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Friday, September 4, 2020

Over 93 percent of summer protests were peaceful: report

‘With two months until the election, the US faces deep divisions over racial inequality.’

A vast majority of the anti-police brutality and racial justice protests that have erupted across the nation since the death of George Floyd have been peaceful and nonviolent, according to a new report.

The US Crisis Monitor — a joint project between ACLED and the Bridging Divides Initiative (BDI) at Princeton University — analyzed real-time data about protest movements and political violence in the US, using news reports and social media for the report published on Thursday (Sept. 3). 

The ACLED recorded more than 10,600 demonstrations across the US between May 24 and August 22, about 93% were peaceful. Nearly 8,000 (precisely 7,750) were linked to the Black Lives Matter movement, the report states. 

Read More: Republican congressman threatens to kill protesters in Facebook post

“These data reveal that the United States is in crisis. It faces a multitude of concurrent, overlapping risks — from police abuse and racial injustice, to pandemic-related unrest and beyond — all exacerbated by increasing polarization,” the researchers wrote. 

March On Washington To Protest Police Brutality
WASHINGTON, DC – AUGUST 28: Protesters hold signs of George Floyd during the Commitment March at the Lincoln Memorial on August 28, 2020 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Natasha Moustache/Getty Images)

According to the study, less that 100 demonstrations between May 24 and August 22, where counter-protesters clashed with racial justice advocates, turned violent. The ACLED noted 43 incidents in the report.

“Authorities have used force — such as firing less-lethal weapons like tear gas, rubber bullets, and pepper spray or beating demonstrators with batons — in over 54% of the demonstrations in which they have engaged,” the authors wrote.

They also warn that as we get closer to the November presidential election, “these intersecting risks are likely to intensify.”

“While these data present only a snapshot of demonstration activity and political violence in America, the trendlines are clear: demonstrations have erupted en masse around the country, and they are increasingly met with violence by state actors, non-state actors, and counter-demonstrators alike,” according to the authors. 

“With two months until the election, the US faces deep divisions over racial inequality, the role of the police, and economic hardship exacerbated by an ineffective pandemic response.”

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The post Over 93 percent of summer protests were peaceful: report appeared first on TheGrio.



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Minn. man charged after allegedly killing wife, 2 sisters next door

Jason Michael Mesich told investigators he shot his wife after an argument in the garage over the coupe’s lack of sex.

Two Minnesota sisters have a long road to recovery after being shot by their neighbor moments after he killed his wife. 

Jason Michael Mesich, 48, reportedly told investigators he shot his wife after an argument in the garage over the coupe’s lack of sex. He then shot his two neighbors in their front yard — 12-year-old Makayla Saulter-Outlaw and her 29-year-old sister Canisha Saulter, CBS Minnesota reports.

The mother of the sisters told investigators that Mesich came out of nowhere while the family was packing up a moving truck on the afternoon of August 30 and opened fire, hitting the sisters several times.

Makayla was shot in the head as she shielded her 1-year-old niece from Mesich. She is reportedly in critical condition and heavily sedated. The baby was not injured. Canisha was shot several times in the legs and left hip, and is in serious condition. The family says she will need physical therapy to learn how to walk again.

Read More: After losing siblings to police violence, women join forces in Sisters Of The Movement

Officer’s were called to the Mesich home on reports of several gunshots on Sunday afternoon. That’s when they found the shooter’s wife, Angela, dead in the detached garage. She had been shot “several times in the neck and upper torso.”

Mesich reportedly barricaded himself in the basement when the cops arrives. He was taken into custody after a standoff with police, during which he fired 40 rounds before surrendering to officers. 

When asked about shooting the sisters, Mesich said they were not “good neighbors,” and that “he hated all children.”

He also reportedly told investigators that he shot the sisters because he suspected they saw him kill his wife. 

Rev. Marcia Westbrook, Makayla and Canisha’s aunt, said the girls heard a popping noise.

“My sister said the same thing of, ‘You know, we heard them but we ain’t used to hearing shots so we’re thinking fireworks,’” Westbrook said. Moments later, the family saw Mesich outside firing at them. 

He is currently in the Hennepin County Jail on three 2nd-degree murder charges for the death of his wife, and for shooting two sisters. He faces up to 80 years in prison if convicted.

A GoFundMe has been set up to help the sisters’ family cover their medical costs.

