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Twitter Permanently Suspends Donald Trump’s Account for Violating ‘Glorification of Violence’ Policy

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Published January 8, 2021 by The Root

Twitter announced Friday evening that it would permanently ban the account of President Donald Trump after continuing to use the platform to incite violence following the riot at the Capitol on Wednesday.

The company released a blog post explaining what led to this course of action. They cited two tweets the president published on Friday as being responsible for triggering the ban.

“On January 8, 2021, President Donald J. Trump tweeted: The 75,000,000 great American Patriots who voted for me, AMERICA FIRST, and MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN, will have a GIANT VOICE long into the future. They will not be disrespected or treated unfairly in any way, shape or form!!!’” the post read. “Shortly thereafter, the President tweeted: ‘To all of those who have asked, I will not be going to the Inauguration on January 20th.’”

The post said the events on Wednesday played a direct role in its decision to permanently ban the president’s account. “Due to the ongoing tensions in the United States, and an uptick in the global conversation in regards to the people who violently stormed the Capitol on January 6, 2021, these two Tweets must be read in the context of broader events in the country and the ways in which the President’s statements can be mobilized by different audiences, including to incite violence,” the post read.

The company went on to say the two tweets in question were a violation of its Glorification of Violence Policy, which is meant to prevent the platform from being used to incite others to commit violence. The post added that they found the two tweets were “highly likely” to encourage others “to replicate the criminal acts that took place at the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021.”

This determination is based on a number of factors, including:

  • President Trump’s statement that he will not be attending the Inauguration is being received by a number of his supporters as further confirmation that the election was not legitimate and is seen as him disavowing his previous claim made via two Tweets (12) by his Deputy Chief of Staff, Dan Scavino, that there would be an “orderly transition” on January 20th.
  • The second Tweet may also serve as encouragement to those potentially considering violent acts that the Inauguration would be a “safe” target, as he will not be attending.
  • The use of the words “American Patriots” to describe some of his supporters is also being interpreted as support for those committing violent acts at the US Capitol.
  • The mention of his supporters having a “GIANT VOICE long into the future” and that “They will not be disrespected or treated unfairly in any way, shape or form!!!” is being interpreted as further indication that President Trump does not plan to facilitate an “orderly transition” and instead that he plans to continue to support, empower, and shield those who believe he won the election.
  • Plans for future armed protests have already begun proliferating on and off-Twitter, including a proposed secondary attack on the US Capitol and state capitol buildings on January 17, 2021.

So, it only took four years, a failed coup and multiple people dying but President Donald Trump is finally off Twitter for good for now.

Police clearing pro-Trump mob from US Capitol after rioters stormed halls of Congress

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Published January 6, 2020 by CNN

(CNN)Police are clearing supporters of President Donald Trump from the US Capitol after they breached one of the most iconic American buildings, engulfing the nation’s capital in chaos after Trump urged his supporters to fight against the ceremonial counting of the electoral votes that confirmed President-elect Joe Biden’s win.

Shortly after 1 p.m. ET hundreds of pro-Trump protesters pushed through barriers set up along the perimeter of the Capitol, where they tussled with officers in full riot gear, some calling the officers “traitors” for doing their jobs. About 90 minutes later, police said demonstrators got into the building and the doors to the House and Senate were being locked. Shortly after, the House floor was evacuated by police.

An armed standoff was taking place at the House front door as of 3 p.m. ET, and police officers had their guns drawn at someone who is trying to breach it. A Trump supporter was also pictured standing at the Senate dais.

The Senate floor was cleared of rioters as of 3:30 p.m. ET, and an officer told CNN that they have successfully squeezed them away from the Senate wing of the building and towards the Rotunda, and they are removing them out of the East and West doors of the Capitol.

A woman is in critical condition after being shot in the chest on the Capitol grounds, according to two sources familiar with the matter. The sources could not provide further details on the circumstances of the shooting. Multiple officers have been injured with at least one transported to the hospital, multiple sources tell CNN.

It’s not clear if any of the individuals have been taken into custody.

