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HIV/AIDS a Pervasive Worry for District's African American Community

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From the Washington Post:

Washington has one of the the highest AIDS diagnosis rates in the nation, with higher numbers among African Americans than among the white population. Access to health care is another major dividing line. Roughly nine of 10 whites report having private health insurance, compared with fewer than half of African Americans in the District.

Read more here.

 

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Russell Simmons' Prepaid RushCard Investigated Over Hidden Fees

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Russell Simmons believes in today's world you have to have plastic. In fact, the iconic hip-hop mogul envisioned everyone in the country "to have access to the American Dream" with the creation of his RushCard. However for Simmons, his pre-paid Visa card has recently faced scrutiny from the Florida Attorney General's Office, claiming the card may be forcing consumers to pay hidden fees each time they make a purchase.

According to a press release issued by the Florida Attorney General's, subpoenas were issued against five prepaid card companies including First Data Corporation, Green Dot Corporation, Account Now, Inc., Netspend Corporation, and Unirush Financial Services, LLC (makers of Simmons' RushCard) for "possible deceptive and unfair practices."

"Failing to disclose fees is essentially stealing money from consumers," said Attorney General Bondi. "We will aggressively investigate these practices and ensure that Floridians are protected from hidden fees and charges."

The complaints also state that the companies servicing prepaid debit cards often fail to disclose numerous fees in their advertising. Claiming in some instances, every transaction a consumer makes using a prepaid debit card may be subject to a hidden fee.

"I completely welcome any and all debate, discussion and understanding about the best companies in the prepaid debit card industry, which my RushCard company helped found," the Def Jam Records founder responded in a statement. "The RushCard is extremely transparent in terms of the presentation of its fees and its services. All of the information is available for everyone to see on rushcard.com."

To Simmons' credit, the advertising for his RushCard is very transparent in its messaging. After watching 20 seconds of the check card's commercial (see below) it was made clear that no credit check is needed, everyone is eligible to sign-up, and no bank account is needed. Adding that some fees and restrictions "may" apply.

"As a leader in this industry, I encourage a full understanding of RushCard's transparent pricing, and valuable services, especially for those who have been turned away or let down by traditional banks," he clarified. "RushCard is the solution for people who want affordable financial services that they can customize to suit their needs ...I welcome the public debate because the more educated the consumers are the more successful we become."

Much like traditional debit cards, prepaid debit cards can be used wherever major credit cards are accepted. Leaving consumers to spend only what they have deposit.



 

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Bill Maxwell: Homophobia, It's a Black Thing

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From Scripps News:

Tracy Morgan, stand-up comedian and actor on NBC's "30 Rock," now joins the long list of influential or well-known black Americans who publicly spew their homophobia. The list includes actor Isaiah Washington, basketball star Kobe Bryant, popular rap icons and untold numbers of preachers. Morgan showed his hatred of gay people during a recent performance at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, when he said that he would "pull out a knife and stab" his son to death if the boy spoke to him "in a gay voice," mimicking his version of a gay voice. He apologized following a barrage of social media attacks and after fellow entertainers publicly condemned him.

Read more here.

 

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Obama: Another Disappointing Black Politician?

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From the Los Angeles Times:

President Obama's status as a black politician was the subject of debate last month between two black scholars who argued that the president had not urgently addressed black issues. Princeton professor Cornel West argued that Obama has been adopting a white, elite agenda, and Princeton scholar and Nation columnist Melissa Harris-Perry said the president has been hindered by right-wing racism against him. Erin Aubry Kaplan, contributing Opinion editor to the Times, said West and Harris-Perry's disagreement is bigger than Obama; it revives the historic argument between black leaders' strategies of assimilation and nationalism. Here's an excerpt.

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Louis Farrakhan: Obama Is a 'Murderer,' an 'Assassin'

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From the Huffington Post:

Louis Farrakhan, speaking at the American Clergy Leadership Conference on May 28, lambasted President Barack Obama over the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and U.S. military intervention in Libya, calling him an "assassin" and a "murderer." "We voted for our brother Barack, a beautiful human being with a sweet heart," Farrakhan said, in a video making the rounds on the internet. But he has turned into someone else, Farrakhan told the crowd. "Now he's an assassin."

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Bachmann Blasts Obama: "Failed the African-American Community"

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Rep. Michele Bachmann
, a white woman from Minnesota, called out President Barack Obama for "failing" the Black and Hispanic communities by not boosting abysmally high unemployment rates among these groups.

