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  • You Care: Meek Mill & DJ Akademiks Beefing Thanks To Diddy Lawsuit, X Chimes In With Slander

    You Care: Meek Mill & DJ Akademiks Beefing Thanks To Diddy Lawsuit, X Chimes In With Slander

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    Source: Jerritt Clark / Getty

    It’s 2024, and Meek Mill and DJ Akademiks are still beefing. The Philadelphia rapper and the pro-level online troll, respectively, are currently going back and forth on X, so of course social media users are taking in all the mess.

    Not that it really matters at this point, but the brouhaha this go around seems to have started when Akademiks took to his Twitch to throw shots at Meek over the latest Diddy lawsuit. The suit claims that Diddy relayed to Lil Rod that he had sexual relations with Meek Mill—which for the record is totally unsubstantiated.

    Of course, Meek caught wind. “The way you niggas coming on the sick now… I can’t wait to meet akademiks lol they know I drop tomar this they damage control this net getting too weird,” he tweeted in response to the clip of Ak setting the bait.

    Then he eventually threatened Ak with the proper fade, kind of.

    “Akademiks didn’t I tell you stop playing with my name… idk what ima do when I actually see you! It’s gonna have a combination to it tho!,” he tweeted (we’re never going to type or say x’d).

    To this, and with Meek having engaged and thus falling into the trap, Akademiks responded in kind with the usual clown a rapper tropes involving being dropped from your label, allegedly, and plenty of homophobia. He’s also standing by the “Why are you mad at me when it’s the lawsuit that said you’re gay?” plea.

    The blatant toxic masculity and homophobia is the nastiest of work. So of course all angles from the X app are chiming in; good, bad and extra ugly. See for yourself in the gallery, for archival purposes.


    You Care: Meek Mill & DJ Akademiks Beefing Thanks To Diddy Lawsuit, X Chimes In With Slander 
    was originally published on
    hiphopwired.com

    4. Andrew Tate?

    Meek catching hell from all angles. 

    6. What Ye got to do with this exactly?

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    Robert Longfellow

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  • New Cleveland Chief of Police, Safety Director Sworn In a Week After Karrie Howard Resigns

    New Cleveland Chief of Police, Safety Director Sworn In a Week After Karrie Howard Resigns

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    Mark Oprea

    Former Chief of Police Wayne Drummond was sworn in as interim Director of Public Safety, replacing former director Karrie Howard who resigned last week following an investigation into an infringement of city policy.

    Dorothy “Annie” Todd, the former deputy chief of Cleveland Police, was sworn in by Mayor Justin Bibb as the city’s new chief of police Thursday morning.

    And former Chief of Police Wayne Drummond was also installed as the city’s new Director of Public Safety, a move that comes a week after former director Karrie Howard resigned, which came days after a Fox 8 investigation showed Howard admitting to violating a city policy he claimed he was unaware of.

    Mayor Justin Bibb, who swore in both Drummond and Todd on Tuesday, framed Howard’s step-down more as a natural path for the former director, who had held his post since 2020, rather than a result of a controversy.

    “Karrie and I spoke frequently about the future of the department, and we often had frank conversations about the leadership that was needed for the department to be successful moving forward,” Bibb said. “Specifically, to reach our ambitious goals, public safety must be focused on delivering for residents and free from distraction. And there must be a high degree of confidence at every level to ensure collaboration.”

    “Karrie felt that now was the right time to make a change in leadership,” Bibb added, “and made the difficult and hard decision to resign.”

    click to enlarge Dorothy "Annie" Todd is the city's newest chief of police, the second woman to hold this role in the city's history. - Mark Oprea

    Mark Oprea

    Dorothy “Annie” Todd is the city’s newest chief of police, the second woman to hold this role in the city’s history.

    On February 22, Fox 8’s Peggy and Ed Gallek revealed that Assistant Director of Public Safety Jakimah Dye had crashed her city car with her children inside in a violation of City of Cleveland policy that states “employees shall not transport any person other than City employees.”

    In a follow-up interview that day, Howard told the Galleks that he was oblivious to such city policy. He himself, he told Peggy Gallek, had done the same as Dye. “So, I’ve had my son in the car,” he told Fox 8. “We reviewed the policy. I didn’t know their was a policy.”

    Regardless of why Howard resigned, the new roles at CPD and Public Safety come at a seemingly tough time for both departments, when battling violent crime—as both Todd and Drummond said—remains a top priority, all while the CPD navigates an ongoing officer shortage that Bibb himself believes he can budget his way out of. (The city’s still short about 424 officers, News 5 found.)

    “Our new incentives around recruitment and retention, I think, are going to show real dividends to the CPD,” Bibb said. “We’re optimistic that we’ll have a sizable large police class by the end of this first quarter to replenish the ranks.”

    Todd began her career as a CPD traffic controller in the late 1990s, was acting deputy chief since 2022, after taking Joellen O’Neill’s role, and was commander of CPD’s Third District for three years before that. She is the second woman to hold the chief of police role in Cleveland’s history.

    Though less vocal than Drummond, Todd told press in City Hall’s Red Room on Thursday that, as chief, she’s prioritizing preventing juvenile crime, along with convincing the new Department of Justice monitors of “the progress we’re making and made throughout the years” with the Consent Decree.

    All three told press that the near formation of Cleveland’s own Gun Crime Intelligence Center, a copy of a similar center in Cincinnati, is the city’s best bet for taking guns used for criminal activity off the streets—a nod to those used in the West 6th and Public Square shootings downtown last summer.

    Bibb himself fashioned Cleveland as safer than it was three, four years ago, even with 2023’s 200 homicides clocked in. “We’ve seen a 14 percent reduction in homicides in out city,” he said, since 2020.

    As for Dye, the assistant director still has her job in the Department of Public Safety. She’s not allowed to drive her city car during an ongoing internal investigation.
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    Mark Oprea

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  • Matthew 25: Ministries responds to Ohio tornado damage

    Matthew 25: Ministries responds to Ohio tornado damage

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    OHIO — Wednesday morning brought an early wake-up call for Ohioans as tornado warnings rang out before dawn.

    The National Weather Service confirmed five tornadoes touched down in Riverside, Springfield, London, Hilliard and Blacklick/Licking and Matthew 25: Ministries has deployed response teams in order to help clean up the damage.


    What You Need To Know

    • Damage from the tornadoes ranged from downed power lines and trees to rooftops and siding being torn off homes
    • Matthew 25, a humanitarian aid and disaster relief organization headquartered in Blue Ash, Ohio, deployed its teams Thursday morning
    • Supplies will be distributed across Montgomery, Clark, Madison and Franklin counties and other affected areas
    • The organization plans to conduct damage assessments and contact partners in the area to determine how they can serve the needs of the disaster area

    Damage from the tornadoes ranged from downed power lines and trees to rooftops and siding being torn off homes. The Madison County Airport and Wright-Patterson Air Force Base both reported damages from the tornadoes.

    The humanitarian aid and disaster relief organization, headquartered in Blue Ash, deployed its teams Thursday morning.

    The team is bringing personal care products, cleaning supplies, baby items and first aid kits to assist people affected by the storms. They are also bringing paper products, water, tools and tarps.

    Supplies will be distributed across Montgomery, Clark, Madison and Franklin counties and other affected areas. Matthew 25 plans to conduct damage assessments and contact partners in the area to determine how they can serve the needs of the disaster area.

    Matthew 25 responds to disasters across the country and world, last year the organization responded to disasters ranging from  the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Hurricanes Idalia and Otis, wildfires in Hawaii, Syria and Turkey earthquakes, and additional storms, floods and tornadoes. So far this year teams have been deployed to  severe weather and tornadoes that swept through portions of the Southeast in early January as well as the Helena, AR water crisis. 

    The organization continues to respond to the humanitarian crisis in Ukraine, shipping more than 33 million pounds of supplies in 2023 and helped more than 40 million people.