Vice President Mike Pence was also evacuated from Capitol, where he was to perform his role in the counting of electoral votes.

Video from inside the Capitol showed Trump supporters marching through Statuary Hall. The US Capitol Police is asking for additional law enforcement for assistance, including federal authorities, per a source familiar. The source says there are several suspicious devices outside the Capitol building.

Trump has directed the National Guard to Washington along with “other federal protective services,” according to White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany.

The entire DC National Guard has been activated by the Department of Defense following a pro-Trump mob breaching the United States Capitol.

“The D.C. Guard has been mobilized to provide support to federal law enforcement in the District,” said Jonathan Hoffman, the chief Pentagon spokesman. “Acting Secretary Miller has been in contact with Congressional leadership, and Secretary McCarthy has been working with the D.C. government. The law enforcement response will be led by the Department of Justice.

“The Department of Defense had earlier received a request from the US Capitol Police for additional DC National Guard forces but a decision has not been made, according to a senior defense official.

The official said DC National Guard was not anticipating to be used to protect federal facilities, and the Trump administration had decided earlier this week that would be the task of civilian law enforcement, the official said.

The shocking scene was met with less police force than many of the Black Lives Matter protests that rolled across the country in the wake of George Floyd’s killing at the hands of Minneapolis police officers last year. While federal police attacked peaceful protesters in Lafayette Square outside the White House over the summer, clearing the way for Trump to take a photo in front of a nearby church at the time, protesters on Wednesday were able to overrun Capitol police and infiltrate the country’s legislative chambers.

House and Senate leadership is safe and in an undisclosed locations, according to a person familiar. A separate lawmaker said House members have been evacuated to a location that this source would not disclose.

The US Capitol Police are working to secure the second floor of the Capitol first, and will then expand from there. Outside the Capitol, the DC Metropolitan Police Department continues to mass, but no major move has been made yet toward the crowd.

The Capitol police officer in the House chamber told lawmakers that they may need to duck under their chairs and informed lawmakers that protesters were in the building’s Rotunda. Lots of House members were seen wearing gas masks as they move between Capitol buildings. Members were calling family to say they are OK.

While the White House refused to comment on the protests, Trump said on Twitter, “Please support our Capitol Police and Law Enforcement. They are truly on the side of our Country. Stay peaceful!”Others inside the President’s orbit tweeted their calls for calm as the mob repeatedly attempted to take over the building.

Donald Trump Jr., the President’s son, said that his supporters who mobbed the Capitol were “wrong and not who we are.”

“Be peaceful and use your 1st Amendment rights, but don’t start acting like the other side. We have a country to save and this doesn’t help anyone,” he tweeted.

The protesters have breached exterior security barriers, and video footage shows protesters gathering and some clashing with police near the Capitol building. CNN’s team on the ground saw a number of protesters trying to go up the side of the Capitol building. Several loud flash bangs have been heard.

Protesters could be seen pushing against metal fences and police using the fences to push protesters back, while other officers reached over the top to club people trying to cross their lines.

Flash bangs could be heard near the steps of the Capitol as smoke filled the air. In some instances officers could be seen deploying pepper spray. Tear gas has been deployed, but it’s not clear whether by protesters or police, and people wiped tears from their eyes while coughing.

Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser just announced a citywide curfew from 6 p.m. ET on Wednesday until 6 a.m. ET Thursday.

Federal and local law enforcement are responding to reports of possible pipe bombs in multiple locations in Washington DC, according to a federal law enforcement official. It’s unclear if the devices are real or a hoax, but they’re being treated as real.

A pipe bomb was found at the Republican National Committee’s headquarters earlier Wednesday, an RNC official told CNN. The device was found on the ground outside, along the wall of the headquarters. It was safely detonated by the police, the RNC official said.

The Democratic National Committee was also evacuated after a suspicious package was being investigated nearby, a Democratic source familiar with the matter told CNN. The party had preemptively closed the building ahead of the protests, the source said, but a few security and essential personnel were evacuated.

This is a breaking story and will be updated.