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The post Minn. man charged after allegedly killing wife, 2 sisters next door appeared first on TheGrio.



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Charges against Curtis Flowers dropped after 24 years: ‘I am finally free’

Flowers spent 23 years behind bars as a White prosecutor repeatedly took him to trial for a crime he claims he didn’t commit

Curtis Flowers is feeling “free” after prosecutors in Mississippi dropped murder charges against him that were repeatedly filed by a White prosecutor who also lobbied to keep Black jurors from serving on the case.

Murder charges against Curtis were dropped on Friday in the 1996 shooting deaths of Bertha Tardy, Carmen Rigby, Robert Golden, and Bobo Stewart at the Tardy Furniture store in Winona, Miss, The New York Times reported. Judge Joey Loper granted the motion.

Curtis Flowers Mississippi charges thegrio.com
(Credit: Curtis Flowers/APM )

Read More: Ann Romney to join Michelle Obama on voting campaign

Flowers was released from custody last December after 23 years behind bars.

Until Friday’s decision, he was prepared to defend himself in a court of law once again.

“Today, I am finally free from the injustice that left me locked in a box for nearly 23 years,” Flowers said in a statement. “I’ve been asked if I ever thought this day would come. … With a family that never gave up on me and with them by my side, I knew it would.”

Over the course of more than two decades, Flowers had been put on trial for the slayings for which he has always maintained his innocence. District Attorney Doug Evans brought him to trial six times with the rulings resulting in mistrials or convictions that were ultimately reversed.

Evans’ zealous pursuit of Flowers made the case the subject of Season 2 of the APM Reports podcast In the Dark.  Their investigation found discrepancies in the evidence against Flowers.  

Read More: Wear Their Names’ jewelry inspired by Black death, glass from Charleston unrest faces backlash

In 2010, Flowers was sentenced to death row but the United States Supreme Court intervened after an appeal was filed. Last year, the High Court sent the case back to Montgomery County for the prospect of a seventh trial. The justices also ruled that Evans violated the constitution by keeping Black people from the jury and cited that over the various trials that Flowers had, 61 of the jurors were white out of 72.

“Equal justice under law requires a criminal trial free of racial discrimination in the jury selection process,” Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh wrote for the majority.

Kavanaugh further declared that Evans wanted to put Flowers “ideally before an all-white jury.”

The Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch took over the case after Evans recused himself in January amid criticisms that he was biased and wasting taxpayer money. Evans is currently being sued by the NAACP in a federal class-action lawsuit for racial bias.

Fitch did not feel there was sufficient enough evidence to proceed with yet another trial.

“As the evidence stands today, there is no key prosecution witness that incriminates Mr. Flowers who is alive and available and has not had multiple, conflicting statements in the record,” Fitch wrote. “The only witness who offered direct evidence of guilt recanted his prior testimony.”

The decision to drop all charges was greeted by those who felt Flowers had been railroaded by the justice system.

“This is systemic racism. Help to eradicate it. It destroys lives, incarcerates people unjustly, puts profit before people, places barriers on the path out of poverty, etc,” Dr. Bernice King tweeted.

“It is inhumane and evil to continue to argue that racism doesn’t exist.”

Have you subscribed to theGrio’s podcast “Dear Culture”? Download our newest episodes now!

The post Charges against Curtis Flowers dropped after 24 years: ‘I am finally free’ appeared first on TheGrio.



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Coronavirus Guide: Symptoms, Testing, Treatment, and Economics

Everything we know about Covid-19, from avoiding the virus to caring for your loved ones, with regular updates.

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52 Black Ex-Franchisees File $1 Billion Racial Discrimination Lawsuit Against McDonald’s

McDonald’s

Fifty-two former McDonald’s franchisees who say they faced decades of discrimination at the fast-food chain are suing McDonald’s for more than $1 billion.

The suit was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois Tuesday, according to Yahoo. Franchisees say in the complaint that they faced “systematic and covert racial discrimination,” with McDonald’s denying them the same opportunities as their white counterparts.

The lawsuit also argues McDonald’s “systematically steered” Black franchisees to buy locations in Black neighborhoods that tend to have higher insurance and security costs while bringing in less revenue. One franchisee wrote in the complaint that Black franchisees were at such a significant disadvantage that acquiring a McDonald’s as a Black franchisee was “financial suicide.”