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    Madison MacArthur

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  • U.S. Supreme Court agrees to hear Trump’s immunity claim with oral arguments set for April…By Clevelandurbannews.com, Ohio’s Black digital news leader

    U.S. Supreme Court agrees to hear Trump’s immunity claim with oral arguments set for April…By Clevelandurbannews.com, Ohio’s Black digital news leader

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    By Kathy Wray Coleman, editor

    WASHINGTON, D.C.-The U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday agreed to hear former President Donald Trump’s (pictured) case on whether he is immune from prosecution on charges of trying to overturn the 2020 election that he lost to current President Joe Biden.

    The nation’s highest court will hear arguments in April and a ruling could come by the end of June, sources have said.

    A U.S. Court of Appeals panel rejected Mr Trump’s argument earlier this month and he appealed to the Supreme Court that has three Trump appointees, Justices Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney-Barrett.

    Trump had claimed in the unprecedented legal case that he was immune from all criminal charges for acts that he said fell within his duties as president, including that he incited the Jan 6 insurrection at the Capitol.

    The Supreme Court taking the case is, by some standards, a victory for the former president as it increases the chances that his trial may not happen before November’s presidential election, a likely rematch between Trump and Biden.

    The former president was elated with Wednesday’s decision and said on his Truth Social site that without immunity presidents would  be “paralyzed by the prospect of wrongful prosecution and retaliation after they leave office.”

    Trump, 77,  was charged last year with witness tampering and conspiracy to defraud the U.S. over his attempts to overturn his 2020 election loss to Biden.

    Jack Smith, who was appointed as special counsel in the investigation, brought the criminal charges against  Trump and  wants the trial to be held this year. He initially asked the Supreme Court to take up that question to no avail and this left the federal court to address the matter. It rejected his claim earlier this month in a unanimous ruling and it is from that ruling that Mr. Trump successfully sought review by the Supreme Court.

    “We cannot accept former President Trump’s claim that a president has unbounded authority to commit crimes that would neutralize the most fundamental check on executive power – the recognition and implementation of election results,” the appeals court wrote in rejecting the immunity claim.

     

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    editor@clevelandurbannews.com (Kathy)

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  • Car vs. school bus: One of many morning crashes

    Car vs. school bus: One of many morning crashes

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    You can watch FOX 8’s 9:30 a.m. traffic report in the video below.

    CLEVELAND, Ohio (WJW) – An intense lake effect snow band caused a slick morning commute in portions of Northeast Ohio.

    Shortly after 9 a.m. on Thursday, Meteorologist Scott Sabol reported the line of snow was weakening as it moved off the lake but, the quick burst of snow made a big impact over several hours as it pushed through the area.

    Shortly after 8 a.m., FOX 8’s Patty Harken reported a crash involving a car and school bus at the I-77 Northbound and I-490 merger. She said no injuries were reported on the bus.

    Earlier, before 7 a.m., several accidents were reported on the Innerbelt Bridge. At one point, traffic in both directions on the Innerbelt Bridge was at a standstill. The portion of the highway has since reopened.

    Here is a look at conditions in downtown Cleveland shortly before 6 a.m.

    CLICK HERE to see current snowfall on the FOX 8 radar.

    The Ohio Department of Transportation has lifted an earlier speed reduction on I-90 in Lake County. Early Thursday morning, at about 5 a.m., ODOT reported they had 160 crews out combating snow and ice.

    FOX 8’s Patty Harken reminds motorists to take it slow on ramps, bridges, and overpasses when conditions may be slick.

    This blog has since been archived. Find previous blog posts below:

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    Danielle Langenfeld

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  • FOX 8’s Wayne Dawson honored among ‘Future History Makers’

    FOX 8’s Wayne Dawson honored among ‘Future History Makers’

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    CLEVELAND (WJW) – A member of our FOX 8 family was honored Wednesday night for his commitment to giving back for more than 40 years.

    Morning anchor Wayne Dawson was one of the five pillars of the local Black community honored during the event by Radio One, the parent company of radio stations Z 107.9 and WZAK.

    WJW photo

    Organizers recognized Wayne for his various contributions to the Cleveland community through his ministry and The Dawson Foundation.

    “I’m just humbled and honored to be recognized by Radio One. I’ve been blessed to be at Channel 8 for 44 years,” Wayne said. “What I try to do is to give back and be a blessing. That’s all I want to do. I am totally humbled and very grateful for this.”

    The other honorees included Maple Heights Mayor Annette Blackwell, Cleveland’s Health Commissioner Frances Mills, Warrensville Heights Superintendent Donald Jolly and local businesswoman Senayt Fekadu.

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    Jordan Unger

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  • Exclusive! Watch Susan L. Taylor Discuss The National CARES Mentoring Movement With NewsOne

    Exclusive! Watch Susan L. Taylor Discuss The National CARES Mentoring Movement With NewsOne

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    Susan L. Taylor onstage during the 5th Annual National CARES Mentoring Movement Gala at Cipriani Wall Street on February 10, 2020, in New York City. | Source: Brian Stukes / Getty

    A day before Susan L. Taylor’s For the Love of Our Children Gala opens its doors on Thursday to a sold-out audience at Pier 60 in New York City, the ESSENCE Editor-in-Chief Emerita and founder and CEO of the National CARES Mentoring Movement, recently sat down with NewsOne Senior Editor, asha bandele.

    During the intimate one-on-one chat, Taylor discussed why retiring from the legendary publication she helped shape and lead over nearly four decades could never mean not continuing to serve the community. Her organization, National CARES — founded in 2006 as ESSENCE Cares and now with affiliates in 58 U.S. cities — is dedicated to providing for free its culturally anchored curriculum and CARES-trained mentors and psychologists to support and guide young people in poorly resourced schools and communities and detention centers. CARES supports and provides mentors it recruits and trains to other mentoring organizations like the Boys and Girls Clubs of America as well.

    Tomorrow evening, on Feb. 29, Taylor will issue a call to love and action live before all of the celebrities, high-level friends in business, education and advocates, young people and community organizers who will gather at the For the Love of Our Children Gala to determine that ensuring our children is the big business of Black America.

    The red carpet livestream can be viewed beginning at 6 p.m. ET on the National CARES Facebook page, with the programming, hosted by Sherri Shepherd, immediately following at 7 p.m.

    SEE ALSO:

    Where Have All The Children Gone?

    A Meditation For Survival With Dionne Monsanto

    An American Crisis: Black Child Suicide, A NewsOne Special Series

    The post Exclusive! Watch Susan L. Taylor Discuss The National CARES Mentoring Movement With NewsOne appeared first on NewsOne.


    Exclusive! Watch Susan L. Taylor Discuss The National CARES Mentoring Movement With NewsOne 
    was originally published on
    newsone.com

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    asha bandele

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  • Cuyahoga Co. Animal Shelter offers $29 adoption fees for Leap Day

    Cuyahoga Co. Animal Shelter offers $29 adoption fees for Leap Day

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    CLEVELAND (WJW) – The Cuyahoga County Animal Shelter will have a discount on adoption fees in celebration of Leap Year. 

    The shelter is offering $29 adoption fees on all dogs that have been at the shelter for longer than 29 days through Thursday, Feb. 29.

    Adoptions, which are usually $95, include spay/neuter, vaccines, a 2024 dog license, microchipping and a current rabies tag, according to a press release from the shelter.

    “We are hopeful that the community will take the leap and fall in love with some of the fantastic dogs waiting for loving homes at the shelter,” said Animal Shelter Administrator Mindy Naticchioni. 

    If you want to give a dog a new, happy home, head to the Cuyahoga County Animal Shelter! The shelter is open Tuesday-Sunday from 10:30 a.m. – 4 p.m. and Sunday from noon – 4 p.m.

    Click here to view available pets at the shelter.

