53.1 F
New York
Tuesday, May 14, 2024
Home Blog Page 1939

Facebook Bans Trump Campaign Ad that Denounces Antifa Violence

0

ALLUM BOKHARI(BREITBART)

Facebook removed an ad from the Trump campaign earlier today attacking Antifa, citing its policy on “organized hate.”

The ad, now removed by Facebook, denounced Antifa, the decentralized movement of far-left agitators known for acts of domestic terrorism and political violence

During the George Floyd riots, Attorney General William Barr described the actions of Antifa as domestic terrorism, and President Trump has also confirmed that he intends to label Antifa a domestic terrorist organization.

The now-deleted Trump ad featured an inverted red-and-black triangle to symbolize the Antifa movement, which uses the red-and-black color scheme in their badges, flags, and propaganda as a form of ideological identification. Red-and-black are the historical colors of the anarcho-communist movement, and red triangles are an Antifa symbol according to products available for purchase.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In the now-deleted ad, the official Team Trump Facebook account said:

Dangerous MOBS of far-left groups are running through our streets and causing absolute mayhem. They are DESTROYING our cities and rioting – it’s absolute madness.
It’s important that EVERY American comes together at a time like this to send a united message that we will not stand for their radical actions any longer. We’re calling on YOU to make a public statement and add your name to stand with President Trump against ANTIFA.
Please add your name IMMEDIATELY to stand with your President and his decision to declare ANTIFA a Terrorist Organization.

But Facebook, and far-left organizations that regularly run cover for Antifa, said the red-and-black triangle was a “hate” symbol because it is similar to a symbol used by Nazi Germany in concentration camps.

Facebook apparently bought this argument, even though the Trump team’s post was clearly about Antifa.

“We removed these posts and ads for violating our policy against organized hate,” a company spokesman told New York Daily News. “Our policy prohibits using a banned hate group’s symbol to identify political prisoners without the context that condemns or discusses the symbol.”

In a post on Twitter, the Trump team posted an image showing the inverted red-and-black triangle being used by Antifa, in response to a Media Matters post accusing the campaign of using Nazi imagery.

“This is an emoji. It’s also a symbol widely used by Antifa. It was used in an ad about Antifa,” said the Trump team. “It is not in the ADL’s Hate Symbols Database.”

In a comment to the New York Daily News, the Trump team again pointed out the symbol’s links to Antifa.

“The red triangle is an Antifa symbol,” said Trump campaign spokesman Ken Farnaso who linked to the symbol being used in Antifa-branded products.

This is not the first time Facebook has deliberately censored political ads from the Trump team. Ahead of the 2018 midterm elections, Facebook censored a Trump ad about the dangers of mass immigration.

Primary Day Is Next Week. Here Are Key Contests to Watch in New York City.

0

THE CITY This article was originally published on  by THE CITY.

Sign up here to get the latest stories from THE CITY delivered to you each morning.

BY 

New York’s 2020 primary elections are just a week away, offering a crowded field in an era of social distancing.

More people than ever have requested absentee ballots as they plan to vote remotely. Meanwhile, measures to keep people safely apart at the polls are already underway at early voting sites.

The city’s first pandemic election isn’t lacking for races.

A total of 51 state and federal primary contests are set to take place within the five boroughs on June 23, according to a tally from the city’s Campaign Finance Board. In addition, ballots for some will include a contentious battle for Queens borough president and plenty of contests for state district leader spots.

Eleven Congressional districts are on the primary ballot and many longtime incumbents are fighting to keep their seats, including Reps. Eliot Engel and Yvette Clarke.

Some races feature more than one or two challengers: In The Bronx, 10 Democrats are vying to replace retiring longtime Rep. José Serrano.

And by the nature of New York politics, a Democratic primary win is often all a candidate needs to coast in the general election.

Ahead of primary day, THE CITY rounded up some of the most notable and competitive contests.

Get more information about which candidates will be on your ballot by visiting the NYC Votes voter guide from the CFB or Vote411.org from the League of Women Voters.

You also can find out who will be on your local ballot with this tool from the city Board Of Elections. Plug in your address, then click the button for “Ballot Information.”