CNN’s Pamela Brown, Phil Mattingly, and Daniela Diaz contributed to this report.

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Florida reports more than 31,000 new Covid-19 cases Saturday

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Published January 2, 2020 by CNN

After the Florida Department of Health didn’t issue a Covid-19 report in recognition of the New Year holiday yesterday, today an additional 31,518 Covid-19 cases were reported in the state, according to data from the department.

There are 1,354,833 total Covid-19 cases in the state, the Florida Covid-19 data dashboard showed.

There were also 220 new coronavirus related deaths reported on Saturday, bringing the total number of deaths in the state to 22,210, according to the state’s health department.

According to the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration, there are currently 6,701 people hospitalized with Covid-19 in the state.

Note: These numbers were released by Florida’s public health agency and may not line up exactly in real-time with CNN’s database drawn from Johns Hopkins University and the Covid Tracking Project.  

Virtual Travel: 3 VR Travel Ideas for Black Travel Influencers

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For now, traveling is all hopes and dreams, which leads me to a new element of travel we’re sure to see in the near future… virtual travel.

Published January 1, 2020 by Travel Noir

2021 is here, along with a new strain of COVID, tight travel restrictions, and a continued decline in travel around the world. 

With most travelers remaining reluctant to travel due to the pandemic, the travel industry as well as travelers are itching to get back to traveling. In fact, according to a study by Mckinsey, 75% of Gen Z and Millennial travelers aspire to take extended travel trips, while 81% of respondents desire to travel to places less populated and off-the-beaten-path. 

For now, traveling is all hopes and dreams, which leads me to a new element of travel we’re sure to see in the near future… virtual travel.

As a Black Travel Influencer, I do what we do best, we innovate, we preserve, and turn lemons into lemonade, my best advice for Black travel influencers is to identify ways to incorporate virtual technology into your business plan.

Here’s my top 3 virtual travel ideas to give your travel influencer brand a boost:

Host a Self-Love Fantasy Travel:

Imagine tuning in to epic visuals of some of the world’s foremost tranquil waterfalls, floral gardens, and wondrous caves. These and more can serve as the visuals to a virtually facilitated self-love webinar.

Round up your girls and prepare to see sights you cannot yet visit but can still visually indulge in. 

This may not only be monetized by it can be uniquely customized to fit your travel tribe. 

Virtual Reality Bae-cation: 

Virtual bae-time, anyone? Turn a quarantine night into a passionate night in a city far, far, away. It’s 2021, and for many, virtual reality may look better than actual reality.

Virtual reality (VR) along with Augmented Reality (AR) are lucrative fields that are worth exploring for those in the travel industry.

Traveling norms and the recovery of the traveling industry are not expected to reach pre-pandemic levels until as early as 2022; as predicted by the CEO of MMGY Global, Clayton Reid. With this, VR/AR is revamping our conception of travel. Don’t let the thought of simple images flashing across AR smartglasses discourage you because this is far from that. One will find themselves immersed in an interactive reality that involves real movement and reactions to the environment. This will transform what we considered to be limitations of travel and allow us to enter a new era of rich experience at our fingertips.

Travel the Diaspora:

Ok so this idea would require lots of planning and logistics, but it’ll be an unforgettable experience for many Black travelers. Let’s not forget the epic “Year of the Return” travel phenomenon that brought Black people and Black celebrities from all over the world to visit Ghana. Many Black travelers have a deep desire to reconnect with the African diaspora. 

Our ancient roots lie deep within us, craving a sense of connecting with our brothers and sisters across the diaspora. For those in the travel industry looking for the ultimate way to pivot during the pandemic, look no further than the diaspora. 

Consider using VR to take people on a virtual voyage to explore the diaspora in various countries.

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Here’s when new $600 stimulus checks, PPP loans could arrive

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The new stimulus package’s end-of-year timing also has tax implications for charitable donors.

Published Dec. 29, 2020 by Tampa Bay Times

Hours after President Donald Trump signed a new COVID-19 stimulus package Sunday night, Brock Blake started seeing a wave of new interest in Paycheck Protection Program loans.