The franchisees say they lost more than 200 McDonald’s locations over the past decade because of misconduct by the company. Dozens of of other Black franchisees were forced out of the chain over the past two decades. According to the complaint, there are only 186 Black McDonald’s franchisees, down from 377 in 1998.

The complaint added the plaintiffs’ average annual sales of roughly $2 million were more than $700,000 lower than McDonald’s national average of $2.7 million from 2011 to 2016 and $2.9 million in 2019.

“These differences are statistically significant and are the result of Defendants’ racial bias and barriers within the McDonald’s franchise system,” the complaint states.

In a video message to employers and suppliers Tuesday, McDonald’s CEO Chris Kempczinski responded to the allegations.

“When allegations such as these occur, I want them investigated thoroughly and objectively,” Kempczinski said. “That’s been our approach to this situation. Based upon our review, we disagree with the claims in this lawsuit and we intend to strongly defend against it.”

In a statement to Business Insider, McDonald’s categorically denied the allegations, saying that they “fly in the face of everything we stand for as an organization and as a partner to communities and small business owners around the world.”

In July, the fast-food chain promised to improve diversity at all levels of its systems, including franchisees and suppliers.



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11 Best Mattress Sales and Deals for Labor Day (2020)

All of our favorite WIRED-tested bed-in-a-box mattresses are on sale for Labor Day weekend, including some by Helix, Leesa, and Casper.

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Why Can’t We Vote Online Yet?

This week, we discuss the security of mail-in voting (very good) and future of online ballots in the US (very unlikely).

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Here's how much Elon Musk's wealth has shrunk as Tesla shares slide

The sell-off in Tesla shares as been sharp and swift. As of Friday morning, the stock has lost roughly $85 billion in market cap since Monday and CEO Elon Musk's wealth has taken a hit. But the stock is still up about 800% over the past year. CNBC's "Squawk Box" crew discusses what could be ahead for the stock.

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Millennial Investor Aristotle Varner Provides Pathway to Options Trading

Aristotle Varner, Options Trading, Stocks, Investment, Financial Literacy

We quickly associate stocks with white men in tailored suits power walking the eight blocks of New York’s financial district known as Wall Street. But the landscape of investing is rapidly changing as more Blacks are entering into the game. 24-year-old Aristotle Varner has become the founder of Aristotle Investments and is educating the next generation in options trading.

A self-taught investor, Varner’s background is in stark contrast to his career in investments today. In 2014 Varner joined the Army at the age of 18 and thought he would be a career military man, but this soon changed when the access to information arrived.

“I saw an opportunity on my post to earn extra income by cutting hair,” says Varner. “The military barbers did not know how to cut Black hair, so I soon became the barber on the post. I began to educate myself in investing and used my barber earnings to make my first investment in the options trading market.”

A departure from the traditional form of trading, Varner believes that options trading is an opportunity everyone should have access to. “Our community has largely been under-educated in financial literacy and investments,” declares Varner. “I truly believe that if we put the work in, learn, study, and apply the practices, we can be successful investors. It can be done. You do not need a specific level of education, or experience, just the will to learn.”

In just a few years, Aristotle Investments has grown to include a best-selling book (Aristotle’s Investing Guide), an options trading group chat (Aristotle Signals and Learning), and an online trading university (AMUU). With the support of his wife, who handles aspects of the business behind the scenes, Varner has accrued over 50,000 followers invested in his method.

“Aristotle Signals offers people the flexibility to trade on the go,” says Varner. “The group chat, which has generated positive returns for its members, provides detailed insight into a watch-list of stocks before the market opens. No matter where you are you can make informed decisions.”

Varner represents the new face of young successful traders who are finding new ways to enter into stock market investing. His transparency, genuine approach, and consistency with followers and students is what sets him apart.

“There are many that are skeptical, and initially believe that being a successful options trader is not possible. I tell everyone that this is not a get-rich-quick opportunity. This is an opportunity to become educated in options trading, apply your learnings, and invest in the market. You have to put in the time and work to become successful at this just like anything else.”

To learn more about Aristotle Varner’s Investment course offerings and insights, connect with him at @Aristotle_investments on social media.



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Creepy ‘Geofence’ Finds Anyone Who Went Near a Crime Scene

Police increasingly ask Google and other tech firms for data about who was where, when. Two judges ruled the investigative tool invalid in a Chicago case.

