Translate

Pages

Pages

Pages

Intro Video

Thursday, November 5, 2020

Philadelphia police investigating alleged plot to attack convention center during ballot count

An unidentified armed man was taken into custody Thursday night after law enforcement received a tip.

A Philadelphia police investigation of an alleged plot to attack the Philadelphia Convention Center, where ballots are being counted in the highly-contested presidential election, has resulted in the confiscation of a gun and one man placed in custody.

Law enforcement received a tip that a group was driving up from Virginia in a Hummer to attack the convention center where workers and volunteers are currently counting the final ballots in Philadelphia county, reports local TV station WPVI. It’s believed the group consisted of a family.

Read More: Pennsylvania could be counting absentee ballots until Friday

An unidentified armed man was taken into custody Thursday night outside of the convention center, however, it is not clear if he was connected to the investigation. Philadelphia police say both the firearm and Hummer were recovered.

Earlier in the day, tensions were high as hundreds of Trump and Biden supporters clashed outside the building as ballots continued to be counted two days after the election. Since seeing his lead against Biden shrink in Pennsylvania as more mailed-in ballots were counted, Trump has falsely claimed fraud in the U.S. presidential election.

Read More: Trump doesn’t plan to concede if Biden is declared president-elect: report

(Photo: Getty Images)

The Biden camp has confidently said they believe the former vice president will win Pennsylvania’s 20 electoral college votes, which would end Trump’s chances of reelection. In Philadelphia county, where the convention center is located, Biden has a 62+ margin lead over Trump.

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

TheGrio is now on Apple TV, Amazon Fire, and Roku. Download theGrio today!

The post Philadelphia police investigating alleged plot to attack convention center during ballot count appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/3p283Nt
via Gabe's Musing's

A storyteller dedicated to environmental justice

“What’s an important part of your identity?”

It was a simple question. Yet Mimi Wahid watched as the high school students in her workshop fell silent, their eyebrows furrowed in thought. It was clear that for many, this was the first time they had been directly asked this question before.

To Wahid, an MIT senior, questions about identity define her story. Growing up as a young woman in rural North Carolina to a white mother and a black father, Wahid often found herself thinking about race.

She soon learned she wasn’t alone. As a high school student, she was invited to attend the NAIS Student Diversity Leadership Conference, a national event that brings together 1,700 students from different backgrounds across the country. Wahid credits the experience as her first exposure to the importance of identity development.

Today, Wahid is a faculty member for the conference, helping to build and facilitate the annual events, and she has led other identity workshops at MIT, including through MIT’s Office of Engineering Outreach Programs (OEOP). In this work, she aims to help students better understand how social environment, experiences, and self-definition work together to shape a person’s identity, and how exploring categories such as race, gender, and socioeconomic status can help people understand and discuss their own identities.

“I’m constantly viewing things through a lens that’s been shaped by my identity,” says Wahid, who is double-majoring in urban studies and planning and in writing. “My racial identity taught me a lot growing up about the contrast of power and privilege. It affects the way I see the world. It affects what I care about most.”

Wahid cites her identity as the source of her passion for environmental justice. Both her parents are landscapers, and from a young age, she often accompanied them on jobs around town. It was through these experiences that she developed a love for nature and an understanding of the different economic divides in her community.

“I would read in the newspaper about how only certain neighborhoods were affected by harmful water quality in my town. It was clear that it was happening more in poor communities,” says Wahid.

The fact that residents of these communities often were people of color didn’t escape Wahid’s eye. Her father had raised her on stories about his childhood that were entangled with historical social movements. Born in 1950 and raised in South Carolina, Wahid’s father was familiar with the impact of segregation and wanted his children to be educated about their surroundings.

“When you’re in North Carolina, the remnants of the Civil Rights movement are everywhere,” she says. “But the effects of segregation are still there today. People of color are disproportionately exposed to the worst parts of the environment.”

Wahid came to MIT knowing that environmental justice was the issue she wanted to tackle. In her first year, she enrolled in the graduate-level course 11.401 (Introduction to Community Housing and Economic Development). While she lacked the working experience of her older peers, Wahid still found ways to excel. “I could draw evidence from our readings and connect it to what I’d seen in my past. The class helped me value the importance of what I had grown up observing,” she says.

Wahid also credits the class for giving her a new perspective on ways to solve problems. Her original plan was to pursue a degree in environmental engineering, but over time, her interests in reading and writing grew. Inspired by students in her class that were urban planners and community organizers, Wahid realized that she could instead use her words to fight for environmental justice.

She continued to take advanced courses and eventually accumulated enough credits to pursue a double major in urban studies and writing. While the number of students majoring in MIT’s Comparative Media Studies/Writing program is relatively small, many students from other majors often join the classes and write about their unique scientific interests. For Wahid, this meant taking the opportunity to share her longstanding appreciation for trees, among other topics. Her early childhood knowledge of tree identification was brought back to light in a whole new way.

In a science writing class, she wrote a short story about the importance of urban forestry in cities most at risk from climate change. Her work earned her the DeWitt Wallace Prize for Science Writing for the Public.

“Science writing was something that helped me bridge what I was learning in school and explain it to my friends and family back home,” she says.