House Races

With 11 races and multiple candidates in some, you need an election scorecard to keep the players straight. Here are some of the contests to watch:

South Bronx’ Crowded Contest

Serrano’s decision not to seek re-election put the most left-leaning congressional district in the nation in play, and has drawn the interest of a wash of familiar local names. That includes City Council colleagues Ruben Diaz Sr., Ydanis Rodriguez and Ritchie Torres and former Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito. Assemblymember Michael Blake is also hoping for a win.

Ben Fractenberg/THE CITY
Councilmember Rubén Díaz Sr. attends a ribbon-cutting ceremony at Parque de los Niños in Soundview with his son, Bronx Borough President Rubén Díaz Jr. (right), and State Assemblymember Marcos Crespo, on Aug. 13, 2019.

Some political newcomers with their eye on the seat are DSA-backed organizer Samelys Lopez, endorsed recently by Sen. Bernie Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez; Chivona Newsome, a co-founder of Black Lives Matter NY; and Tomas Ramos, former program director at Bronx River Houses.

Though Torres has led in fundraising and picked up a New York Times endorsement, some observers note the crowded field of progressive candidates and name recognition could help the cause of 77-year-old Diaz, who has been assailed for a history of homophobic remarks.

Engel’s Last Stand?

Engel is in his 16th — and possibly last — term in New York’s 16th District, which straddles The Bronx and Westchester.

Chair of the House’s Foreign Affairs Committee, Engel was initially challenged by a pair of progressive contenders, both former educators: Jamaal Bowman and Andom Ghebreghiorgis.

Ghebreghiorgis later ended his campaign, endorsing Bowman. The consolidation of progressive power led to endorsements from Sanders and Ocasio-Cortez, as well as a New York Times nod.

Meanwhile, the last few months have been rough for Engel, politically: In May it was revealed he had spent much of New York’s lockdown outside the state, and he was recently caught on a hot mic saying that if he weren’t being primaried, he “wouldn’t care” about addressing a Bronx news conference. Still, he got an endorsement on Monday from one of the party’s best-known figures: Hillary Clinton.

AOC Faces CNBC

Arguably the biggest name in the local races, first-termer Ocasio-Cortez, whose district spans Queens and The Bronx, is being challenged by a handful of Democrats. Among them: Michelle Caruso-Cabrera, a former CNBC contributor who filed a successful challenge to knock Ocasio-Cortez off of the Working Families Party line.

Ben Fractenberg/THE CITY
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez at the Parkchester station in The Bronx, July 31, 2019.

Clarke’s Trio of Challengers

In Brooklyn, seven-term Rep. Yvette Clarke is facing three challengers who span the Democratic spectrum.

Adem Bunkeddeko, who came within 2,000 votes of unseating Clarke in 2018, is running again. The anti-poverty strategist has embraced ideas from the rising left wing, such as the Green New Deal, and earned his second New York Times endorsement.

Isiah James, an Army veteran and Democratic Socialist, is also facing Clarke. The political newcomer has struggled with fundraising. But he’s earned high-profile endorsements from prominent left leaning groups, including Brand New Congress, which boosted AOC’s bid two years ago.

The race’s wildcard is term-limited Councilmember Chaim Deutsch (D-Brooklyn), a relative conservative who threw himself in the race in January. Deutsch, who is endorsed by the Police Benevolent Association and has positioned himself as an advocate for law enforcement, could pose a threat to Clarke in the district’s southern neighborhoods, which helped carry her 2018 primary victory against Bunkeddeko.

Thorns in Rose’s Side

On Staten Island, two Republican candidates are vying for a chance to go up against freshman Democratic Congressman Max Rose in November.

Assemblymember Nicole Malliotakis and former Brooklyn Assistant District Attorney Joseph Caldarera have both aligned themselves with President Donald Trump. But, with supportive tweets from Trump himself and increased name recognition from her 2017 mayoral challenge, the primary race appears to be Malliotakis’ to lose.

State Races

Across Queens and Brooklyn, some incumbents who have been in office for decades are being challenged by political newcomers.

A DSA Contender in Astoria

Assemblymember Aravella Simotas, who represents parts of Long Island City and Astoria, is being challenged by Zohran Mamdani, a leader in the Queens Democratic Socialists of America branch and a housing counselor for the nonprofit immigrant advocacy group Chhaya CDC. He is running on a campaign of establishing universal rent control, defunding the NYPD, and taxing Wall Street to make public transit free.