“There’s definitely appetite,” said the CEO of Lendio, a small business loan broker that matches companies with lenders. “Small business owners are in a very difficult spot.”

Still, as the U.S. Department of Treasury and Small Business Administration work out the details on how to get more relief money out there, Blake hopes they’ll take time to get it right.

“I realize that every day is critical right now, with business owners needing capital,” said Blake, whose company shepherded $8 billion to 100,000 businesses during initial rounds of Paycheck Protection Program funding. “But last time, the first few days were such a disaster that no one knew what they were doing, and there was very little guidance. … I hope that now that we’ve all gone through this once, we’ve had some key learnings, and I hope that they will map out all of the guidance straight up, up front, even if it takes a couple of extra days.”

With the end of 2020 at hand, timing remains a big question about the $900 billion stimulus package, which will provide $600 checks for many Americans and $284 billion in small business loans.

The law stipulates that the Treasury disperse the funds “as rapidly as possible.” In the case of the $600 payments, that means no later than Jan. 15. Those who are signed up for direct deposits from the Internal Revenue Service could see them in the next week; those who got them by mail last time will have to wait a little longer. (The IRS created a tool this spring to sign up for direct deposit, but it’s currently down for maintenance as the office prepares for the rush of payments.)

Those who don’t receive a payment — but believe they were entitled to one — will be able to claim what’s called a “recovery rebate” on their upcoming 1040 tax forms. That applies both to last spring’s payments ($1,200 per person, $2,400 per couple, plus dependents) and the new payments ($600 per person, $1,200 per couple, plus dependents).

For Paycheck Protection Program loans, the Small Business Administration has 10 days from Trump’s signature to create and clarify new guidance and applications. That would be around Jan. 6.

Blake said Lendio is already collecting applications for first-time borrowers, and expects the first money to trickle through around Jan. 10. Those seeking a “second draw” loan will have to wait a little longer. Either way, companies will have to incorporate new federal requirements, including proof that their business declined by at least 25 percent from one quarter in 2019 to the same quarter in 2020.

“Even though we’re gathering the applications, we’re not submitting them to the SBA yet for approval,” Blake said. “We’re gathering them and queuing them, and as soon as they give us the green light, then we’ll submit them.”

The new law also extends through 2021 a few time-sensitive stipulations of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Stimulus (CARES) Act.

For example, the CARES Act increased the cap on allowable charitable tax deductions throughout 2020, giving people the ability to deduct donations worth up to 100 percent of their adjusted gross income (compared to 60 percent in previous years). It also allowed non-itemizers to deduct up to $300 per person, a rule that did not previously exist. Both rules have now been extended into 2021, which means people who give before New Year’s and after should be able to claim those deductions both this year and next.

“A lot of people do need that $600, but there are a lot of people who don’t necessarily need it,” said financial planner Chuck Lewandowski of Lutz. “Now you can use that money, if you’re charitably inclined, to get a deduction on the top end of your tax returns.”

Even before the new stimulus package, that tax break had paid dividends for numerous charities. American Stage Theater Company in St. Petersburg has seen triple the number of charitable donors from 2019 to 2020, in part because of the CARES Act provision, said artistic director Stephanie Gularte.

“We’re seeing significant increases over previous years’ end-of-year giving,” Gularte said. “A lot of people are wanting to give inside the tax year.”

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Catalyze 2021: Carl Lavender of the Foundation for a Healthy St. Petersburg

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Catalyze 2021: Carl Lavender of the Foundation for a Healthy St. Petersburg

Published on December 31, 2020 by the St Pete Catalyst

The largest grantmaking foundation in the city, the Foundation for a Healthy St. Petersburg – re-created just five years ago from the bones of the Bayfront Health Education and Research Organization, a public charity – has as its focused mission making long-term improvements to quality of life.

From the organization’s website:

Health equity means that everyone can attain their highest level of health, free from avoidable and unfair differences and barriers such as racial discrimination. If we want a healthier community, we must strive for a more just and equitable one, beginning with race equity.