Wahid also channeled her talent for communicating environmental science through her work at the Center for Coalfield Justice. Based out of a rural coal-mining town in Pennsylvania, the nonprofit organization works with individuals who are most directly affected by resource extraction.

As an intern and PKG Fellow, Wahid helped write resource documents that informed community members about their rights in relation to coal companies and how changes in the fossil fuel industry would affect their futures. The information was eventually compiled into a public workshop.

“The town that I was working in was, in some ways, similar to my hometown,” says Wahid. Although she was hundreds of miles away, Wahid’s memories helped her to create questions for the workshop that she knew would be on the minds of community members. Her work opened important discussions and gave locals a chance to discuss new opportunities.

In addition to her work in Pennsylvania, Wahid has also participated in a variety of other efforts on campus focused on social justice. She currently serves as a program facilitator for OEOP’s outreach program MOSTEC, whose mission is to build a diverse and supportive community for high school students interested in STEM fields. During her time at MIT, she has also volunteered as a coordinator and counselor for the PKG Center’s first-year pre-orientation program focused on social justice, and has served in roles with the SPXCE intercultural center, the MIT Admissions Multicultural Recruitment Team, and the Black Students Union, among other projects.

As she continued to interlace her knowledge of science with stories from her own life, Wahid found a passion for writing memoirs, including one that received MIT’s Isabelle de Courtivron Prize for 2020. She is currently working on a writing thesis that is a reworked collection of her previous essays, many of which focus on the theme of intersectionality.

One piece expands on the concept of human migration through the journeys in her own family’s history. She is connecting stories from her parents and grandparents to the histories of the places they’ve called home.

“I’m doing research on what was happening at those moments to paint their fuller history. I’m really curious about all the ways my different family stories intersect with larger narratives,” Wahid explains.

Through telling these stories, Wahid believes that she can better serve as an advocate for environmental justice. She credits her science writing course for teaching her that the challenge of communicating science can be improved through framing it with personal experiences.

“If I can share my own story, I can relate with people through that,” she says. “We all have experiences that shaped us — that made us who we are. When we create these connections, then we can finally start to have really impactful conversations.”



from MIT News https://ift.tt/2TXYUHv
via Gabe's Musing's

Trump doesn’t plan to concede if Biden is declared president-elect: report

The incumbent president would be the first presidential candidate to refuse the ceremonious concession in

As Donald Trump faces the possibility of being a one-term president, the boorish leader is reportedly planning not to concede to his Democratic challenger, Joe Biden, if the former vice president is victorious in the 2020 general election.

According to CBS News, Trump may break a 124-year American tradition by not giving a concession speech in the now likely event that Biden is elected the 46th president of the United States.

Read More: Judge nixes Trump bid to stop Philly vote count

The Associated Press currently has Biden with 264 electoral college votes (other outlets have him at 253) to Trump’s 214. If Biden reaches the 270 mark, he will be declared president-elect.

Trump, who declined to a peaceful transfer of power in the weeks leading up to Election Day, would do away with a long tradition of acknowledging defeat by their political opponent. While it’s not a part of U.S. law or the Constitution, the conventional gesture has been employed by presidential candidates as far back as 1896, according to USA Today.

(Photo: Getty Images)

Essentially, concessions are meant to preserve American democracy and unite the country after a hard-fought contest.

Trump caused shock on Thursday night after holding a press conference at the White House where he fabricated accusations in an attempt to sow doubt on the legitimacy of the election.“We’re hearing stories that are horror stories. … We think there is going to be a lot of litigation because we have so much evidence and so much proof,” Trump said.

As AP reports: “Trump has produced no evidence of systemic problems in voting or counting. In fact, the ballot-counting process across the country has been running smoothly for the most part, even with the U.S. in the throes of the coronavirus pandemic.”

When asked in July about Trump possibly not conceding if defeated by Biden, House Speaker U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi said, “Whether he knows it yet, or not, he will be leaving.”

“Just because he [does] not want to move out of the White House does not mean we won’t have an inauguration ceremony to inaugurate the duly elected president of the United States.”

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

TheGrio is now on Apple TV, Amazon Fire, and Roku. Download theGrio today!

The post Trump doesn’t plan to concede if Biden is declared president-elect: report appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/3evVHrY
via Gabe's Musing's

Simone Biles will ‘always’ support LGBTQ community after campaign hate

The Olympic gold medalist appears in the Uber Eats ‘Tonight I’ll Be Eating’ campaign alongside ‘Queer Eye’ star Jonathan Van Ness

Simone Biles has clapped back at the haters of her new Uber Eats ads featuring Queer Eye star Jonathan Van Ness

The Olympic gold medalist appears in the “Tonight I’ll Be Eating” campaign alongside the reality TV star, who shows off his gymnast talents in the promos. The duo even wear matching leotards. 

“Anything Simone Biles can do, Jonathan Van Ness can do … in his own, amazing way,” the tagline on the ad reads.

Read More: Simone Biles debuts new NFL boyfriend Jonathan Owens on Instagram

In response, conservative Christian group One Million Moms launched a petition to end the campaign for “pushing the LGBTQ agenda” and “attempting to brainwash viewers,” PEOPLE reports. They also blast Van Ness, who identifies as non-binary, for being a “crossdresser.”