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Will WhatsApp’s Misinfo Cure Work for Facebook Messenger?

To protect the election, the platform will limit message forwarding to five people at a time.

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How to Open Port for a Specific IP Address in Firewalld

How can I allow traffic from a specific IP address in my private network or allow traffic from a specific private network through firewalld, to a specific port or service on a Red Hat

The post How to Open Port for a Specific IP Address in Firewalld first appeared on Tecmint: Linux Howtos, Tutorials & Guides.



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Thursday, September 3, 2020

How to Create Your Own IM/Chat Server Using “Openfire” in Linux

With the invention of the Internet, the way of communication revolutionized, a long ago. E-mail replaced traditional postal mail. The email was fast still there were some bottlenecks. One would not know if the

The post How to Create Your Own IM/Chat Server Using "Openfire" in Linux first appeared on Tecmint: Linux Howtos, Tutorials & Guides.



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A day trip to Antarctica? Yes, it exists

Antarctica Flights operates 12-hour sightseeing tours over the continent that take off and land on the same day. Passengers say its a cheaper, easier and warmer way to tour expanses of the polar region.

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3 Questions: Thomas Levenson on a finance scandal for the ages

The subprime mortgage-bond meltdown. The dot-com boom. The Enron fiasco. The last couple of decades have seen their share of finance absurdities and scandals, but such episodes are hardly new. Indeed the most important of them all may be the South Sea Bubble, in which Britain’s South Sea Company floated shares based on the promise of future trade while assuming Britain’s national debt, but then collapsed in 1720, ruining many investors.

And yet, as MIT Professor Thomas Levenson explains in a new book — “Money for Nothing: The Scientists, Fraudsters, and Corrupt Politicians Who Reinvented Money, Panicked a Nation, and Made the World Rich,” just published by Crown — the South Sea Bubble helped shape modern finance and debt markets. MIT News talked to Levenson, a professor in MIT’s Graduate Program in Science Writing and the Comparative Media Studies / Writing program, about his new work.

Q: How did you become interested in the South Sea Bubble, and what is relevant about it today?

A: I was writing a book about Isaac Newton, [“Newton and the Counterfeiter,” 2009], and came upon a stray mention about how he lost money on the South Sea Bubble. I thought: This is really curious. Isaac Newton is the smartest man maybe ever, certainly the smartest of his time. What was he doing losing a lot of money? As I started looking at this quite famous case of stock market exuberance and crash, the more it became evident why it seemed like a good idea at the time to people.

What’s striking is how little has changed. A lot of things we think of as part of our 21st-century financial markets were already there in 1720. Do we still have the same dynamics and pathologies that created that disaster? Yes, absolutely. We’ve gotten cleverer, the math behind the financial markets is more complicated, but the basic architecture of financial crashes and bubbles is similar.

Q: One part of this book is an intellectual history: You look at Newton, the astronomer Edmond Halley, a scholar named William Petty, and other figures who, you contend, helped pave the way for these financial innovations. What’s the connection between their work and the South Sea Bubble?

A: In one way, the single most important takeaway from the book is that although the South Sea Bubble was a disaster for those who lost all their money, it worked. It was the final victory in a revolutionary change in the way Britain, uniquely among the nations, was able to fund its national obligations. It led to the creation of the first modern bond market. If you think of finance as a technology, that’s an incredibly powerful technology. Because it allows you to basically rent money from the future, use that money in the present to do things that help build the wealth of your nation going forward, and thus make the future richer than it otherwise would have been.

To get to that point, there needed to be a change in the way people understood the relationship of numbers to experience. The first part of the book shows how the scientific revolution and the financial revolution are intimately connected. They’re part of the same phenomenon, populated in part by the same people and driven by similar habits of thinking. The core idea is that empiricism and quantification allow you to apply disciplined reasoning, in the form of mathematics, to come up with insights that are available no other way. 

Petty, a polymath who was a founder of the Royal Society, explicitly applied that doctrine of numbers, measure, and observation to practical problems [such as assessing the wealth of Ireland]. Edmond Halley applied calculations to provide the basis for life insurance. Yes, the scientific revolution involved things like what governs the motion of Jupiter, but it’s also: How should we think about probability and risk in human life? Isaac Newton wrote fairly well-thought-out memos on credit.