Double Fight for Nolan

Assemblymember Cathy Nolan, whose district also covers parts of Long Island City, Astoria as well as Sunnyside and Ridgewood, has been in office for 35 years. She is being challenged by two Democrats.

One, Danielle Brecker, a lead organizer for the grassroots political group Empire State Indivisible, is campaigning on taxing the rich to fund healthcare, housing, and education. The other, Mary Jobaida, a co-founder of Bangladeshi Americans for Political Progress, has said that if sent to Albany she would fight to implement universal childcare, curb the influence of the fossil fuel industry, and put term limits in place for elected state officials.

A First Time Challenge for DenDekker

Four challengers are up against Assemblymember Michael DenDekker, who has never faced a primary in his six terms representing Woodside, Jackson Heights and East Elmhurst.

Nuala O’Doherty-Naranjo, a community organizer and former prosecutor, has prioritized criminal justice reforms such as funding supportive social services and scaling back the NYPD’s reach.

Jessica González-Rojas, the former executive director of the National Latina Institute, is campaigning on a platform of universal health care, a rent freeze, and funding public schools and CUNY. Joy Chowdhury, a taxi driver and labor organizer, has made supporting gig economy workers one of his key issues.

Little is known about the fourth challenger, Angel Cruz.

Ortiz’s Brooklyn Battle

Longtime Sunset Park Assemblymember Félix Ortiz, who serves as assistant speaker of the Assembly, faces three challengers — all progressive women raised in the district he’s represented for a quarter century.

Katherine Walsh, an urban planner and former teacher, is running on a campaign focused on environmental justice. Génesis Aquino, a Dominican Republic-born organizer who previously ran for female district leader, has placed immigration issues at the forefront of her campaign.

But the hopeful with the biggest heat is arguably Marcela Mitaynes, who has racked up a series of high-profile endorsements — including from the DSA and Ocasio-Cortez. Mitaynes, who was born in Peru, is a long-time tenant organizer and has pledged to fully fund NYCHA and expand tenant protections if elected.

Hanging over the race for Ortiz: In August 2019, his then-chief of staff was arrested by the FBI and charged with wire fraud, accused of stealing $80,000 from his boss’ campaign.

Lentol Pushes Half-Century Mark

Assemblymember Joe Lentol has represented North Brooklyn in the state legislature for the last 47 years, following in the footsteps of his father and grandfather.

Now he’s facing his first primary challenger in a decade: Emily Gallagher, a Greenpoint activist and community board member, who launched her upstart Democratic primary campaign for the 50th Assembly District in September, on a platform based on housing guarantees and government reform.

A Two-Borough Race to the Right

Two Republicans are racing to the right of each other to grab the last GOP-held seat in Brooklyn, in an Assembly district that encompasses a piece of Bay Ridge and Staten Island’s East Shore.

Former prosecutor Michael Tannousis is backed by the state Republican party, Donald Trump Jr. and the outgoing incumbent, Malliotakis. Marko Kepi, a Marine veteran and formidable fundraiser, is supported by former pols familiar to the district: ex-Rep. Michael Grimm, and ex-state Sen. Marty Golden. Both candidates have campaigned on reopening the city faster.

New York State Assembly
Assemblymember Nicole Malliotakis.

City Races

Last year’s Queens district attorney’s race, in which Borough President Melinda Katz edged upstart Tiffany Cabán in a hotly contested recount, emerged as perhaps the most compelling New York City race of 2019. Now, the contest to replace Katz as beep is dominating the local electoral landscape.

Queens Borough President Drama

It’s been a tumultuous few months in the borough president’s race, with changing terrain caused by a series of blurry, pandemic-driven decisions at both the city and state level.

First, the March 24 non-partisan special election was canceled by Mayor Bill de Blasio with two-weeks’ notice, despite more than 2,500 absentee ballots already cast in early voting. Then the contest to replace Katz was postponed to June 23 — the same day the primary to permanently fill the seat was supposed to take place.

The special election was ultimately cancelled in late April, when Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed an executive order officially mandating that the borough president post would be filled with the general election in November.

There were six candidates vying to be the next Queens borough president, but the elimination of the special election knocked former prosecutor James Quinn out of the race.