Bachmann cited double-digit unemployment rates among them as proof that Obama's "status quo is not working for Americans."

"This president has failed the Hispanic community. He has failed the African-American community," Bachmann said while delivering a speech at The Republican Leadership Conference in New Orleans last week. "He has failed us all when it comes to jobs."

Bachmann, who hopes to snag the Republican presidential nomination for 2012, said, "The status quo certainly isn't working for the African-American community, with 16 percent unemployment, or the Hispanic community, with nearly 12 percent unemployment."

"It's even worse for the youth: For Hispanic youth right now, 26 percent unemployment; for African-American youth, 40 percent unemployment," she continued.

Indeed, Bachmann's assessment of the unemployment mess in the black and Hispanic communities is dire, as cited in a Huffington Post article in April that suggested Black unemployment is at Depression level highs in some cities.

It is the second time in less than a week that talk of race and President Obama has taken center stage at The Republican Leadership Conference. Reggie Brown, a comedian and Obama impersonator made off-color jokes hinting at the president's mixed race.

"Black Leadership Month," Brown said, "Michelle, she celebrates the full month and you know, I celebrate half."

At another point Brown showed a photo from the show 'Sanford and Son' and made comparisons to the Redd Foxx character to show what Obama might look like when he's older.

Brown was later hauled off stage after he turned the jokes on Republican stars Tim Pawlenty and Bachmann.

Organizers pulled Brown because at that point "the performance had gone too far and was getting inappropriate," according to CNN.

 

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Snapped: Debbi Morgan At The 38th Annual Daytime Emmys

Michelle Obama, Nelson Mandela Meeting Takes Place During Africa Trip

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From the Huffington Post:

A healthy-looking Nelson Mandela met with Michelle Obama and her daughters on Tuesday, an unexpected encounter between the first lady and the former South African president and anti-apartheid icon who has largely retired from public life. A photo provided by the Nelson Mandela Foundation showed the 92-year-old Mandela sitting on a couch next to Mrs. Obama, pen in hand to sign an advance copy of his new book, "Nelson Mandela By Himself: The Authorized Quotations Book." Mandela was wearing one of his trademark shirts, richly patterned and buttoned at the neck.

Read more here.

 

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Picking the Perfect Coffee Table

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coffee table
Selecting the right coffee table is essential to tying together your whole living room design. Look for a table that appeals to your tastes, comes across as inviting and goes with the rest of your design scheme.

Basic:
coffee table
If you have simple taste, a basic black coffee table is a safe bet. This double tiered table is available for $199 at Ikea.

Modern:
glass table
A multilevel glass table is great for those seeking a sharp, sleek look, and at $74.99 from Target it's certainly worth a try.

Craftsman:

table
A craftsman table works well for someone who appreciates practical design. Get this one for about $155.00 at Walmart.

Portable:
coffee table

This walnut table is $214.99 at Target. It's wheels and small dimensions make it easy wheel to different spots in the room, which suddenly gives you several options in one!

 

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For New Life, Blacks in City Head to South

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From the New York Times:

In Deborah Brown's family lore, the American South was a place of whites-only water fountains and lynchings under cover of darkness. It was a place black people like her mother had fled. But for Ms. Brown, 59, a retired civil servant from Queens, the South now promises salvation. Three generations of her family - 10 people in all - are moving to Atlanta from New York, seeking to start fresh economically and, in some sense, to reconnect with a bittersweet past. They include Ms. Brown, her 82-year-old mother and her 26-year-old son, who has already landed a job and settled there.

Read more here.

 

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10 Things We Owe Our Children

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From Madame Noire:

A parent's number one job is to love their child unconditionally; and, for most of us, that comes easily. Difficulties come with figuring out to how to best demonstrate our love and effectively communicate it to our children. Love is not an emotion but an action and children have to see their parent's love at work.

Read more here.

 

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Sade, Reluctantly Back in the Spotlight

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From the Washington Post:

The conference room at the Hotel Monaco in downtown Baltimore is oppressively taupe. Taupe walls, taupe chairs, taupe tablecloths. Pull back the taupe curtains and enjoy the view: a taupe building made of taupe bricks. "It's a bit grim in here, isn't it?" asks Sade. Casually dressed in red denim, red lipstick, a red satin jacket and silver hoop earrings big enough to shoot basketballs through, she beelines for a switch on the wall and dims the lights. Soft. Softer. Off. As she takes a seat in the afternoon sunlight, those reds seem to glow like cosmic embers. At 52, one of the most magnetic singers of our time sips lukewarm coffee from a paper cup and tries to explain how music's inexplicable gravity pulled her out of a nine-year silence. "It's that feeling that you can get a little bit better," she says. "That there's somewhere to go and you haven't expressed it all."

