRT. “This is not the way to do things right now. We need to come together.”

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer‘s executive order requires all retail employees and customers to wear a mask.

The shooting comes after increasing tension in Michigan over Whitmer’s executive orders, as protesters have taken to the state capitol to demand the reopening of businesses.

READ MORE: Armed protesters storm Michigan Capitol over stay-at-home orders

Demonstrators took to the streets in April to speak out against Whitmer’s stay-at-home mandate, which was extended earlier this month until May 15. The demonstration, known as “Operation Gridlock,” was met with both adulation and criticism from the public.

Whitmer, meanwhile, has faced backlash from Republicans, including President Donald Trump, for her no-nonsense approach to the pandemic. Michigan currently has more than 41,000 cases of coronavirus, with 3,789 lives lost.

Detroit, the state’s largest city, has been especially impacted by the virus, with more than 8,500 infections reported. Of those cases, Black people account for more than 64 percent of them, according to AP. Almost 77 percent of the Detroit residents who have died from coronavirus complications have been Black.

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Tracee Ellis Ross opens up about being ‘happily single’ in new interview

Tracee Ellis Ross is a well-respected actor, director, and executive producer but in a new interview with NET-A-PORTER’s digital title, PORTER, she opens up what it’s like to be happily single in her 40’s.

Ross for years spoken out about the importance of not putting pressure on women – particularly women of color – to get married and have children unless it’s something they sincerely want and need. Now she elaborates on that stance and how she feels about being along during a global pandemic.

trace ellis ross
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READ MORE: Tracee Ellis Ross dishes about Hollywood snubs during ‘Girlfriends’ days

“It’s one of the reasons I feel so strongly about telling the stories that I tell. I wish I had known there were other choices, not just about how I could be living, but how I could feel about the way my life was,” she explains.

“I was raised by society to dream of my wedding,” she continues. “But I wish I had been dreaming of my life. There are so many ways to curate happiness, find love and create a family and we don’t talk about them. It creates so much shame and judgment.”

READ MORE: Tracee Ellis Ross takes on the music industry in first trailer for ‘The High Note’

To ger point Ross gives an example, stating, “I had some big celebrity guy go, [shakes head and taps watch on wrist] ‘you better get on it.’ And that was when I was in my thirties!”

She also points out that many people have a hard time understanding that being happily single doesn’t mean she’s adverse to love or romance.

“People misinterpret being happily single as not wanting to be in a relationship. Of course, I want to be in a relationship but what am I going to do?” the 47-year-old asked rhetorically. “Spend all the time that I’m not [in one] moping around? No. I’m going to live my life to the fullest and I’m going to be happy right here, where I am.”

READ MORE: Tracee Ellis Ross announces lush new hair care line for curly hair

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The post Tracee Ellis Ross opens up about being ‘happily single’ in new interview appeared first on TheGrio.



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