“In one commercial, she gives him a strange look and tells him he can keep her leotard because she doesn’t want it back now that he has worn it. In the other commercial, she asks him if he wants to split her food order by saying, “Splitsies?” Confused by her request, he does the actual splits instead,” the petition reads. 

“Casting a cross-dresser in its ads screams liberal agenda and turns off potential Uber Eats customers,” the statement continues.

“Instead of making audiences lose their appetite by glamorizing a LGBTQ lifestyle, Uber Eats should focus on what it does and remain neutral on controversial issues,” the petition goes on to state. Adding, “For anyone curious or struggling with his or her sexual identity, watching someone prance around in the opposite sex’s clothing is not the answer.”

Read More: Simone Biles hesitant to compete in 2021 Tokyo Olympics

On Monday, Biles, 23, responded to the petition, writing, “the world we live in makes me sad, but I’d do x1000000 more commercials with you just to p— everyone off!”

She made clear that the “LGBTQIA will always have my support and feel welcome on my socials,” she she wrote in a post on Twitter.

In a statement to PEOPLE, a spokesperson for Uber responded to the backlash by noting, “At Uber Eats, we’re unapologetically committed to representing the flavor spectrum. From tacos to talent, we like it spicy.”

Adding, “JVN and Simone serve gymnastic prowess and ferosh self-confidence, qualities millions of moms everywhere can—and do—support.”

As of Thursday, the petition has over 7,000 signers.

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

TheGrio is now on Apple TV, Amazon Fire, and Roku. Download theGrio today!

The post Simone Biles will ‘always’ support LGBTQ community after campaign hate appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/3p2sav2
via Gabe's Musing's

Televangelist who blamed COVID-19 on premarital sex dies from virus

The reverend previously claimed the president was ‘messing up’ satan’s plan for creating a one world government

The Rev. Irvin Baxter Jr., who once blamed premarital sex for the COVID-19 pandemic, died this week after a weeklong battle with the virus. He was 75. 

Baxter Jr. was a prominent Trump-supporting Evangelical pastor who claimed the president was “messing up” Satan’s plan for creating a one world government. He often took aim at Trump’s critics, who he called “satanic.”

“Even Republicans have not been hated like this guy [Trump],” Baxter said last year on the Jim Bakker Show. “And it’s because he was against their one-world government and this hatred is deeply inhuman. It’s satanic. Satan hates it that Trump is messing up his plan. That’s what’s really going on.”

Read More: North Dakota candidate who died from COVID-19 wins election

The reverend is best known for his television program End of the Age, which reaches 100 million households in North America and millions more globally, per Christian Post. He founded Endtime Ministries in 1991, and later published several books, a magazine and his radio program has aired on several AM and FM stations. 

Endtime Ministries confirmed that Baxter died on Nov. 3, days after he tested positive for the coronavirus and was hospitalized. 

“Irvin went on to his great reward. We celebrate his life, but at the same time, there is sorrow, there is grieving,” said Dave Robbins, co-host of End of the Age.

Robbins said the ministry will “continue in his legacy, sharing the message and good news.”

Read More: Judge nixes Trump bid to stop Philly vote count

Baxter Jr. previously preached about the sin of fornacaton and linked it to the pandemic as a punishment from God, TheWrap reports.

“I was thinking, as I was putting all this together in my mind, about the sin of fornication. I thought about fornication and I did a little research. There are 7.5 million couples living together in the United States, this is not worldwide, just in America. 7.5 million couples. That means 15 million people that are living together unmarried,” Baxter Jr. said. 

“And that’s increased over the last 10 years by 138%. Now, in addition to that — I hope this research is not correct, but I got it straight from the encyclopedia — it says that 5% of new brides in America now are virgins. That means 95% have already committed fornication!” he added.

“If we think we can just ignore God and live a sinful lifestyle, well, we cannot do it. You know, I believe in what you’re saying, that God may be using this as a wake-up call. This coronavirus may be a privilege, because I’ll tell you right now, there’s a much bigger judgment coming. It’s in the Bible.”

Baxter reportedly leaves behind his wife, three children, eight grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren.

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

TheGrio is now on Apple TV, Amazon Fire, and Roku. Download theGrio today!

The post Televangelist who blamed COVID-19 on premarital sex dies from virus appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/3mXa1wW
via Gabe's Musing's

LeBron James asks for help in murder of childhood friend’s sister in Akron

James posted an appeal on social media to ask for help.

Basketball star and NBA champion LeBron James is pleading for help.

James is asking for the people of Akron, Ohio to help him find the person responsible for murdering his close friend, Brandon Weems‘ sister, Ericka Weems.

Read More: LeBron James officially endorses Biden after Trump rally attacks

Weems, 37, was found dead in her Hardesty Avenue residence in Akron from a gunshot wound to the head around 3 p.m. on Monday. Family members asked police to conduct a wellness check after they had not heard from her or been able to reach her, according to Cleveland.com.

James and Brandon Weems are childhood friends who played together on two of the three state high school championships James won at St. Vincent-St. Mary where James was one of the most publicized high school players in the country. Weems’ mother, Brenda Lewis Weems, was James’ godmother. James dedicated his first career playoff game to her after she died of cancer in 2006.