Q: All right, lightning round here. Who is the hero and who is the villain of the piece? What surprised you most about the South Sea Bubble? Who are your ideal readers?

A. There are no disinterested noble characters. The chief villain of the day is John Blunt, the secretary of the South Sea Company, the public face and one of the chief architects of the scheme. And it’s true he wanted to get rich and was unscrupulous in defense of the company. But I don’t think he set out to defraud the nation. He got on a horse that bolted and stayed on as long as he could. The great hero for me is clearly Robert Walpole, the parliamentary figure often seen as the first true prime minister in the British system of governance. In a sense he was lucky; if he’d been in power [when the scheme started], he might have been bribed. But he was a driven and devoted political leader who understood the problem well and worked his way toward a response. Like all his peers, he was perfectly happy with the ordinary corruption of the time. He got rich holding office. Just like Blount wasn’t all bad, Walpole was not someone you’d entirely admire.

It surprised me that the sense of human passions around money felt so familiar. Newton was a formidable intellect who had the mathematical knowledge in his fingertips to reason his way to the flaw in the South Sea plan. Other people did that. Newton didn’t, because he was a human being and got caught up in the money mania. Even somebody with his focus and concentration and seeming detachment from human passions was still vulnerable to the same excitement.

My hope for this book is that it would build bridges between different groups: people who like history and want to understand how the past makes the present; people who want to understand how science works; and, I hope, a lot of people who want to understand ideas about finance and money. The book is in some ways an extended meditation on how money changes its character over time.



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McDonald’s adding Travis Scott meal to menu to appeal to Gen Z

The rapper is the first celebrity the fast-food giant has put on its menu since Michael Jordan in 1992.

Travis Scott has teamed with McDonald’s on a new partnership with his Cactus Jack music label. 

The fast-food giant is adding the hip-hop star’s favorite meal to the menu starting Sept. 8 — a Quarter Pounder with cheese, bacon, and lettuce, medium fries with BBQ Sauce, and a Sprite — for $6. It will be available through October 4.

The rapper is the first celebrity McDonald’s has put on its menu since NBA legend Michael Jordan in 1992. Scott’s label even designed custom T-shirts for employees to wear during the promotion. 

Read More: Black Twitter defends T-Pain after Travis Scott ghosted him

“His ability to kind of see where culture is going and have a hand in where culture is going is really unique,” McDonald’s Chief Marketing Officer Morgan Flatley said in an interview with the IBI Times on Friday. “Then you couple that with his huge followership and his fans, social-media footprint, and … 3 billion streams. He just has an incredible audience.”

The company said Scott will be “exploring opportunities to support charitable organizations during the month long program.” 

“Everyone has a favorite McDonald’s meal, no matter who you are,” Flatley wrote in a McDonald’s blog post. “Travis is a true McDonald’s fan having grown up visiting our restaurants in Houston, not to mention one of the biggest musical acts and cultural icons in the world.”

“I couldn’t be more excited to bring the Cactus Jack x McDonald’s collaboration to life,” wrote Scott in the same blog post. “We are bringing together two iconic worlds. Including a charitable component was key for me, and I can’t wait for people to see what we have in store.” 

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While critics have noted that his explicit lyrics don’t really vibe with McDonald’s family-friendly aesthetic, the company said the partnership with Scott is key to appealing to younger customers. 

Flatley said people under the age of 34 are “becoming more and more challenging for brands to reach.”

“How they engage with media is different,” Flatley added. “They look to recommendations much more than any other generation has. They’re very reliant on social media. They’re very reliant on their friends.” 

Have you subscribed to theGrio’s podcast “Dear Culture”? Download our newest episodes now!

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Old Navy to pay employees to work election polls

The retailer joins the effort to get out the vote

This week Old Navy has announced that it plans to pay its employees to work at the polls during November’s presidential election. 

Tuesday, the retailer announced it had partnered with Power the Polls, which is described as “a first-of-its-kind initiative to recruit poll workers to ensure a safe, fair election for all voters.” 

READ MORE: LeBron James partners with Dodgers to turn stadium into polling place for Election Day

“BIG NEWS! We’re partnering with Power the Polls to empower our 50,000 employees with paid time off to serve as poll workers this Election Day,” read the caption for the announcement on Facebook.

Old Navy also said employees would be offered up to 3 paid hours off to vote,” because the company understands, “it’s so important that we all can vote (and that we all do vote!)”