According to Chief Equity Officer Carl Lavender, “2020 was our defining year. From my point of view.”

The arrival of Covid-19 last March was the Foundation’s first call to action. “We knew that there would be so much to do, that if we didn’t organize our response we would be scattered every place and not have spaces for impact,” Lavender said. “So we divided our responses into three different buckets.”

  1. Disease mitigation. “In cooperation with the Department of Health, we funded some test-taking for Covid, we funded community education for Covid. We reached out to the Department of Health, the Urban League and other organizations to step in and ensure that people of color had access to the right information, testing, et cetera.”
  2. Economic development. “Forty-one percent of all Black and Brown small businesses closed because of the city, county and state ordinances. Just obliterated them. So we’ve resourced a number of community interventions to allow for the smallest businesses to still have some liquidity during the crisis. So there’s some resiliency there on the part of those small businesses, like beauticians and barber shops, and small seamstress shops – those things that make up a huge fabric in the Black and Brown community.”
  3. Non-profit capacity. “We allowed our nonprofits to re-purpose their dollars. Whatever their grant was, we contacted them and said ‘You can re-purpose your dollars toward a Covid-19 response.’ Millions of dollars were re-purposed toward Covid-19.”

The next campaign, he added, will address the imminent Covid vaccine, “and how we might get the vaccine information out to those communities that are most likely not to take the vaccine because of their insecurity, and words and traditions and abuses in the past when it comes to these kinds of things in the Black community.”

Lavender sees the big picture – philanthropy is not just about money, it includes education, information and follow-through. “Certainly, 2020 will be a year we could very well say absolutely, we were very clear on our role in the community,” he explained. “It became formally defined. After George Floyd’s killing, it was even more deeply defined. We went from Covid-19 to George Floyd, and to that end people came to us in big numbers saying ‘What do we do now?’”

The Foundation helped organize meetings and peaceful demonstrations, disseminated information and provided funding for violence mitigation and prevention.

Looking ahead, Lavender sees a busy 2021 for the Foundation for a Healthy St. Petersburg. Since Black voters turned out in unprecedented numbers for the presidential election, he said, “We’ve got a responsibility now to those we encouraged to vote. We’ll have small campaigns on who did get elected, and where those elected stand on race equity.

“We have a mayoral election in St. Petersburg in 2021. So we want to make sure that people are informed about that, because government has a big role in systems change, and protecting citizens from harm, and institutionalizing economies, et cetera.”

A top “sociological conversation” for 2021, he is certain, will be the relationship between minorities and the vaccine: “Why Black people in particular are hesitant to participate in these kinds of interventions. It needs to be addressed through essay, through advocacy, through leaders taking the vaccine themselves and saying to people ‘It’s OK.’ “

In short, his work is cut out for him. Lavender is a charter member, along with others on the civic front lines, of the recently-formed Race Equity Leadership Council. “It’s going to be a big part of our year, along with some other economic development pieces in race equity,” he said. “I think those things together are going to be very positive.

“I believe that we are in a good place, as a city, to be a model for the country, that says we will no longer tolerate the mistreating of citizens because of the color of their skin. ‘We will object to it, we will fight it, and we won’t see it again.’”

Only When It Is Darkest, Can We See the Stars: Marc Lamont Hill Reflects on 2020

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“2020 showed us how vulnerable we are to the unforeseeable, it showed us how precarious our lives are. 2020 showed us that in a day, our entire worlds could be turned around. And because of our vulnerability, that instant shift in our lives could have devastating consequences.” —Marc Lamont Hill, Ph.D.

Published December 29, 2020 by The Root

Like many of us, Marc Lamont Hill is still attempting to make sense of the tumultuous year that was 2020.

“2020 kicked our asses,” Hill told The Root.

From the coronavirus pandemic that paralyzed the country, leaving over 330,000 dead (and counting); the state-sanctioned deaths of and violence towards Black people; the 2020 uprisings, which were a response to the police killings; and not to mention the loss of many, many luminaries—to say that “2020 kicked our asses” might be an understatement.