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    Celeste Houmard

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  • Bobby Rush Aims To Keep the Blues Alive

    Bobby Rush Aims To Keep the Blues Alive

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    Arnie Goodman

    Bobby Rush.

    Early in his career, blues singer-songwriter Bobby Rush, who was relatively unknown at the time, recruited guitarist Elmore James, already a notable musician who’d go on to become a Rock Hall Inductee, to play alongside him when he was performing at small Arkansas clubs like the Jitterbug. How’d he pull it off?

    “I had been singing at juke joints around town,” says Rush in relating just one anecdote from his storied career. Bobby Rush performs with Austin Walkin Cane and DJ Pete London at 8 p.m. on Thursday, March 7, at the Beachland Ballroom. “In that band, Elmore James was the most popular one of all of us. I wanted him to play with me. It’s a drawn-out story, but there was a little lady in Mississippi getting married to a friend of mine. He saw her coming down the sidewalk one day and said, ‘Who is that pretty girl? I’d do anything to get that.’ I said, ‘Maybe I can help you out.’ I knew her and could make the introduction. He wanted $5 a night. I said ‘I can’t pay you that. I could give you $3.’ That’s how I got him to play with me. It was a dirty trick. That ain’t right.”

    Those juke joint gigs gave Rush the confidence to buy a $7.50 bus ticket to Memphis where guys like B.B. King, Sonny Boy Williamson and Rufus Thomas worked on Beale Street. He worked on Beale Street and saved up enough money to move to St. Louis. After working there alongside the likes of Chuck Berry and Albert King, he migrated to Chicago.

    “I thought I was in heaven,” he says of the Windy City. “Howlin’ Wolf and Muddy Waters and Bo Diddley and Jimmy Reed were there. All the guys I could think of with my little country mind were in Chicago. That was like heaven to me. But then, the Lord took me to the Blue Island suburb. At that time, there weren’t any Black people that I knew of in Blue Island. I got this job playing behind a curtain. They wanted to hear my music but didn’t want to see my face as a Black man. That’s how I got off the ground. I put some musicians together and got a good band together with some musicians from down South.”

    Significant success didn’t arrive until 1971 when “Chicken Heads” became a big hit. Prior to that, Rush “played every juke joint [I could] for no money and got pushed around just enough to  learn what I was doing.”

    He cut “Chicken Heads” in 1968, but the track, a slow jam that starts with a funky bass riff before Rush’s woozy vocals come into the picture, didn’t come out until 1971.

    “People thought it was nothing, a zero,” he says. “Then, when put it out, it went to No. 1. I had a No. 1 and James Brown had the No. 2 record and Bill Withers had the No. 3 record. To beat those two guys at that time was hard to do. I didn’t know what I was doing. I was just playing music and hoping to be popular enough for the girls.”

    Eventually, Rush decided to move back to Mississippi, where his grandparents lived. He wrote his autobiography, I Ain’t Studdin’ Ya: My American Blues Story, based on researching his family background.

    “I didn’t write the book so people would feel sorry for me,” he explains. “I wanted people to read and think, ‘If Bobby Rush can do it, I can do it.’”

    He also cut the 2020 Rawer Than Raw album with his roots in mind.

    “I was trying to take back what the white musicians had taken from the Black guys,” he says. “Black guys had changed their identities and tried to sound white. I said, ‘I’m going to take it back and be this Black guy.’ I write and joke and have fun, and that’s blackness. Then, I started to crossover. I have crossed over to a white audience. You can name a few black guys now who have a big Black audience, but black audiences don’t know who they are.”

    His latest album, All of My Love, came out last year and won a Grammy for Best Traditional Blues album. Expect to hear some songs from it at the upcoming Beachland show, which will allow Rush to celebrate his remarkable legacy. When it comes to playing live, Rush  says he aims to entertain at a high level and rely upon his decades of experience.

    “Oh, I just be Bobby Rush,” he says with modesty when asked about playing live. “I’m old and ugly, and I just be me. I have learned what to do on stage after 70-some years on stage. I know what not to do, and that’s important. It’s the really the same thing as I’ve been doing all my life. When I was a kid, I didn’t have a bathroom inside the house. We had to go out to the toilet. It looked bad and smelled bad. Now, I got nine bathrooms, and they look good and smell good, but you do the same thing in them. That hasn’t changed. That’s kind of like the music. I’m just trying to keep the blues alive. It’s the root of all music. If you don’t like the blues, you probably don’t like your momma.”

    Coming soon: Cleveland Scene Daily newsletter. We’ll send you a handful of interesting Cleveland stories every morning. Subscribe now to not miss a thing.

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    Jeff Niesel

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  • RFK Jr. Whitesplains How ‘Education’ Will Make Us Immune To Racism ‘Like The Avengers’

    RFK Jr. Whitesplains How ‘Education’ Will Make Us Immune To Racism ‘Like The Avengers’

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    Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. hosts a fireside chat with rapper and producer Eric B. at The Gentleman’s Factory on February 18, 2024, in New York City. | Source: John Nacion / Getty

    A couple of videos have recently started floating around the interweb that show Robert F. Kennedy Jr. speaking to a room full of Black people about racism. The video clips are actually from Feb. 1, when the Kennedy 2024 campaign kicked off Black History Month by hosting a panel discussion at the Artlounge Collective in the Miracle Mile district of Los Angeles. RFK, who is a Democrat running as an independent in the 2024 presidential race, offered his insight on issues such as environmental racism and medical discrimination, but the part of his lecture (which is, indeed, what it appeared to be) that has drawn new attention on X shows the 70-year-old whitesplaining to Black people that education is the key to making Black people “immune” from racism, and, well—I have some thoughts.

    “We’re never going to eliminate racism…We’re hardwired to look for differences in other people and then to essentially practice racism. I don’t think you can change that human nature, but what you can do is you can make kids resilient against it,” RFK said. “The way you do that is by giving them a great education so that they know that they have potential. The other thing is to give them business models, role models and opportunities within their own neighborhood.”

    OK, so far, the politician who made headlines for spreading COVID-19 misinformation about lab-grown “bioweapons” that target “African nations” but spare Jewish people hasn’t said anything too unhinged here. I mean, he came dangerously close to going off on a “racism goes both ways” diatribe at the beginning there, and I’m not sure why so many white politicians think Black people need to be told of the importance of education—but whatever, I’ll let that slide.

    Then RFK gets into this weird thing where he appears to be trying to equate discrimination he has faced in America as a person of Irish-Catholic descent to what Black people have faced and still face, and, yeah, I need him to be less white.

    “I remember crosses being burned when I was a kid…I was called a ‘mick,’ a ‘mackerel snatcher,’ all of these anti-Catholic slurs when I was a kid, but it never bothered me. If someone called me that, I would think, ‘That guy’s got a problem.’ I didn’t think I have a problem,” he continued. “I had a great education, I had a family who loved me, I had role models, my country had confidence in my own future. Those kind of things had no impact on me, and that’s the kid of resilience we want to give Black American children so that they have so much confidence in their own future that when they do encounter inevitable racism, it will bounce off of them…like the Avengers.”

    *heavy negro sigh*

    First of all, RFK grew up white, well off and in a family full of some of the most well-known and revered elected officials in American history. I need him to stop pretending any discrimination he faced was comparable to what Black people have and still face. (Although, I must admit I’d never heard the anti-Catholic slur “mackerel snatcher,” and now I’m genuinely curious about the origin of that one.) It’s like: Sir, you are rich, white and a Kennedy, so, yes, I imagine anti-Irish Catholic slurs didn’t have much of a chilling effect on you.

    Secondly, when it comes to the devastating effects systemic racism has on Black people, racial slurs are really the least of it. If the most discrimination RFK faced was bigots saying mean things to him (unless you’re just willing to take it at face value that the KKK was burning crosses on his family’s lawn), he got light work. Black people, on the other hand, have to deal with actual statistical racial disparities (in housing, employment, education, policing, redlining, etc.) that affect us in ways that can’t be solved by simply shouting, “MORE EDUCATION!”