BIG NEWS!We’re partnering with Power the Polls to empower our 50,000 employees with paid time off to serve as poll…

Posted by Old Navy on Tuesday, September 1, 2020

“This is a critical moment. America is in the midst of a nationwide poll worker shortage,” reads the official website created for this initiative. “Most poll workers are over the age of 60 and, in the era of uncertainty caused by the coronavirus, fewer are signing up for the job.”

Fayetteville State University students get off a Black Votes Matter bus at Smith Recreation Center on March 3, 2020 in Fayetteville, North Carolina. (Photo by Melissa Sue Gerrits/Getty Images)

“The consequences have already been felt in several recent primaries, where poll worker shortages led to long lines and voter disenfranchisement. For example, 95% of past poll workers in Anchorage, Alaska, declined to work the polls this year (source) and the state of Kentucky consolidated in-person voting in each county to a single polling place during the primary due to poll worker recruitment concerns.”

READ MORE: Filmmaker Michael Moore warns of 2016 redux, says Trump support is ‘OFF THE CHARTS

“Power the Polls will be a part of the solution by addressing the need for low-risk and diverse poll workers who can staff in-person voting locations during early voting and on Election Day,” it concludes.

Have you subscribed to theGrio’s podcast “Dear Culture”? Download our newest episodes now!

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6ix9ine compares himself to Tupac in response to sexual assault claim

‘What’s the difference between me and Tupac Shakur? I never caught a rape charge.’

Controversial rapper Tekashi 6ix9ine compares himself to TuPac, Donald Trump and brags about using the N-word in a wide-ranging new interview with New York Times

The convicted felon remains on house arrest after being released from prison in April, amid COVID-19 concerns.

In February 2019, he pled guilty to nine charges including conspiracy to commit murder, and was sentenced to two-years in prison after testifying against his former street gang, Nine Trey Gangster Bloods.

He has since been dubbed a snitch. Some have also labelled him a child molester after he was seen in videos from 2013 miming graphic acts and touching a 13-year-old while she performed sex acts on other men, Complex reports.

Read More: Tekashi 6ix9ine accuses Snoop Dogg of snitching on Suge Knight in online beef

In 2015, 6ix9ine pleaded guilty to one felony count of use of a child in a sexual performance. As part of a plea agreement, he was sentenced to four years of probation and 1,000 hours of community service, per Daily Mail.

Tekashi insists he was “at the wrong place at the wrong time,” and that “I was 18 at the time. Am I this 40-year-old Jeffrey Epstein-type?”

He compared his journey to Tupac, who was convicted of raping a woman in 1994. 

“Is Tupac Shakur loved or hated? Loved!” he told Times interviewer Joe Coscarelli. “What’s the difference between me and Tupac Shakur? I never caught a rape charge –  ever.”

He did, however, physically abuse the mother of his child, Sara Molina, for several years. 

“Me and Sara spoke. I’ve been visiting my daughter, I’ve been giving my daughter money. I admitted my truth. It’s the worst thing ever,” Tekashi said. “But I’m not going to sit there and lie to you. I’m telling you, I did it. I admit to it, and I apologize.”

He went on to make clear: “I don’t owe the world an apology, the person I owe an apology to is Sara Molina. She got that apology. That’s where it matters.”

Read More: Biggie’s crown and Tupac Shakur letters to be sold at hip-hop auction

Coscarelli challenged 6ix9ine’s comments about Pac, pointing out that the late hip-hop icon “tried to give back through his work.” 

“And what am I doing?” 6ix9ine replied. Coscarelli called his music “fun, but it’s not introspective.” He also praised Pac for being a “multifaceted artist.”

6ix9ine fired back with, “I got to feed the masses. There’s no difference between me and Tupac Shakur.”

As for his use of the N-word, 6ix9ine said “I grew up in Bushwick, Brooklyn. All my friends are Black. Who’s going to stop me? If I felt it was wrong, I would stop, but it’s not wrong.”

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Michael Bloomberg donating $100M to historically Black medical schools

The billionaire and former presidential candidate helps HBCU’s with a big donation

This week it was revealed that former presidential candidate Michael R. Bloomberg is responding to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic by donating a $100M to Black students studying to become doctors.

According to the NY Times, Thursday, the billionaire businessman announced that his charitable organization, Bloomberg Philanthropies, has committed to giving $100M to medical schools at four historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) over the next four years.