Read more here.

 

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The Stereotype Herman Cain Couldn't Refuse: His Old Pizza Chain Endlessly Mocks Italian-Americans

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From the New York Daily News:

Herman Cain looked magnificent last week at the Republican presidential candidates' debate. Tall, broad-shouldered and immaculately dressed, he had a smile that almost made you forget that his platform panders shamelessly to the far right. Yet as troubled as I am by an African-American who plays to overwhelmingly white crowds with unqualified praise of the Founding Fathers, I am even more concerned by Cain's corporate experience, which calls his entire record into question.

Read more here.

 

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Brooklyn Museum Cancels Graffiti Art Exhibit

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From NBC New York:

Brooklyn Museum officials say they are canceling an upcoming exhibit of graffiti and street art because they can't afford to mount the show. Called "Art In the Streets," it's the first major U.S. museum exhibit on the history of graffiti and street art. It's currently on view at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles and was scheduled to come to Brooklyn next March for three months.

Read more here.

 

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Division Runs Deep in Gay Vote

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As forces for and against a gay marriage bill in New York have rallied their constituencies in hopes of swaying or securing last-minute support, the legislative session has drawn to a close, delaying a vote on the bill and forcing the legislature to extend the session to deal with it and other key pieces of legislation.

Legislative leaders had worked out tentative deals on a number of issues on Tuesday, including the renewal of the state's rent laws, raising tuition at state universities and capping property taxes for homeowners.

But the gay marriage bill remains a thorny issue, as lawmakers haggle over key points of the legislation, including exemptions for religious organizations, which is a selling point for many Republicans in the Republican-led senate. The Senate majority leader, Dean G. Skelos, a Republican from Long Island, said that his caucus had yet to decide if and when it will bring the bill to a vote, according to the New York Times. The Democrat-led State Assembly has already passed the measure.

Thirty-one state senators have already agreed to endorse the bill, just one vote short of the number needed for it to pass.

While some have found it distasteful to in any way liken the historic plight of blacks to that of gays, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg urged Republicans to vote for the bill, saying in a statement:

"At our founding, African-Americans were held in bondage. Catholics in New York could not hold office. Those without property could not vote. Women could not vote or hold office. And homosexuality, in some places, was a crime punishable by death," he said. "Every generation has expanded upon the freedoms won by their parents and grandparents," he said.

"And the next great barrier standing before our generation is the prohibition on marriage for same-sex couples."
While support of the bill has been divided largely along political and party lines, divisions seem to also have been drawn along religious lines, as an unlikely front of Republicans, Tea Party Patriots and African-American clergy have formed.

Members of the groups met in throngs in the corridors of the Capitol building last week to protest the bill, introduced by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, according to the Albany Times Union.


"I've been here for the last week," Willie Stovall, a minister at Albany's Mt. Olive Baptist Church, told the newspaper, as others opposing the bill gathered and chanted around him. But, as the paper reported, the front makes for a problematic relationship. Outside of their opposition to marriage equality, they have little else in common, at least politically.

The Rev. Arthur Anthony Harris of the Rescue Mission Baptist Church in Harlem, a member of the Baptist Ministers Conference of Greater New York & Vicinity, said in a phone interview that while he and many of his brothers of the cloth have no problem with individual gays, they could not in good faith support a lifestyle that goes against their religious convictions.

"I didn't make up these words," he said. "These are the words of God. If I'm going to preach the gospel, I'm going to be held accountable to God and my congregation," said Harris. "It's not a political thing. I'm not against gay people, but I cannot sanction it because that's not what God said."

And what if the bill passes?

"If it passes I have no problem with that," he said, "I just will not perform those ceremonies."

But with all the voices clamoring, there still remains wide support for a bill that many see not as an issue of gay rights, but of equal rights, and so its passage could have a particular impact on the black and brown community.

"Black or Latino gay couples are twice as likely as their white counterparts to be raising children. They are also more likely to be economically disadvantaged. Marriage equality gives these families and others the protections that will allow them to provide for their loved ones, including the ability to adopt, hospital visitation, medical decision-making power and access to family insurance policies," said Kimberley McLeod, a spokeswoman for GLAAD, the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation.

"A victory in New York would set a powerful example for the rest of the country. It will show that New Yorkers want what all Americans want, which is to take care of the people they love and to protect their families."