“AKRON OHIO!! My brother family need answers to why and by whom,” tweeted James. “My city I need y’all to go to work and find out who did this awful, shameful, disgusting thing to such a caring, loving angel!”

Weems received her master’s degree in teaching from Kent State University and owned a daycare in Columbus, Ohio, per Cleveland.com.

Brandon Weems joined the the Cleveland Cavaliers as a scout in 2015. The organization is offering their support in light of the tragedy.

“The entire Cavaliers organization was terribly saddened to learn about the recent tragic death of Brandon Weems’ sister Ericka,” said general manager Koby Altman in a statement on Wednesday. “Our hearts are heavy and filled with pain over this senseless act. We express our deepest condolences to Brandon, the entire Weems family, their loved ones, and the Akron community. We will be with Brandon throughout this extremely difficult time and will offer our assistance and resources to help find justice for Ericka.”

Read More: Barack Obama joins LeBron James and Maverick Carter in ‘The Shop’

Weems also posted on social media to pay tribute to his sister.

View this post on Instagram

To my beautiful sister…We were just talking about celebrating your birthday and now I can’t believe you are gone!! Taken from me, the family, and your friends way too soon!! You were truly our moms child. You had such a kind heart and a warm soul. So open to care for… help..and love whoever crossed your path. You recently just found your “glow” and it looked amazing on you!! I was so proud of you and happy that you finally found peace and happiness in your life. Why would anyone want to do this to you?? I’m so angry sad and heartbroken. My life will never be the same without you!! But I’m happy you and mom are back together! Watch over us from up there and I promise we got you down here!! Love you forever and always!!💙💙💙💙💙#JusticeForEricka #10/23

A post shared by Brandon Weems (@brandonweems10) on

“To my beautiful sister, we were just talking about celebrating your birthday and now I can’t believe you are gone!! Taken from me, the family, and your friends way too soon,” Brandon Weems wrote on Instagram. “You were truly our moms child. You had such a kind heart and a warm soul. So open to care for, help and love whoever crossed your path. You recently just found your ‘glow’ and it looked amazing on you!! I was so proud of you and happy that you finally found peace and happiness in your life. Why would anyone want to do this to you?? I’m so angry, sad and heartbroken. My life will never be the same without you!! But I’m happy you and mom are back together! Watch over us from up there and I promise we got you down here!! Love you forever and always!!”

Lt. Michael Miller of the Akron police department says no arrests have been made and detectives have not yet discovered a motive.

“Talking with people not just in the family, but in the community, she was the last person someone would expect this to happen to,” Miller told Cleveland.com. “She didn’t have an adversarial relationship with anyone in her life. It looks like another unfortunate and senseless murder.”

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

TheGrio is now on Apple TV, Amazon Fire, and Roku. Download theGrio today!

The post LeBron James asks for help in murder of childhood friend’s sister in Akron appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/3p29AmM
via Gabe's Musing's

Georgia presidential count tightens in scan of last ballots

Trump had a narrow lead, but with thousands of ballots still being tallied in counties that tend to vote blue, Democrats had reason for optimism

ATLANTA (AP) — Vote counting continued in several Georgia counties on Thursday as Americans watched to see whether the state gives Democrat Joe Biden the electoral votes he needs to become president.

The Associated Press has not declared a winner in Georgia, because the race between President Donald Trump and Biden is still too early to call. Trump had a narrow lead, but with thousands of ballots still being tallied in counties that tend to vote blue, Democrats had reason for optimism.

Read More: Judge nixes Trump bid to stop Philly vote count

The secretary of state’s office announced that as of 7:15 p.m. there were about 18,936 absentee votes in seven counties remaining to be counted. Gabriel Sterling, who has overseen the implementation of Georgia’s new electronic voting system, said the secretary of state’s office has long said counting could take several days.

During an afternoon news conference in the state Capitol, Sterling did not offer an estimate for when he expected counties to finish tabulating their results. He said officials are working diligently and he emphasized his confidence in the legitimacy of the process.

“I think if anybody was going to try to rig a system they might have seen something a little less close than this,” Sterling said. “In this state in particular we take security very seriously. … We’re going to have a recount for president more than likely and the people will see that the outcome will stay essentially the same.”

The roughly 19,000 outstanding absentee ballots don’t include provisional ballots and ballots that need to be “cured” before being scanned. Sterling also noted that ballots cast before Election Day by military voters and citizens living overseas and received by 5 p.m. Friday will be tallied.

“I think all of us would agree that having an accurate count is much more vital – an accurate and fair count – is much more vital than having a fast one,” Sterling said.

A software problem that occurred on Election Day was delaying the counting of about 6,000 ballots in Gwinnett County outside of Atlanta, county spokesman Joe Sorenson said. The error is forcing officials to rescan roughly 80,000 ballots to identify ones where voters made errors in marking them by hand. An adjudication panel will then examine those ballots to try to determine voter intent over the next two to four days, Sorenson said. Once that’s done, the outstanding ballots – mostly absentee ballots received on Election Day – can be counted.

Adjudication panels will then review any that were flagged electronically. These panels, including representatives from both the Democratic and Republican parties, study each ballot for marks indicating voter intent. After each county certifies their total, the state will perform an audit before certifying the results, Sterling said.