“It was the confluence of all those things at once against the backdrop of a presidency which was even more racist, even more indifferent to Black suffering than other presidencies which all have been and so on some level,” says the author of We Still Here: Pandemic Policing, Protest and Possibility.

Indeed, Trump’s presidency has shown that we live in a country where white supremacy still exists. His mere presence in the White House emboldened many racist Americans, and his inaction during a time of crisis made a bad situation, well, worse.

As we end this unequivocally bleak year, where is there hope?

“In 1968, Dr. King said, it is only when it is darkest that we can see the stars,” Hill said. “This was an incredibly dark moment and we were able to see those stars, those stars roaming the streets of Minneapolis, those stars were on the streets of Philadelphia, in New York and Los Angeles and Houston. Those stars were protesters who were willing to stand up and speak out and use their bodies and put their bodies on the line as a means of pushing for freedom.”

MF Doom, influential rapper, died in October at 49

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Rapper MF DOOM performs at a benefit concert for the Rhino Foundation at Central Park's Rumsey Playfield on June 28, 2005 in New York City.

Published January 1, 2020 by CNN

MF Doom, a masked rapper who was much respected in the industry, died in October, his wife and record label shared on social media Thursday. He was 49.No cause of death was given and CNN has reached out to his record label and reps to ask about the delay in announcing his death. His wife, Jasmine, broke the news in the caption of a photo on his verified Instagram account.

She began the note addressing the rapper, whose real name was Daniel Dumile, by his last name.”The greatest husband, father, teacher, student, business partner, lover and friend I could ever ask for,” the note read “Thank you for all the things you have shown, taught and given to me, our children and our family.”

Several well-known artists took to social media to mourn his death.

“RIP to another Giant your favorite MC’s MC .. MF DOOM!! crushing news…,” rapper QTip tweeted. Born in London in 1971, he moved with his family to Long Island, New York, as a child and started performing and producing hip hop as a teen under the name Zev Love X. He and his younger brother Dingilizwe, known as DJ Subroc, formed the group KMD and released a critically acclaimed debut album, “Mr. Hood,” in 1991.Their sophomore album was prepared for release in 1993 when Dumile’s brother died after being hit by a car. Five years later the rapper re-emerged as Metal Face Doom, wearing a mask modeled after the Marvel villain Dr. Doom, and released a solo record titled “Operation: Doomsday.” In a 2009 New Yorker article, he told writer Ta-Nehisi Coates that the mask “came out of necessity.” “I wanted to get onstage and orate, without people thinking about the normal things people think about. Like girls being like, ‘Oh, he’s sexy,’ or ‘I don’t want him, he’s ugly,’ and then other dudes sizing you up,” Dumile said. “A visual always brings a first impression. But if there’s going to be a first impression I might as well use it to control the story. So why not do something like throw a mask on?” He became well known for his intellect, wit and intricate rhyme style, which he displayed on six solo albums and five collaborative projects with the likes of Danger Mouse and Ghostface Killah. In 2017, his 14-year-old son, King Malachi Ezekiel Dumile, died.” Safe journey and may all our ancestors greet you with open arms. One of our greatest inspirations. Thank you for allowing us to be your parents,” he reportedly posted on social media in announcing the loss of “the greatest son one could ask for. “The rapper’s wife referenced that loss in announcing her husband’s death.” Words will never express what you and Malachi mean to me, I love both and adore you always,” she wrote. “May THE ALL continue to bless you, our family and the planet.”

As US inches closer to 350,000 Covid-19 deaths, one model projects about 115,000 more could die in next four weeks

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Published Sat January 2, 2021 by CNN

The US topped 20 million total infections and inched closer to 350,000 Covid-19 deaths on the first day of 2021 — proof of a grim reality continuing into the new year. More people have died across the US than anywhere else: nearly 348,000 Americans since the pandemic’s start. Another 115,000 could die over the next month, according to projections from the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation. For comparison, more than 77,500 died in December, the country’s deadliest month.