 

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Tracy Morgan Returns to Nashville to Apologize

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After facing a hailstorm of criticism stemming from anti-gay remarks made on June 3 during a comedy show at Nashville's Ryman Auditorium, Tracy Morgan has decided to try to redeem himself by returning to the city.

The '30 Rock' star made his way back to Nashville on Tuesday to apologize to anyone who took offense to his homophobic tirade, claiming that he would "pull out a knife and stab" his son to death if he admitted to being gay.

"I apologize to ... the people that were at the show," he professed. "I want to apologize to my friends and my family and my fans and everyone in every community who were offended with this. ... I don't have a hateful bone in my body."
"I don't believe that anyone should be bullied or just made to feel bad about who they are... I don't care who you love, same-sex or not, as long as you have the ability to love."

Although Morgan may have thought his offensive joke would win fans over, one spectator broke the news via his Facebook account. Kevin Rogers, who titled his posting, "I No Longer 'Like' Tracy Morgan -- A Must Read," detailed the comedy routine as totally unexpected and was convinced that; "none of this rant was a joke. His entire demeanor changed during that portion of the night. He was truly filled with some hate towards us."

Rogers added that about 10-15 people walked out of the auditorium immediately following Morgan's unforeseen comments. And though he was offended, Rogers was adamant about sitting through the duration of the show. "I knew if I got up ... he won... I'm not angry ... just very very, very disappointed," he said.

Since Morgan's rant made headlines, the former 'Saturday Night Live' star has received a flurry of criticism from the masses, some suggesting that the comedian give a full explanation for his actions.

"Tracy Morgan's management needs to investigate these allegations and should they prove true, we call on him to remove these violently anti-gay remarks from his show and send a strong message that anti-gay violence is not something to joke about," GLAAD president Jarrett Barrios told The Hollywood Reporter.

Fellow comedian Chris Rock took to Morgan's defense on Twitter writing: "I don't know about you, but I don't want to live in world where Tracy Morgan can't say foul inappropriate sh*t," he said before going back on his statement.

"When I first heard the statement I thought it was offensive but it also reminded me of my father saying ill kill you if you ever bring home a white girl but after reading everything Tracy said . Wow I get it that sh*t wasn't called for and I don't support it at all. Now can I please go to the Tony Awards without getting my [butt] kicked."

In addition to Tuesday's apology, Tracy Morgan will also participate in GLAAD's upcoming "Amplify Your Voice" PSA campaign, which also includes Russell Simmons, Al Sharpton, and Rashida Jones among others.

 

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Urban Outfitters: No Thanks Women & Minorities

The First Family Visits South Africa

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First Lady Michelle Obama arrived with daughters Malia and Sasha in South Africa on Monday night. The First Lady, who met with Nelson Mandela yesterday, has taken the girls to visit several community centers, including the Vhuthilo Community Center in Soweto and the Nelson Mandela Foundation in Johnannesburg.



Check out some photos from their visit below.

South African children welcome the First Lady to their homeland.
south africa
Michelle Obama meets with members of the African Women Leaders Forum at the Apartheid Museum.
michelle obama
Malia and Sasha Obama are embraced by children at the the Emthonjeni Community Center in Zandspruit Township.

 

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Naomi Campbell Designs Jeans Line for Fiorucchi

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After dealing with the controversial Cadbury ad debacle supermodel Naomi Campbell is getting back to her fashion roots and is teaming up with Italian denim brand Fiorucci, produced by Ittierre, for her new line of jeans.

Fiorucci's top executives are certain the partnership will benefit both Campbell and the growth of their brand. "This agreement is important to accelerate the development of the company," said Antonio Bianchi, owner of Albisetti, which now controls Ittierre.

Campbell's collection for the brand will have 15 pieces with jeans in four different styles. She created the line with her personal taste and women's figures in mind. "Jeans are like pasta. You can interpret them differently each time and play with the accessories -- wear them with flip-flops if you want comfort or heels if you want to look sexy. For the collection I thought about what would enhance women [and] about what I liked," Campbell told Harper's Bazaar.

 

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Artwork From The Multitalented Amanda Diva

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black artwork


From MadameNoire.com:

We've been down with Amanda Diva for a minute. If you're not familiar with her, you can do so by clicking here, but let us tell you a little about this Harlem Madame. She's a singer, rapper, poet, painter, speaker and just a generally dope person. You might have caught her a few years ago touring with the lovely Marsha Ambrosious and the Deevster just dropped a new mixtape called Madame Monochrome.

See more of her artwork here.

 

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