    This leads me to my final point: The idea that education will make Black kids or Black people in general immune to racism is absurd. For example, as important as a good education is, cops don’t check our high school and college transcripts before racially profiling or brutalizing us. It certainly won’t make us the Avengers. (I honestly don’t have the bandwidth to get into the patronizing tone of that reference.)

    The truth is, white politicians, regardless of party affiliation, all seem to have the same issue when it comes to connecting with the Black collective. RFK may not have been as superficial, manipulative and egregiously racist as white conservatives are when they try to appeal to us, but the inherent condescension was still there.

    Contrary to what many white people appear to believe, Black people already know how important education is. Whether we have equal access to quality education is the issue, and to RFK’s credit, that did seem to be what he was getting at. But the fact that he thinks it would serve as a racism-proof shield for Black peopledespite all of the educated Black people throughout history who suffered the effects of racism their entire lives (many of whom were killed behind it)—only highlights how different the American experience truly is for Black people. 

    Two Americas. That’s the core issue whether Black people are sufficiently educated or not.

    SEE ALSO:

    RFK Jr. Hosts Roundtable With Black Women As Polling Shows More Black Voters Supporting 3rd-Party Bids

    RFK Jr. Spreads COVID-19 Vaccine Conspiracy Theories About Black Nations After Alleged Antisemitism

    The post RFK Jr. Whitesplains How ‘Education’ Will Make Us Immune To Racism ‘Like The Avengers’ appeared first on NewsOne.


    RFK Jr. Whitesplains How ‘Education’ Will Make Us Immune To Racism ‘Like The Avengers’ 
    was originally published on
    newsone.com

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    Zack Linly

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  • PHOTOS: See the damage from Wednesday’s storms

    PHOTOS: See the damage from Wednesday’s storms

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    OHIO — Storms that spun up several Tornado Warnings swept through central and southern Ohio Wednesday morning, leaving damage in their wake. 

    From Springfield to the Columbus area, several homes have been damaged, as well as businesses and store fronts. So far, the National Weather Service has confirmed at least two tornadoes touched down — one in Licking County and another in Montgomery County into Greene County. NWS crews will be out surveying areas of damage Wednesday. For more details, click here. 

    Take a look at the damage in some Ohio cities:

     

     


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    Lydia Taylor

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  • Ohioans continue cleanup following Wednesday’s storms

    Ohioans continue cleanup following Wednesday’s storms

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    OHIO — Damage is being reported following severe weather early Wednesday that prompted several tornado warnings across central Ohio, including at least one report of a confirmed tornado near Springfield.


    What You Need To Know

    • The National Weather Service confirmed a tornado touched down in Clark County, northeast of Dayton, with several reports of damage to homes
    • Emergency management officials said the tornado struck Springfield Township with reports of collapsed buildings
    • Officials are asking people to stay away from the area of Mitchell Road, Crabill Road and Ridge Road, and to watch out for downed power lines
    • To the east, damage has been reported in neighboring Madison County

    Spectrum News 1 is breaking down the reported damage by region.

    Clark County

    The National Weather Service confirmed a tornado touched down in Clark County, northeast of Dayton, with several reports of damage to homes. Emergency management officials said the tornado struck Springfield Township with reports of collapsed buildings. The agency is working with area fire departments to assess the damage.

    Officials are asking people to stay away from the area of Mitchell Road, Crabill Road and Ridge Road, and to watch out for downed power lines. They are asking drivers to avoid Ohio 41 as well. Additional damage has been reported along Newlove Road in Harmony Township. Officials suggest those looking to go to the area of South Charleston find another way. 

    A Spectrum News 1 Ohio crew in the area reported seeing downed power lines, uprooted trees and property damage. That included, in an area off Ohio 41, a farm with silos missing their tops and large sheets of metal on a fence. Next to the farm was a home with its roof partially torn off, exposing upstairs bedrooms.

    Local police, the Ohio State Highway Patrol and the Ohio Department of Transportation were all on scene assessing the damage.

    University Suites in Fairborn had part of its roof damaged. (Photo Courtesy Claire Colwell)

    Madison County

    To the east, damage has been reported in neighboring Madison County. Officials there told Spectrum News 1 Ohio that damage has been reported at the Madison County Airport, just north of London.

    The street leading up to the airport is closed about a mile away from the damage to keep residents safe. Debris from the airport hanger and downed power lines were reported in the area.

    “The tornado appeared to have hit our airport madison county airport. We received devastating damage to a lot of the hangars in that area. It moved across continuing kind of in a northeast direction, hitting the Ohio State University’s Molly Karen Center,” said Sheriff John Swaney. “There were several structures in that center that were damaged.”

    Damage has been reported in other areas of the county, with several buildings damaged and trees down.

    Franklin County

    In the Columbus-area, damage was reported in the community of Hilliard. The extent of the damage is still being assessed, but residents are being asked to use caution if they do travel this morning.

    One resident on Rome Road in Hilliard had disfigured trees and a street sign blown into her yard while the wind tore part of the roof of her home.

    “We got down about five steps, and then I heard all the windows blow,” said Bonnie Rice. “Then in five minutes it was over. And then we walked back up and the whole house is gone. It’s just gone, everything is gone.”

    Several thousand Ohioans lost power as the storms moved through. More than 18,000 customers were without power statewide as of 10:20 a.m., with most outages reported from near Dayton extending to the east of Columbus.

    Many school districts in areas impacted by the storm delayed the start of classes Wednesday. Officials encouraged parents to check with their school districts for information on start times and delays.

    The National Weather Service in Wilmington said it will dispatch teams to evaluate damage left behind by Wednesday morning’s storms. The teams will examine damage to determine the strength and path of any tornadoes that touched down. The storm survey is expected to be released in the next few days.

    Montgomery County

    Fallen trees damaged several homes in Riverside, breaking through roofs. 

    Spectrum News 1 Ohio crews also saw damage to multiple shops in the Airway Shopping Center. Employees said they were shocked when they showed up for work, with windows blown out, holes in the roof and damage in the stores.

    Owners had to quickly determine what they could to prevent any further damage.

    “It’s going to be a long day that’s for sure. We’ll get it taken care of,” said Mark Parker, maintenance supervisor. 

    Winds were so strong, that bags of mulch and dirt weighing about 35 pounds each were thrown about 30 feet away from one of the front doors of the shops. 

    Wright-Patterson Air Force Base

    The base suffered damage to several buildings, including the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force’s Restoration Hanger 4, Gate 22B, according to a press release. Officials are currently assessing the damage. These include the 88th Civil Engineer Group, base safety personnel and first responders.

    “Our initial assessment from this morning’s storm is the damage is isolated to the southern side of Area B. Our initial focus right now is on safety and damage assessment,” said Col. Travis Pond, 88th Air Base Wing and installation commander, in the release. “I can’t speak highly enough about our security forces, fire department and civil engineer airmen for their quick response and hard work to assess damage and determine a path forward for restoring operations as quickly as possible.”

    Photos of the scene showcase damaged planes, broken windows, ripped down siding and caved in doors. 

    Check back for updates.

    Reporters Jamilah Muhammad, Aliah Keller and Alese Underwood, as well as Producers Cody Thompson and Lydia Taylor contributed to this article. 

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    Aaron Hepker

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  • Geauga County Judge Grendell Faces Second Day of Ohio Disciplinary Counsel Hearings

    Geauga County Judge Grendell Faces Second Day of Ohio Disciplinary Counsel Hearings

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    Photo from the Geauga County Court of Common Pleas Website.

    Judge Timothy J. Grendell, Geauga County Probate/Juvenile Court.

    During a second day of hearings Tuesday, the Ohio Disciplinary Counsel finished its questioning of Geauga County Judge Timothy Grendell and began bringing other witnesses to the stand. The conclusion of the Grendell’s testimony dealt with his dispute with the county auditor and his testimony before an Ohio House committee in favor of legislation sponsored by his wife, then-state Rep. Diane Grendell.