Hospitalizations are at the highest levels they’ve ever been. The US reported a record 125,379 hospitalized Covid-19 patients nationwide Thursday, according to the Covid Tracking Project. That number dipped slightly Friday, with 125,057 hospitalizations reported — about an 163% increase from two months ago.

A California doctor said hospitals have hit a “breaking point.””We’re also worried that at some point soon we’re going to have a really tough time finding the space and the staff to take care of all the sick patients coming in with Covid-19 who really need our help,” said Dr. Nicole Van Groningen of Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles.

Friday’s milestone also means the nation has recorded by far the most Covid-19 infections. It’s double what No. 2 India has reported and almost triple what No. 3 Brazil has.

But the worst may not be over. Experts fear that in the coming weeks — following holiday travel and gatherings — the US could see another surge of cases that could drive hospitalizations and deaths even higher. 

Dr. Anthony Fauci told CNN earlier this week the country has seen a surge that has “just gotten… out of control,” and that the coming weeks could be even worse. 

“Once you get to large numbers of people at a dinner inside, poor air ventilation and circulation, that’s when you get in trouble,” he said. “That’s what we’re concerned about– that in addition to the surge, we’re going to have an increase superimposed upon that surge which could make January even worse than December.”

“We just have to assume that it’s going to get worse,” Fauci added.

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Booger McFarland and the rise of the anti-Black scold in sports

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Bogger McFarland, left, and Washington Football Team quarterback Dwayne Haskins.

Stop me if you’ve heard this one: A professional athlete with a zillion-dollar contract who’s barely old enough to rent a car from Enterprise gets into trouble. Maybe they’re caught drunk driving (obviously not in a rental car), arrested at a strip club, or worse, accused in a domestic violence incident. 

It happens so often we barely pay attention anymore, which was likely going to be the case when Dwayne Haskins, the underperforming quarterback of the Washington Football Team, was cut last week. However, thanks to the brilliance and insight of Booger McFarland, an analyst on ESPN’s NFL Primetime, we now know that Haskins and all other Black quarterbacks are just one missed team meeting away from being poster boys for Scared Straight: NFL Edition.

Dwayne Haskins #7 of the Washington Football Team looks on from the sidelines after being injured during the second half of the game against the New York Giants at FedExField on December 22, 2019 in Landover, Maryland. 

It pays to be the anti-Black scold on sports television.  

Haskins was cut last week after just over a year of poor performance on and off the field for the Washington Football team. When pictures surfaced of him partying at a strip club without a mask (violating NFL COVID-19 safety protocols for a second time) the team was done with him. While the sports commentariat mostly focused on Haskins’s wasted potential, McFarland saw Haskins as an indictment of most Black men in the league.

“It bothers me because a lot of it is the young African-American player. They come in and they don’t take this as a business. It is still a game to them. This ain’t football. This is a billion-dollar business.

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What Black women’s political wish list should be for 2021

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Organizers of the Black Women Matter march (L-R) Ashley, Aurora and Sarah J pose for a photo on July 03, 2020 in Richmond, Virginia. Protests continue around the country after the death of African Americans while in police custody.

Published December 30, 2020 by TheGrio

As we near the end of 2020, Black women political elites and citizens alike deserve more than a round of applause. This was an extremely tough year that was characterized by several ups and downs. 

From celebrating the historic win of Kamala Harris as the first Black and South Asian vice-president elect to the senseless murder of Breonna Taylor and the injustice that her family received at the hands of Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron.

Furthermore, the coronavirus pandemic negatively and disproportionately impacted Black women while the calls for racial justice provided new opportunities for some Black women-owned businesses. This year of extreme contradictions saw Black women rally to weather this storm, doing what Black women do — hunker down to survive and often thrive in an environment that was created for their destruction. 

Rather than lean into the myth of the Black Superwoman, Black women in politics walk this fine line of balancing structures that marginalize them and drawing on their own agency to positively change their circumstances. 

2021 will not be different. 

What political action items do Black women want and deserve in 2021? Below, I provide a list of possible and discrete items that may be enacted to help Black women survive and thrive in next year’s American political arena.

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