With margins so narrow in Georgia, Democrats, Republicans and voting advocacy groups are scrambling to encourage people to fix flaws in already submitted ballots before a Friday deadline to ensure they are counted. There are two categories of ballots where voters may need to fix or “cure” flaws.

An election worker examines ballots as vote counting in the general election continues at State Farm Arena on Thursday, Nov. 5, 2020, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

One is in mail-in ballots, where voters may have forgotten to sign their ballot or elections workers may have decided that the signature doesn’t match.

The second category is provisional ballots, where voters encountered a problem in person at a polling place and cast their vote with the understanding that officials would later determine whether it’s eligible. Some will be counted without further action, but if a voter didn’t present a photo identification, they will have to present ID to officials to cure their ballot. Advocates also say that in some cases, voters may need to go to a county elections office if they didn’t show up on the rolls at a polling place to make sure their ballot is counted.

Cam Ashling, a Democratic activist, said she spent Thursday canvassing Gwinnett and Hall counties northeast of Atlanta door to door, although she said she found few voters. She said volunteers are flooding in on the Democratic side to seek out missing ballots.

“I guess they’re waking up to the reality that we can flip Georgia,” Ashling said.

State officials couldn’t immediately provide the number of uncured absentee ballots. Provisional lists are kept at the county level, and there are thousands outstanding statewide that county officials will decide on whether to count by Friday.

A protester displays a sign in front of the CNN center Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2020 in Atlanta. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

With 270 electoral votes needed to win the presidency, Georgia’s 16 electoral votes would clinch it for the Democrats.

In Fulton County, one woman sang “All Night Long” as election workers opened, flattened, stacked and scanned ballots inside Atlanta’s State Farm Arena.

Donald Trump Jr. spoke Thursday evening at an event in Atlanta, along with several Georgia elected officials and decried the process.

Read More: Alabama police captain placed on leave for social media post on Biden voters: ‘Put a bullet in their skull’

Earlier in the day, roughly a hundred Trump supporters gathered outside the arena. They carried signs that read, “Foolton County=Fraud” and chanted “God bless Trump” and “Stop the steal.” Several Atlanta police officers monitored the scene.

On Thursday, Chatham County Judge James Bass dismissed a lawsuit by the Georgia Republican Party and the Trump campaign that essentially sought to ensure state laws are being followed on absentee ballots. The suit had raised concerns about 53 absentee ballots; county officials testified that all had been received on time.

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

TheGrio is now on Apple TV, Amazon Fire, and Roku. Download theGrio today!

The post Georgia presidential count tightens in scan of last ballots appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/2Jw4VsT
via Gabe's Musing's

Sen. Gary Peters says John James refusing to concede is ‘pathetic’: ‘They lost’

John James wants an investigation into his race against the Michigan senator

Michigan Republican U.S. Senate candidate John James is not conceding defeat to incumbent Sen. Gary Peters and wants an investigation into the race to determine its fairness.

James, a Black businessman and Iraq War veteran who graduated from West Point, fell short of his bid to unseat the first-term senator in Tuesday’s election. Peters was projected to win with 49.8% of the vote in comparison to 48.3% for James with 99% of precincts reporting, according to the New York Times.

Gary Peters John James thegrio.com
(Credit: Peters and James)

Read More: Judge nixes Trump bid to stop Philly vote count

The race was heavily watched, with millions pouring into the contest, and seen as a benchmark as to whether or not Michigan would elect its first Republican senator since 1994, and its first Black senator. James previously lost by 7 points to Sen. Debbie Stabenow in 2018, but was seen as very competitive in this effort.

Despite outlets declaring that he fell short of that goal in the battleground state, James is now refusing to concede and claiming “while Senator Peters is currently ahead, I have deep concerns that millions of Michiganders may have been disenfranchised by a dishonest few who cheat.”

James, 39, made the accusation in a statement posted to Twitter on Thursday. He maintained that the integrity of democracy was at stake if he were to accept the loss without due diligence that every ballot was legally cast.

“While not everyone wins in an election, voters must be confident that the election was fair and honest,” James wrote in a statement shared on Twitter Thursday.  “Failure to do so, is the end of democracy.”

“When this process is complete, I will of course accept the results and the will of the people,” James added, “but at this time there is enough credible evidence to warrant an investigation to ensure that elections were conducted in a transparent, legal and fair manner. Those who object likely have something to hide.”

John james thegrio.com
John James, Michigan GOP Senate candidate, speaks at an election night event after winning his primary election at his business James Group International August 7th, 2018 in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Bill Pugliano/Getty Images)

Read More: Michigan Democratic Sen. Gary Peters wins reelection, beats John James

James preemptively criticized those who will find fault in his course of action.

“Those who object likely have something to hide,” James insisted.

James also retweeted a user who claimed that he was actually the victor.

The Detroit News reported that Charlie Spies, an attorney representing James, filed a complaint with the Wayne County Board of Canvassers and alleged Democratic interference. He reportedly claimed that Republican poll watchers weren’t allowed to “meaningfully participate” as the vote count was monitored and cast doubt on the process.

“We have seen and we have witnesses that saw the mysterious appearance of ballots at the TCF Center that can’t be accounted for,” Spies said.