    Disciplinary counsel Joseph Caligiuri continued to question Grendell’s handling of the custody case that dominated the first day of hearings. In that incident, Grendell ordered two boys into juvenile detention after they refused a parental visit with their father. But as he moved to the other charges, Caligiuri highlighted examples of Judge Grendell threatening some officials and making unfounded accusations against others.

    Grendell’s testimony

    Caligiuri continued to raise doubts about Grendell’s stated defenses as he moved through charges against the judge. On the decision to place the two boys in juvenile detention, he pointed to Grendell deciding to hold a full evidentiary hearing to suss out what was in the boys’ best interest after putting them in custody. Grendell previously argued he took that drastic step because it was in their best interest.

    “You don’t think it would’ve been better to have the evidentiary hearing in May before you decided to put the kids in custody?” Caligiuri asked.

    After a long pause, Grendell simply stated, “No.”

    The judge grew more animated as Caligiuri moved on to the second charge — Grendell’s dispute with the county auditor. The complaint centers on an incident in which two of Grendell’s staffers allegedly took paperwork from the auditor’s office without permission. The auditor’s staff called the police, and the officer who responded informed Grendell’s staffers they would be trespassing if they returned to the auditor’s office.

    Caligiuri argued that, in his frustration, Grendell proceeded to dangle contempt charges against the police.

    In a loud encounter with a responding officer outside the courthouse, Grendell said he’d issue a court order prohibiting anyone from impeding his staff carrying out the court’s business. “And you know what happens when people violate court orders,” Grendell said. The judge insisted he never threatened to hold the officer in contempt, but eventually acknowledged it was a potential outcome.

    Grendell then went to the police chief and warned that impeding his staff could result in a federal civil rights case under Section 1983.

    “You do threaten him with a section 1983 federal lawsuit?” Caligiuri asked.

    “I did not threaten him with that,” Grendell said.

    “Did you tell him that you’d ‘hate to see the Chardon Police Department tied up in a 1983 action in federal court?’” Caligiuri tried again.

    “Filed by—,” Grendell started.

    “It’s a yes or no answer,” Caligiuri interjected.

    “Yes,” Grendell said.

    “And you wouldn’t consider that to be a threat of a federal lawsuit?” Caligiuri asked.

    “It wasn’t,” Grendell said.

    No evidence

    Caligiuri also highlighted two examples of Grendell making public pronouncements that were misleading or unsupported by the facts. In a continuation of his beef with the county auditor, Grendell gave a presentation titled “just the facts” to the local tea party, criticizing the auditor.

    In addition to sharing shared a version of events based solely on the reports of his staff, Grendell also alleged the county prosecutor would protect the auditor from criminal charges by declining to prosecute.

    “Did you have any evidence that he had ever protected (Auditor) Charles Walder from criminal charges?” Caligiuri asked.

    “Uh, no.” Grendell acknowledged.

    Later in the presentation, Grendell claimed without evidence that the auditor had shared a “doctored” surveillance video on social media showing the encounter in the auditor’s office.

    “Had you seen the video at that point?” Caligiuri asked.

    “I’ve never seen the video,” Grendell said.

    Caligiuri responded, “So here you’re just talking about — you have no first-hand knowledge of what you’re talking about, and you, as a judge, are providing this information to the citizens of your county?”

    Next Caligiuri turned to Grendell’s testimony at the Statehouse. Judicial rules prohibit judges from appearing voluntarily at a public hearing for another branch of government in most circumstances. One exception is if they’re discussing “the law, the legal system or the administration of justice.”

    Grendell testified in favor of his wife’s “Truth in COVID statistics” bill, which among other things would require the state health department to release daily case counts. Before state lawmakers, he referenced increasing cases, but mostly he argued the department of health was manipulating its figures to make COVID-19 appear worse than it actually was.

    He argued health officials’ warnings about 10,000 cases a day by April 2020 had not come to pass, and so the state’s closures had been overkill. Ohio’s daily case count would peak at more than 13,000 cases a day later that year after most businesses resumed more or less normal operation. The following year, Ohio would hit a daily peak of more than twice that many.

    But Caligiuri noted, Grendell’s complaints about health department reporting were incorrect to begin with. Rather than only releasing cumulative case counts, as Grendell claimed, daily figures were readily available on the same dashboard. He shared an exhibit showing step-by-step how to access the drop down menu, but Grendell insisted, “I’m still not convinced of that.”

    Caligiuri also seized on inaccuracies in Grendell’s presentation about rising caseloads. In several instances, cases were dropping despite Grendell’s claims of firsthand knowledge of increases. Grendell argued that the court was seeing greater contact from parties seeking assistance even if it didn’t show up in case figures.

    “I didn’t break it down into specifics,” Grendell said. “You only have so many minutes. I gave them the big picture.”

    “So you’re accusing the department of health of not breaking down their numbers into specifics but then you do the same thing?” Caligiuri asked.

    “I only had a few minutes to testify,” he insisted.

    Originally published by the Ohio Capital Journal. Republished here with permission.

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    Nick Evans, Ohio Capital Journal

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  • With a New Waterfront Address, Sushi 86 Keeps Adapting and Evolving

    With a New Waterfront Address, Sushi 86 Keeps Adapting and Evolving

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    Sushi 86 is here to disprove that old adage about “good, fast and cheap.” In the time it would take an online food order to be delivered to one’s home or office, a diner could enjoy a speedy and delicious Japanese lunch – complete with soup, a trio of nigiri sushi and a roll – for the equitable sum of $25. And unlike that dreary workplace cubicle, this meal comes with nautical views of the North Coast Harbor and beyond.

    If you’re a fan of this tenacious local restaurant, then you know it’s wise to double check the address before heading out. Since Rachel and Mike Hsu opened the first shop in 2000, Sushi 86 has called seven different locations home. Compared to the first – a five-seat, 250-square-foot shoebox on Public Square – this latest residence is downright palatial. This past summer, the owners swapped their previous digs in the 5th Street Arcades for an attractive space at Harbor Verandas, which is a two-minute stroll from the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. The fishbowl dining room offers panoramic views of attractions such as Browns Stadium, Great Lakes Science Center, SS Mather and the Goodtime III.

    There has always been a dearth of waterfront dining options in this neck of the woods – who can forget the maritime delights of Hornblowers? – and the situation hasn’t much improved. It’s understandable given the feast-or-famine economics of operating in a tourist district; Sushi 86 fills those gaps with steady event catering.

    Indoors, a 10-stool sushi bar anchors the 60-seat dining room, which is equipped with a pair of soft-seating areas that are ideal for a casual lunch or place to wait for carryout. When the weather warms up, diners will be able to enjoy those watery views from the other side of the glass thanks to a sizable harbor-side patio.

    Sushi 86 was created as the quick-serve alternative to raw-fish temples like Shuhei, where the Hsus worked prior to going solo. Their menu was shorter but fresher, they argued, with carryout-friendly items like rolls and bento boxes designed for harried commuters. The name “86” was a nod to the items that Shuhei would invariably run out of.

    All these years and locations later, Sushi 86 still plays it pretty tight. This isn’t the place to come for an exotic, ever-shifting roster of raw fish. Nigiri and sashimi lovers are limited to a greatest hits-style roundup of varieties like tuna, yellowtail, salmon, eel, mackerel and the like. Those fishes are available as part of a 3-piece ($11) or 6-piece ($21) nigiri plate or in the 6-piece sashimi box ($12). Uni was unavailable during a recent visit.

    Sushi 86 has always excelled at rolls, with a dizzying assortment of slender 6-piece rolls and fatter 8-piece rolls. Over the course of two meals we enjoyed the spicy scallop roll ($9.25), yellowtail jalapeno roll ($8.25) and the rainbow roll ($14.95). That last large roll featured large pieces of escolar, tuna and salmon draped over crab and avocado centers. The “best name award” goes to the 3-Way Reverse Cowgirl, a shrimp tempura, avocado and faux-crab salad devised by the band Hinder when they passed through town some years ago.