Democrats Hold Unprecedented Virtual Convention From Milwaukee
In this screenshot from the DNCC’s livestream of the 2020 Democratic National Convention, former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg addresses the virtual convention on August 20, 2020. (Photo by DNCC via Getty Images)

READ MORE: Sen. Kamala Harris announces anti-racism bill to fight COVID-19’s impact on Black communities

In an op-ed for CNN titled “To save Black lives, we need more Black doctors,” Bloomberg concedes that one of the many reasons Black Americans are dying from COVID-19 at disproportionate rates is because of inequitable health care.

“Black patients overall have better outcomes when they are treated by Black doctors. A wealth of data supports this, including a recent study that found Black newborns treated by Black physicians had higher rates of survival,” he writes.

“Currently, Black people make up about 13% of the US population but, according to the Association of American Medical Colleges, only 5% of practicing medical doctors. And while this disparity has been growing for years — especially among Black male doctors — the coronavirus threatens to make it far worse.”

His organization’s immediate goal is to reduce medical students’ financial burdens by gifting 800 of them with up to $100K in grants. The ultimate objective is that these recipients will use their educations to contribute to the health and wealth of Black communities.

READ MORE: Black newborns 3 times more likely to die when cared for by White doctors

“If the goal of the portfolio is to create intergenerational wealth, we have to think about the mortality and the life span of the Black community,” said Garnesha Ezediaro, program lead for the Greenwood Initiative, Mr. Bloomberg’s philanthropic effort.

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Republican congressman threatens to kill protesters in Facebook post

Republican congressman Clay Higgins in Louisiana says he was censored after a controversial social media post

Louisiana congressman Rep. Clay Higgins had his Facebook post removed by the tech giant after he threatened to shoot armed Black protesters “where they stand.”

The post was flagged because it violates the social media platform’s terms of service which prohibit threatening violence. According to the Acadiana Advocate in Louisiana, Higgins posted a picture of armed Black protestors, from a demonstration in Louisville, Kentucky, that brought Black gun advocates out to show their support of the Black Lives Matter movement and the Second Amendment.

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“I’d drop any 10 of you where you stand,” Higgins wrote in his post earlier in the week. “Nothing personal. We just eliminate the threat. We don’t care what color you are. We don’t care if you’re left or right. If you show up like this, if We recognize threat… you won’t walk away.”

Black Militia Group Holds March In Louisville
Members of a protestor group affiliated with NFAC, most carrying firearms, gather to march on July 25, 2020 in Louisville, Kentucky. The group is marching in response to the killing of Breonna Taylor. (Photo by Brett Carlsen/Getty Images)

Similarly, armed members of white militias have joined BLM counter-protests and coronavirus protests across the country. Illinois teenager Kyle Rittenhouse brought a rifle to a demonstration in support of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wisconsin to join what is believed to be white militia members “protecting” local businesses. He is now accused of fatally shooting two men.

HIggins further said about the Louisville protesters: “We don’t want to see your worthless ass nor do we want to make your Mothers cry.”

According to the Acadiana Advocate, Higgins is often seen with a gun on his person and is an advocate of gun ownership and gun rights. It is legal to carry in Louisiana.

Higgins is a former policeman and sheriff’s’ deputy in Louisiana’s St. Landry Parish where he was once disciplined by his commanding officer for hitting a handcuffed Black man and lying about in an investigation. Higgins is still a certified law enforcement officer in the state and the Advocate reports that the former police officer who lied about the incident now works with him.

Higgins’ post may reference protests happening in Lafayette over the police shooting death of Trayford Pellerin, killed on the Evangeline Thruway on Aug. 21. The protest has brought out Black Lives Matter supporters and a counter-protest group called the Louisiana Cajun Militia, who were armed in a show of force at a BLM protest earlier this week.

After Higgins’ post was removed, he put up a new one saying that his rights were being infringed upon.

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“America is being manipulated into a new era of government control. Your liberty is threatened from within,” Higgins wrote in his follow-up post on Facebook. “Welcome to the front lines, Ladies and Gentlemen. I suggest you get your mind right. I’ll advise when it’s time gear up, mount up, and roll out.” 

Facebook also removed that post.

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The post Republican congressman threatens to kill protesters in Facebook post appeared first on TheGrio.



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