The current tally had Peters leading James by more than 80,000 votes. He laughed off being told that his Republican challenger wanted to contest the outcome of the race during a press conference on Thursday.

Gary Peters thegrio.com
In this Oct. 16, 2020, file photo, Sen. Gary Peters, D-Mich., speaks during an event with Democratic presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden at Beech Woods Recreation Center, in Southfield, Mich. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster, File)

“It’s sad and it’s pathetic. They lost,” Peters said to reporters at the Goodison Cider Mill. “It’s very clear. Just count the votes. I understand Mr. James has been running for four years, he’s lost twice now. I understand that doesn’t sit well with him.”

Peters added that James had not yet personally contacted him but urged him not to be a sore loser.

“This is where you see someone’s character,” the senator added. “And they come up and realize that they need to accept the vote of the people of the state of Michigan. I would hope that this nonsense could go away.”

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

TheGrio is now on Apple TV, Amazon Fire, and Roku. Download theGrio today!

The post Sen. Gary Peters says John James refusing to concede is ‘pathetic’: ‘They lost’ appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/3mUWGFg
via Gabe's Musing's

Judge nixes Trump bid to stop Philly vote count

U.S. District Judge Paul S. Diamond suggested each party be allowed 60 observers inside a hall at a downtown convention center where the final ballots are being tallied

A federal judge has denied a bid by President Donald Trump’s campaign to stop the vote count in Philadelphia over observer access, urging the two sides to instead forge an agreement.

Read More: McConnell may stop Biden from picking liberal Cabinet: report

U.S. District Judge Paul S. Diamond suggested each party be allowed 60 observers inside a hall at a downtown convention center where the final ballots are being tallied. As the hearing unfolded Thursday evening, President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden were locked in a tight battle for the 20 electoral votes in Pennsylvania.

Diamond, an appointee of President George W. Bush, chastened the lawyers as both sides bickered about who was following the rules and reminded them they are officers of the court.

People urge for all votes to be counted during a demonstration outside the Pennsylvania Convention Center where votes are being counted, Thursday, Nov. 5, 2020, in Philadelphia, following Tuesday’s election. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

“Really, can’t we be responsible adults here and reach an agreement?” the exasperated judge asked. “The whole thing could (soon) be moot.”

Read More: Alabama police captain placed on leave for social media post on Biden voters: ‘Put a bullet in their skull’

Republicans went to court Thursday afternoon to complain that election officials in the Democratic-led city were ignoring a state court order they’d won earlier in the day to give them a closer view of ballot processing.

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

TheGrio is now on Apple TV, Amazon Fire, and Roku. Download theGrio today!

The post Judge nixes Trump bid to stop Philly vote count appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/3etlOjz
via Gabe's Musing's

Counties with highest COVID-19 cases voted for Trump, data shows

The president also won massive support in states with the highest virus-related deaths

Americans in counties with the highest number of new COVID-19 cases overwhelmingly voted for Donald Trump in Tuesday’s election.

According to an Associated Press analysis, in 376 counties where the virus is currently most rampant, 93% of those counties went for Trump. Most were in rural areas where there is low adherence to social distancing and mask-wearing, Chicago-Tribune reports. Counties in Montana, the Dakotas, Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa and Wisconsin are hotbeds for the latest surge in COVID cases, and Trump enjoyed massive support from voters in these areas.

“Public health officials need to step back, listen to and understand the people who aren’t taking the same stance” on mask-wearing and other control measures, said Dr. Marcus Plescia of the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials.

Read More: Fauci warns of COVID-19 surge, opposes Trump’s response

Trump also won the majority of votes in states with the highest COVID-19 deaths, including Florida and Texas. 

“The president has spent months minimizing the virus and the pain of the loved ones of the more than 230,000 Americans taken by COVID-19. It’s no surprise that the deception paid off,” said Florida resident Andrea Mulcahy, whose husband died of COVID-19 in July at age 52.

“It’s also heartbreaking that more Americans don’t understand the horror that so many of their neighbors have lived and continue to live,” she added.

Read More: Tens of thousands of COVID-19 infections linked to Trump rallies: study

There have been more than 230,000 COVID-19 related deaths in America. Trump has responded by downplaying the severity of the pandemic and encouraging the public to ignore basic safety precautions.

If elected to the White House, Joe Biden has vowed to “immediately put in place a national strategy that will position our country to finally get ahead of this virus and get back our lives,” the former vice president said at a rally in Wilmington, Delaware, last month.

“I’ll reach out to every governor in every state, red and blue, as well as mayors and local officials during the transition, to find out what support they need and how much of it they need. I’ll ask the new Congress to put a bill on my desk by the end of January, with all the resources necessary to see how both our public health and our economic response can be seen through the end,” Biden added.

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

TheGrio is now on Apple TV, Amazon Fire, and Roku. Download theGrio today!

The post Counties with highest COVID-19 cases voted for Trump, data shows appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/356NkjT
via Gabe's Musing's

Africa's week in pictures: 30 October - 5 November 2020

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

from BBC News - Africa https://ift.tt/36aPVZ8
via Gabe's Musing's

McConnell may stop Biden from picking liberal Cabinet: report

Sources say Joe Biden’s transition team is considering prospective Cabinet nominees who will be on the moderate side

According to a new report, potential president Joe Biden may limit his Cabinet choices to moderates if he does take office.