    In terms of starters, the options are equally concise, with edamame, seaweed salad and a dish of alien-red pickled baby octopus ($7.95) served cold in a sesame-flavored marinade. Inari ($3.50) is a sweet and savory snack of fried tofu skin stuffed with seasoned rice. An order of uber-crisp shrimp tempura ($8), it soon dawns on us, is one of only two items on the entire menu that is served hot, the standard miso soup ($3.75) being the other.

    Sushi 86 has survived these many years by adapting to the unpredictable forces around them. During Covid, management condensed the menu, went essentially virtual, and even sold off the liquor license. An as-yet-unopened poke concept was brought under the Sushi 86 umbrella. Those bowls are available here, generous portions of white or brown rice (or greens) topped with any combination of fish, veggies, toppings and sauces. The Shell-a-Bowl ($16.95), for example, features shrimp, “crab” salad, cucumber, avocado and crunch.

    After a meal of some nigiri, a few small and large rolls, and one of those bottomless poke bowls, rice fatigue begins to creep in. The good news is that, once again, change is afoot at Sushi 86. In the coming days and weeks, Hsu will be adding gyoza and ramen to the menu.

    Less than five years after peddling her liquor license, Hsu says that she’s found joy on the open market and will soon begin offering hard beverages.

    Sushi 86
    1050 East 9th St., Cleveland
    216-621-8686
    sushi86.com

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    Douglas Trattner

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  • Biden, Trump win respective Michigan primaries, AP projects

    Biden, Trump win respective Michigan primaries, AP projects

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    President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump have won their respective primaries in Michigan, according to a projection by the Associated Press.

    The outcome of Tuesday’s primary was not a surprise. Both men have cruised to victory in primary contests so far this year on their way to a likely presidential election rematch this November — but important questions remain for both men based on the results in the Wolverine State, a key battleground for both parties in the general election.


    What You Need To Know

    • President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump have won their respective primaries in Michigan, according to a projection by the Associated Press
    • Both men have cruised to victory in the early primary contests so far this year on their way to a likely presidential election rematch in November, but important questions remain for both men
    • Biden faces pushback from progressive activists who have protested his candidacy in order to move him to back a permanent cease-fire in the Israel-Hamas war, while Trump faces a resilient challenger in former Ambassador Nikki Haley — as well as questions to his appeal among general election voters
    • Next week, March 5, is Super Tuesday, when more than a dozen states and a territory will hold their primary elections, accounting for about a third of all delegates to the nominating conventions
    • Activists in Michigan set a goal of getting roughly 10,000 voters to vote “uncommitted,” a nod to the margin by which Trump won the state over Hillary Clinton in 2016, to protest Biden’s stance on the Israel-Hamas war; they easily surpassed that on Tuesday night

    For Biden, the question is the salience of a push by progressive activists to get voters to pick “uncommitted” as a form of protest to push the incumbent to back a permanent cease-fire between Israel and Hamas in Gaza.

    His comment Tuesday night looked beyond the uncommitted protest vote, opting instead to thank the voters for their support in the primary and to recall the 2020 election.

    “Four years ago, it was Michigan’s diverse coalition that came together to reject Donald Trump’s MAGA extremism and sent me and Kamala to the White House. Because of Michiganders, we’ve been able to work hand in hand with Governor Whitmer and the incredible Democratic leaders in Michigan’s congressional delegation to deliver enormous progress,” Biden said in a statement, celebrating Tuesday’s victory and his alliance with the United Auto Workers union. “This fight for our freedoms, for working families, and for democracy is going to take all of us coming together. I know that we will.”

    Trump, on the other hand, faces a resilient challenger in former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley and the challenge of trying to win over her sizable chunk of Republican voters amid questions about his strength among general election voters.

    The former president, as ever, was as confident as ever in his remarks to the Michigan GOP Tuesday night.

    “We have a very simple task: we have to win on November 5, and we’re going to win big, and it’s going to be like nothing that anybody has ever seen. It’s going to be fantastic. We win Michigan, we win the whole thing. The auto workers are with us. We have so many people with us,” Trump said. “So the date November 5, January 20, when we take over, could not come fast enough because we’re going to make America great again, greater than ever before.”

    Tuesday’s contest in Michigan is the final one before Super Tuesday on March 5, when more than a dozen states — accounting for roughly a third of all delegates to the nominating conventions — are up for grabs.

    Both campaigns will be closely watching the election results in a state that Biden, in a local Michigan radio interview on Monday, called “one of the five” that will determine the outcome of November’s election. 

    Narrowly winning the reliably blue state by just 11,000 votes over Hillary Clinton helped give Donald Trump the presidency in 2016, the first Republican to do so since 1988, but Joe Biden won it back in 2020 by more than 150,000 votes.

    But Biden faced a unique challenge in the state over his perceived handling of Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza and his relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. At more than 310,000 residents, Michigan has the largest concentration of Arab Americans in the United States; about half of the population of Dearborn, a populous suburb of Detroit, are Arab American.

    Activists in the state earlier this month launched Listen to Michigan, an effort aiming to show Biden that his administration must listen to the state’s voters and change his policy on the war in Gaza.

    The organization has set a goal of getting roughly 10,000 voters to vote “uncommitted,” a nod to the margin by which Trump won the state over Hillary Clinton in 2016. They easily surpassed that on Tuesday night — by 11:30 p.m., more than 51,000 “uncommitted” votes were tallied, accounting for 13.5% of the total. That said, Biden still has 80% of votes within the Democratic primary as of that same time.

    “This is not an anti-Biden campaign,” Layla Elabed, the campaign’s organizer and the sister of Rep. Rashida Tlaib, the first Palestinian American woman to serve in Congress, told CNN. “It’s a humanitarian vote. It’s a protest vote. It is a vote that tells Biden and his administration that we believe in saving lives.”

    “I was proud today to walk in and pull a Democratic ballot and vote uncommitted,” Tlaib, one of the movement’s most prominent backers, said in a message posted to social media on Tuesday. “We must protect our democracy. We must make sure that our government is about us, about the people. When 74% of Democrats in Michigan support a cease-fire yet President Biden is not hearing us, this is the way we can use our democracy to say, ‘listen, listen to Michigan.’”

    Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer on Monday said she thinks there will be a solid number of “uncommitted” votes in protest of President Joe Biden’s handling of the Israel-Hamas war.

    “I think there will be a sizable number of votes for ‘uncommitted,’” Whitmer, a co-chair for Biden’s 2024 campaign, said in an interview with NBC News

    “I think that that’s possible,” she added when asked if the number of “uncommitted” votes will reach 10,000 – the threshold organizers of the effort have set as their goal. 

    For context, in the 2020 presidential primaries, “uncommitted” scored more than 19,000 (1.2%) votes on the Democratic side and over 32,000 (4.8%) on the Republican side. In 2016, more than 21,000 (1.79%) “uncommitted” votes were cast in the Democratic primary between Clinton and Bernie Sanders and 22,000 (1.72%) were cast in the GOP primary. 

    In 2012’s Democratic primary, in which then-President Barack Obama was running unopposed, more than 20,000 (10%) “uncommitted” votes were cast; he won the state over Mitt Romney with 54% of the vote that November in the general election.

    Despite trailing Trump in the delegate count — 110-20 ahead of Michigan — and thus far not winning any states (as of 11:30 p.m., Trump has more than 67% of the vote, with Haley trailing at just more than 27%) Haley has vowed to forge ahead with her presidential campaign.

    Haley’s campaign on Sunday touted a $1 million fundraising haul in the 24 hours following the South Carolina primary, which they said was entirely raised by grassroots supporters. Haley, a former two-term governor of the state, lost the primary but notched roughly 40% of the vote, which she has painted as a warning sign for Trump.

    “We are seeing all over the country that the Republican Party is fully divided,” Haley said at an event in Michigan on Monday. “If you have a candidate that can’t win 40% of the vote in the early states, if you have a candidate who can’t bring in independents, if you have a candidate that is driving people out of our party, then that is a sinking ship.”

    Duel for the delegates

    There are 117 Michigan delegates available on Tuesday for the Democrats. 

    There are 55 delegates up for grabs for the Republican candidates. Sixteen will be awarded by the primary on Tuesday, while the remaining 39 will be awarded at a nominating convention held on Saturday. This was in part because Democrats, who control the state government after last year’s midterms, moved the state’s primary up, which conflicts with Republican Party rules prohibiting states — except for traditionally early voting ones like Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina — from holding primary contests before March 1. 

    But two warring factions within the state Republican party have each pledged to hold their own convention, leading to some confusion.

    Kristina Karamo, who ran for governor unsuccessfully in 2022 against Whitmer, was elected to lead the Michigan Republican Party last year, but was ousted earlier this year. She has refused to recognize her ouster and relinquish power, and will be holding a convention in Detroit on Saturday.

    On Tuesday, hours before the polls closed, a judge ordered Karamo to cease her efforts to remain in power, affirming her removal from the Michigan GOP. 

    Former U.S. Ambassador Pete Hoekstra, the RNC-recognized chair of the Michigan GOP, will be hosting a convention in Grand Rapids on Saturday.

    Spectrum News’ Maddie Gannon, David Mendez and Joseph Konig contributed to this report.

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    Justin Tasolides

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  • Parents, teachers speak out about cuts in proposed CMSD budget plan

    Parents, teachers speak out about cuts in proposed CMSD budget plan

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    CLEVELAND (WJW) – Emotions ran high at times during a Cleveland Metropolitan School District board meeting Tuesday night.

    More than 100 parents, teachers and staff members filled the gymnasium at Whitney M. Young School on Harvard Avenue in Cleveland to hear the board’s deficit reduction plan.

    CMSD CEO Dr. Warren Morgan says the district is facing a $168 million budget gap that must be closed.

    A proposed plan must be submitted to the Ohio Department of Education and Workforce by Feb. 29 or potentially face being placed on some level of fiscal oversight status by the state.

    The proposed plan calls for cuts the following areas:

    1. Central office staffing, travel, conferences and staff food
    2. Summer learning but at a capacity level higher than in pre-pandemic years
    3. Out of school time provided by external partners, but not including district athletics or other extracurricular programs
    4. Aligning school calendars
    5. Student technology

    One mother addressing the board was extremely concerned about the impact of losing out of school programs and activities which she said have helped her children immensely.

    “If you take these kids away, what’s going to happen? An increase in socialization’s going to go down, an increase in self-confidence is going to go down, the increase in grades are going to go down and then what happens?” she said.

    “Ever since I first heard about this looming financial abyss, I’ve generated far more questions than answers,” said Shari Obrenski, president of the Cleveland Teachers Union.

    Another issue of concern has to do with the CMSD Get More Opportunities Fund and program which was founded with a $20 million donation from billionaire Mackenzie Scott.

    According to the district, the fund and program allowed more than 40 high school students to learn what it’s like to be a philanthropist and decide how the money should be used for things like college visits and arts programs.

    To “empower and transform individuals,” said former CEO Eric Gordon at the time.

    Now, that program and money is being shifted to help close the budget gap.

    Although the board and CEO said it is a temporary move and that the program would be reinstated in the future, many people at the meeting and multiple members of Cleveland City Council disagree with the decision.

    “Children want to know, are you going to fight for them? So when you take this money away from them, they turn around and say, ‘ain’t nothing true,’” said Councilman Kevin Conwell, Ward-9.

    Despite the objections, the proposed plan passed 7 -1 with one member voting no specifically because of the Mackenzie Scott funds.

    The CEO attempted to reassure the crowd and said the proposal was not an actual budget rather a plan for the state, and that he and the board would be carefully considering all of the points raised by parents and staff at the meeting.

    “This plan is our plan to show how we will be in the black the next couple of years but this is not our budget,” said Dr. Morgan. “These are proposals and strategies of how we will get there, but there is still more work we have to do as a district.”

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    Suzanne Stratford

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  • Video Shows Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears Misgender Trans Senator As ‘Sir,’ Offers Non-Apology

    Video Shows Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears Misgender Trans Senator As ‘Sir,’ Offers Non-Apology

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    Virginia Lt Gov-Elect Winsome Sears greets supporters on November 2, 2021, in Chantilly, Virginia. | Source: The Washington Post / Getty

    Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears is back in the news, and it turns out that when she’s not being a tap-dancing, critical race theory-propagandizing safe negro for white nationalism, she’s using her time on the Senate floor to be a passive-aggressive anti-LGBTQ+ bigot by (seemingly) intentionally misgendering the first transgender person elected to the Virginia state legislature.

    MORE: Gov. Wes Moore Warns Black Voters Of Trump’s Divisive Rhetoric

    According to Newsweek, on Monday, Earle-Sears referred to Sen. Danica Roem (D-Prince William) as “sir,” despite the fact that Roem uses she/her pronouns. Roem responded by walking out of the session.

    From Newsweek:

    The incident occurred during a debate on House Bill 592, related to “emergency regulations related to prescription drug price transparency.” The bill passed the Virginia Senate with bipartisan support on February 26.

    In footage, Roem rose to ask the Earle-Sears how many votes for the bill would be required for the it to pass with an emergency clause.

    “That would be four fifths, Senator,” Earle Sears responded, before she was asked by Roem what the exact number would be. The lieutenant governor added: “Yes sir, that would be 32.”

    Now, transphobic apologists are going to go out of their way to give Earle-Sears the benefit of the doubt and say she simply misspoke. Perhaps it just slipped her mind that this person who presents as a woman identifies as a woman. But consider that this is the same woman who, in 2022, said Gov. Glenn Youngkin‘s policy requiring trans students to use the bathrooms and locker rooms based on their biological sex and denying them the use of their preferred pronouns by inexplicably implying that any opposing policy would “destroy our families.” Earle-Sears also wrote in a 2004 op-ed for the Daily Press, “I also believe our society has gone immeasurably beyond almost all standards in accommodating the homosexual community the last couple of decades,” as if she believes “society” has overdone it with the whole tolerating various sexual identities thing. (She also accused the LGBTQ+ community of co-opting the movement for Black civil rights, but to be fair, she also doesn’t really care about pro-Black civil rights movements either.)

    Earl-Sears also initially refused to apologize for misgendering Roemwhich is also very telling regarding her intent—but she did eventually offer a raggedy non-apology that was generally a lengthier variation of: “Sorry you were offended.”

    “It is never my intention to make anyone offended,” Earle-Sears said after a recess. “I hope that others would consider that they would try not to offend me as well, we are all equal under the law.”

    “I’m not here to upset anyone,” she continued. “I am here to do the job the people of Virginia have called me to do, and that is to treat everyone with respect and dignity,” she continued, adding “I apologize, I apologize, I apologize.”

    One thing about conservatives: They’re good for offering “apologies” that manage to be more offensive than the initial offense.

    Why is Earle-Sears even talking about hypothetical people who should “consider that they would try not to offend me as well,” when she’s the only one who said anything offensive? And those lines about how “we are all equal under the law” and about treating “everyone with respect and dignity” were examples of blatant gaslighting coming from Earle-Sears, who is indifferent at best and resentful at worst regarding LGBTQ+ rights.

    SEE ALSO:

    Winsome Earle-Sears Posts Black History Month Message For ‘All People Of All Colors’

    Virginia’s Republican Black Woman Lieutenant Governor And The Era Of The ‘Safe Negro’

    The post Video Shows Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears Misgender Trans Senator As ‘Sir,’ Offers Non-Apology appeared first on NewsOne.