Read More: McConnell: New virus relief bill will now be top priority

As Axios reports, the former vice president’s transition team will consider limiting its prospective Cabinet nominees to those who satisfy Mitch McConnell. According to the outlet, this could keep many progressive Democrats out of the running for high-ranking positions. Sources told Axios Biden may go with centrist options such as economist Lael Brainard for Treasury Secretary or Tony Blinken, former Deputy National Security Advisor for Secretary of State instead of more left-leaning politicians like Susan Rice and Stacey Abrams.

A source close to McConnell says a “Republican Senate would work with Biden on centrist nominees but no ‘radical progressives’ or ones who are controversial with conservatives.”

“It’s going to be armed camps,” the source said.

The outlet previously reported that the Biden team considered an informal ban on naming Democratic U.S. senators to the Cabinet if he wins, which prevents consideration of Elizabeth Warren for Treasury or Bernie Sanders for Labor. Biden himself, focused on the election outcome, had not confirmed a potential Senate ban but it avoids having to choose replacements while the balance of the Senate is still at stake.

10th Anniversary Women In The World Summit
Susan Rice speaks onstage at the 10th Anniversary Women In The World Summit – Day 2 at David H. Koch Theater at Lincoln Center on April 11, 2019 in New York City. (Photo by Mike Coppola/Getty Images)

But Politico reports Warren hopes to be Treasury Secretary in a Biden White House. Sources confirmed to the outlet: “She wants it.”

Read More: McConnell says ‘no concerns’ about health while badly bruised and bandaged

Biden officials may hold out for signals from McConnell about whether he’ll fight every nominee or only a few selected progressive options per Axios.

As theGrio reported, McConnell, the Senate majority leader, was re-elected to a seventh term in Kentucky, defeating Democrat Amy McGrath. According to the report, he won by boasting that his leadership post and close ties to President Donald Trump were political assets for the Bluegrass State. Trump won Kentucky by 30 percentage points.

A statement on the official website for the Biden-Harris Transition Team said that staffers are prepared to continue working towards an easy transition if Biden does win the presidency.

“The American people will determine who will serve as the next President of the United States. Votes are still being counted in several states around the country. The crises facing the country are severe — from a pandemic to an economic recession, climate change to racial injustice — and the transition team will continue preparing at full speed so that the Biden-Harris Administration can hit the ground running on Day One.”

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

TheGrio is now on Apple TV, Amazon Fire, and Roku. Download theGrio today!

The post McConnell may stop Biden from picking liberal Cabinet: report appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/2GvCslQ
via Gabe's Musing's

Virginia man kills wife, himself after she serves him separation papers

Their daughter says he may have suffered from untreated mental health issues.

A family is in mourning after a tragic murder-suicide on Halloween night.

Michele Francis, 53, of Stafford, Virginia attempted to serve her husband separation papers on Oct. 31, but it ended with him shooting her and then pulling the gun on himself.

Read More: Virginia man arrested for allegedly killing friend, driving with body in car

The Stafford County Sheriff’s office responded to a 911 call at Baldwin Drive in the subdivision of Cardinal Forest. They found the couple in the master bedroom with gunshot wounds, according to The Free Lance-Star.

The husband was identified as Peter Francis, 57, a surgical technician.

“My father took my mom’s life simply because she got tired of his abuse and had decided to leave him,” Tiffini Amber Pietrzak, 24, the couple’s oldest daughter, who lives in Florida, told The Free Lance-Star in a phone interview.

“He’s been causing us pain our entire lives and now he’s caused pain that may never go away.”

The couple, married almost 26 years, shared an 18-year-old son who says he heard an argument and then gunshots from the upstairs bedroom. He ran upstairs and after discovering his father’s body in a closet, called 911.

Read More: Virginia Baptist church donates $1 million in surplus tithes

The couple also has a 15-year-old daughter who was staying with Pietrzak in Florida. Pietrzak says when she picked up her sister two weeks earlier to get her away from the deteriorating situation, she begged their mother to come along but she refused.

She describes her as the backbone of the family who worked a full-time job and two part-time jobs.

Pietrzak is asking for help to take care of the siblings she now has to raise. Both her sister and brother are still in high school.

“I never imagined having two extra people to be responsible for,” she adds, “We have enough on our plate with our own family, but I’m all they have left.”

The daughter has advice for other victims of abuse.

“People need to know they are not alone and perhaps it will encourage someone to take action before it’s too late.”

Donate to Pietrzak’s GoFundMe here.

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

TheGrio is now on Apple TV, Amazon Fire, and Roku. Download theGrio today!

The post Virginia man kills wife, himself after she serves him separation papers appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/350BqHT
via Gabe's Musing's

Lil Wayne reportedly broke up with girlfriend over her Biden endorsement

In a plot twist, Lil Wayne reportedly unfollowed his girlfriend because she posted a message in support of Joe Biden

Lil Wayne made headlines after he endorsed President Donald Trump last week. Shortly thereafter it was reported that his girlfriend Denise Bidot broke up with him due to his political views. Now the plus-sized model has come forward to deny the viral claim and sources have revealed that it was in fact Wayne who dropped her for voting Democrat.

The 38-year-old hitmaker had been blissfully dating the plus-sized model for months, but sources claimed they split shortly after he revealed that he met with the Republican presidential incumbent just days before the 2020 general election on Nov. 3.

READ MORE: Sales of alcohol, food, and weed skyrocketed on election night: report

Lil Wayne girlfriend thegrio.com
(Credit: Instagram)

Originally it was reported that Bidot she broke things off with Wayne because of his endorsement. But the Puerto Rican and Kuwait bombshell denied the rumors in a social media post, declaring, “I did not. This is absolutely false.”

Later, in an Instagram story captured by Gossip in the City, she wrote, “Imagine being dumped over an IG post…that expressed MY political view and encouraged people to vote… It’s definitely 2020.”

Allegedly there was some tension between the couple after Bidot posted a picture endorsing Biden with the hashtag, #notrumpforme. She later posted a picture of Wayne in her story clarifying, “Let me be clear this my king. I love him.”

READ MORE: John Legend says rappers supporting Trump are new supergroup ‘called the Sunken Place’

But that seemingly wasn’t enough to smooth things over given Wayne unfollowed her shortly thereafter. According to The Neighborhood Talk even after she removed her Biden endorsement, a source claims he kicked her out.

Wayne has yet to directly address the scandal. But he did post a cryptic message on his Twitter about love that many speculate is in reference to the break up in which he shared, “I live the way I love and love the way I live. I’m a lover not a lighter bekuz they burn out. I am an eternal fire and burning love, either leave with a tan, a 3rd degree burn, or stay and die in love. You’re sweating. Sincerely, the fireman.”

As we previously reported, this controversy all started last Thursday when the New Orleans hip-hop star shared a photo of he and Trump standing side by side as they smiled with their thumbs up.

“Just had a great meeting with @realdonaldtrump @potus,” wrote Wayne, real name Dwayne Carter Jr. He continued, “…besides what he’s done so far with criminal reform, the platinum plan is going to give the community real ownership.”

“He listened to what we had to say today and assured he will and can get it done.”

Trump later went on the record to state that Lil Wayne requested a meeting with him and also complimented him as an “activist” and “nice guy.”

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

TheGrio is now on Apple TV, Amazon Fire, and Roku. Download theGrio today!

The post Lil Wayne reportedly broke up with girlfriend over her Biden endorsement appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/36o1oVB
via Gabe's Musing's

Sen. Holly Mitchell helps make history with all-female Board of Supervisors in LA County

State Senator Holly Mitchell won a landslide victory for the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors 2nd District race

While the country is still counting votes, Los Angeles, California is making process.

State Sen. Holly Mitchell made history when she won the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors 2nd District race in Tuesday’s election.

Read More: Senator Holly Mitchell says Los Angeles County Supervisor is ‘the job I have trained for my entire career’

Mitchell won easily against L.A. City Councilman Herb Wesson according to CBS Los Angeles. She won 60.89% of the votes against City Councilman Herb Wesson’s 39.11%. They were both gunning to take L.A. County Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas’ seat who had termed out. The board is formally known as “five little kings” for the five men that held their positions for decades is long over.

The Board of Supervisors is considered the most powerful body of local government in the country. It controls the county’s $35-billion budget, the largest jail system, and its health care system.

Senator Holly J. Mitchell www.theGrio.com
(Credit: Senator Holly J. Mitchell)

Read More: Mystery blue dots painted near Biden supporters’ homes in California

This is the first time in history that women will run the board in the over 150 years it has been established. Ange-Marie Hancock Alfaro, a professor and chair of gender studies of the University of Southern California, says five women having this much power on a board is basically unprecedented in the country.

“I can’t think of another example in the entire United States where you will have five women having control of,” she told the Los Angeles Times. “… the largest county in the entire country just in terms of people, but also the largest county budget in the entire country.”

Former Supervisor Gloria Molina was the first Latina elected to the board in 1991 and she said when she joined she was met with racism and sexism. She says a male supervisor told the media she was “having hot flashes,” when she challenged a decision made by one of her fellow supervisors.   

Mitchell said at first she never thought of running until $1 billion was cut from the state’s subsidized childcare. She said that was her lightbulb moment.

“I literally said in my mind, ‘I guess I have to run,’ ” said Mitchell.

Mitchell previously introduced The CROWN Act, a law that protects Black people from race-based hair discrimination, which is the denial of opportunities because of hair texture or protective hairstyles including braids, locs, twists, or Bantu knots. The law was ultimately passed in seven states. In an exclusive interview with theGrio last month, the senator explained the significance of making issues that impact the Black community a priority.

“It is who I am, it is the lens through which I see the world, I experience the world and it’s the moves through which I legislate and appropriate resources. I’m the only black woman that serving in the California State Senate currently and I’m only the fourth since statehood. I’m clear that I have a responsibility to bring it,” she said. “I am confident in my skin, and it gives In great pride to stand on that floor.”

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

TheGrio is now on Apple TV, Amazon Fire, and Roku. Download theGrio today!

The post Sen. Holly Mitchell helps make history with all-female Board of Supervisors in LA County appeared first on TheGrio.



from TheGrio https://ift.tt/3517rQ6
via Gabe's Musing's