    Video Shows Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears Misgender Trans Senator As ‘Sir,’ Offers Non-Apology 
    was originally published on
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    Zack Linly

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  • Good Company Akron to Open on Friday, March 1

    Good Company Akron to Open on Friday, March 1

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    Heidi M. Rolf

    Good Company Akron to open on March 1st.

    Good Company, the easy-going upscale pub in Battery Park, will soon have a sibling. Early last year, Will Hollingsworth announced that he was converting the Spotted Owl bar (60 S. Maple St.) in Akron, which he opened in 2019, into the second location of Good Company. That officially becomes so on March 1st.

    Good Company was launched by chef Brett Sawyer in 2019. In 2022, Hollingsworth folded the property into his burgeoning hospitality group Buildings & Food. That group also includes Prosperity Social Club in Tremont, Old 86 in Detroit Shoreway and La Cave du Vin in Tremont. Buildings & Food is also in the process of converting the former Lola/Lolita property in Tremont into a seperate concept.

    The Akron-based Good Company will offer the same chef-driven American food as the original. Diners can expect world-class wings, amazing sandwiches, burgers and patty melts, and enough starters, sides, and salads to please everyone in the group. An excellent beverage program includes beer, wine, cocktails and boozy milkshakes.

    “We’re so excited to be back in Akron, and we can’t wait to introduce Akronites to the best chicken wings and cheeseburgers on earth,” says Hollingsworth.

    Good Company Akron will be open Thursday through Tuesday from 4 p.m. to close.

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    Douglas Trattner

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  • Toppled moon lander sends back more images, with only hours left until it dies

    Toppled moon lander sends back more images, with only hours left until it dies

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    CAPE CANAVERAL SPACE FORCE STATION — A moon lander that ended up on its side managed to beam back more pictures, with only hours remaining before it dies.


    Intuitive Machines posted new photos of the moon’s unexplored south polar region Tuesday.

    The company’s lander, Odysseus, captured the shots last Thursday shortly before making the first U.S. touchdown on the moon in more than 50 years. Odysseus landed on its side, hampering communication and power generation.

    Once sunlight can no longer reach the lander’s solar panels, operations will end. Intuitive Machines expects that to happen sometime between Tuesday afternoon and early Wednesday.

    The mission, part of NASA’s effort to boost the lunar economy, was supposed to last until at least Thursday, when lunar nighttime sets in. NASA has six experiments on board.

    Intuitive Machines is the first private business to land a spacecraft on the moon without crashing. Another U.S. company launched its own lunar lander last month, but a fuel leak doomed the mission and the craft came crashing back to Earth.

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    Associated Press

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  • Sybil Wilkes ‘What You Need To Know:’ President Biden, RIP Eric Mays, and More

    Sybil Wilkes ‘What You Need To Know:’ President Biden, RIP Eric Mays, and More

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    Source: REACH Media / Reach Media

    Constantine The Great (Roman Emperor who introduced financial, administrative, military and social reforms in government 0272-0337)

    .

    1. Ground Hog Day….Again

    Ground Hog Day….Again

    Source:Getty

    Ground Hog Day….Again

    What You Need to Know:

     The budget funding can being kicked down the road is slowing down as the first of two deadlines is days away. This, as members of the House of Representatives are still on vacation. President Joe Biden called the top leaders of each party in  the Senate and House to the White House to “discuss the urgency” of passing a government funding bill before the current plan expires late Friday night, March 1. 


    Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) were summoned to the White House meet with the President along with House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) and Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY). They are also expected to address the foreign aid legislation for Ukraine and Israel.

    If leaders can’t reach an agreement, about one-third of the federal government will shutdown midnight Friday/Saturday morning. The departments and agencies affected include Agriculture, the Food and Drug Administration, Housing and Urban Development, Transportation and Veterans Affairs. 

    2. R.I.P to the Firecracker of Flint, Councilman Eric Mays

    R.I.P to the Firecracker of Flint, Councilman Eric Mays

    Source:Getty

    R.I.P to the Firecracker of Flint, Councilman Eric Mays

    WRITTEN AND CONTRIBUTED BY KHAMERON RILEY

     

    What You Need to Know:

     

     

    Eric Mays, a longtime city councilman in Flint, Michigan, passed away over the weekend at the age of 65, leaving behind a legacy marked by both controversy and advocacy. Mays, who served as the council’s president and represented the 1st Ward, was known for his no-nonsense behavior and unwavering dedication to his constituents.

    Mays rose to prominence in Flint politics in 2013, winning by a narrow margin over his opponent. He quickly established himself as a vocal critic of the city’s administration, particularly during the Flint water crisis, where he was among the first elected officials to raise concerns about water quality issues stemming from the city’s switch to the Flint River as its water source.

    3. What You Need to Know About Dementia

    What You Need to Know About Dementia

    Source:Getty

    What You Need to Know About Dementia

    What You Need to Know:

     

     

    Dementia is not a specific disease but is rather a general term for the impaired ability to remember, think, or make decisions that interferes with doing everyday activities. Alzheimer’s disease is the most common type of dementia.

    What are symptoms of Dementia?
    Symptoms include forgetfulness, limited social skills, and thinking abilities so impaired that it interferes with daily functioning.

    People may experience:
    -Cognitive: mental decline, confusion in the evening hours, disorientation, inability to speak or understand language, making things up, mental confusion, or inability to recognize common things
    -Behavioral: irritability, personality changes, restlessness, lack of restraint, or wandering and getting lost
    -Mood: anxiety, loneliness, mood swings, or nervousness
    -Psychological: depression, hallucination, or paranoia

    4. Black History is NOW! First Black Woman to Compete in U.S. Open Women’s Polo Championship

    Black History is NOW! First Black Woman to Compete in U.S. Open Women’s Polo Championship

     

    WRITTEN AND CONTRIBUTED BY COY MALONE

    What You Need to Know:

     

     

    ReShariah Harris, a 25-year-old Black woman from Upper Darby, Pennsylvania, has made U.S. Equestrian history by becoming the first Black woman to compete in the U.S. Open Women’s Polo Championship. “It’s still very weird to me,” Harris said, “but I’m learning to embrace it and use it to help other people break barriers into the sport.”

    Polo is one of the world’s oldest known sports and has been dominated by White athletes of wealthy backgrounds. Harris said she’s used to being the “first” or “only” when it comes to polo. “I was either the only girl or then when I left my team in high school to play in college, I was the only Black person period,” Harris said.

    Harris got her start in horseback riding at 8 years old, when her mother stumbled upon the Work to Ride program in Philadelphia. “My mom and my younger brother, we all got lost in the park, made a wrong turn and we found the program,” Harris said. “My mom just saw other Black kids riding, and she was like, ‘OK, how can I get my kids involved in this?’”

    5. Mastering Your Paycheck: Simplifying Tax Withholding

    Mastering Your Paycheck: Simplifying Tax Withholding

    Source:Getty

    Mastering Your Paycheck: Simplifying Tax Withholding

     

    WRITTEN AND CONTRIBUTED BY CATRINA M. CRAFT, CPA

    What You Need to Know:

     

    Have you ever received a tax refund that was larger or smaller than expected? It might be time to review your paycheck withholding. Don’t worry. It’s simpler than you think.


    Here’s the deal: Your tax refund or bill depends on whether you’ve paid too much or too little in taxes throughout the year. This is determined by your paycheck withholdings, which are calculated based on a form called a W-4.


    To ensure your withholdings are accurate, it’s essential to update your W-4 whenever you experience life changes like getting married, having a child, or getting a second job.

     


    Experts recommend periodically reviewing your withholdings to avoid surprises come tax time. But how do you know if your withholdings are on track? One simple method is to calculate your previous year’s “effective tax rate.” This is the percentage of your taxable income that you actually pay in taxes, which can differ from your marginal tax bracket.

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    Nia Noelle

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