The five names still on the ballot are Councilmembers Costa Constantinides and  Donovan Richards, former Councilmember Elizabeth Crowley, retired NYPD Sergeant Anthony Miranda, and Dao Yin, previously a corporate controller.

Brooklyn Ballot Bumping

The race to replace former City Council member Rafael Espinal — who resigned in January from the Brooklyn seat representing a V-shaped district that runs from Bushwick to East New York — was reduced to just one candidate.

Darma Diaz, the Brooklyn Democratic Party-backed district leader, was the only hopeful to survive a string of alternating city Board of Election and state court rulings regarding the number of petition signatures a candidate needed to remain on the ballot. The issue took a more prominent role this year because in-person collection of signatures was impeded by the coronavirus outbreak.

Ben Fractenberg/THE CITY
Councilmember Rafael Espinal speaks in Brooklyn during the 2019 public advocate special election.

In the most recent decision, the state court Appellate Division agreed with the city BOE’s interpretation of a Cuomo executive order that set the minimum number of signatures needed at 270 — much higher than the 135 minimum some of the candidates thought was in place.

That bumped two of the candidates off the ballot: East New York businessman Misba Abdin and law librarian Kimberly Council. Two other candidates were tossed from the ballot over technicalities in late April. Council told THE CITY she sought an appeal with the New York Court of Appeals, but the justices wouldn’t intervene.

THE CITY is an independent, nonprofit news outlet dedicated to hard-hitting reporting that serves the people of New York.

 

Huge Blow to Landlords,Rent Freeze on Stabilized Apartments; Hurts Small Buildings & Minority Owners

0
AP

Edited by TJV News

In a virtual vote The Rent Guidelines Board voted Wednesday night to freeze rent for the third time in seven years for rent-stabilized apartments.

NY Times reported:

The New York City panel that sets rents for the roughly 2.3 million residents of rent-regulated apartments on Wednesday froze those rents for a year, delivering a slight reprieve to tenants struggling in the worst economy in decades.

By a 6-to-3 vote, the panel, the Rent Guidelines Board, approved a measure that froze rents on one-year leases at their current levels and imposed a similar freeze in the first year of two-year leases, while allowing landlords to raise rents 1 percent in the second year.

The vote came after dueling proposals offered by the board’s tenant and landlord members failed. The tenant proposal would have frozen rents for two years, while the landlord members sought to raise rents 2 percent on one-year leases and 5 percent on two-year leases.

An eviction moratorium imposed by the state for those affected by the pandemic and economic shutdown expires in August.

“A lot of residents have lost their jobs and as much as one of the theories that people are using, well they can use their unemployment right to pay for rent? But unemployment is going towards food, towards electricity, utilities,” tenant advocate Paloma Lara told ABC news.

The mayor was quoted as saying “”Renters have never faced hardship like this,” said  “They desperately need relief and that’s why we fought for this rent freeze. Now, more renters than ever before will get help keeping a roof over their heads. This is one step of many we have to take to get families through this crisis-but it’s a big one.”

Landlords and ownership Associations were critical of the vote and process.

NY Times reported:

After the vote, landlords criticized Mr. de Blasio for playing “pandemic politics” and not taking their own precarious situation into consideration.

 The mayor was “denying owners of small buildings, mostly immigrants and people of color, the rent revenue needed to operate their buildings, finance capital improvements, infuse jobs and revenue into their neighborhoods, and pay property taxes that he raises every year,” said Joseph Strasburg, the president of the Rent Stabilization Association, which represents some 25,000 landlords of rent-stabilized units.

Some landlords say they’re not all wealthy billionaire corporate owners, as ABC news reported:

The owner a building in Chinatown said a rent freeze would put his livelihood in jeopardy.

“A lot of people don’t realize that people of color and black owners exist,” said landlord Jan Lee. “There’s this myth that all of New York is owned by corporate giants. That’s not actually true. In neighborhoods like mine and in neighborhoods where there’s people of color, they actually own those buildings and they house people of color. And we’re the ones who are creating stability right now. If we are gone, the city becomes a very ugly and expensive place.”

Lee is a third-generation Chinese-American landlord. His commercial tenants haven’t paid rent for several months now.

The Real Deal quoted one of the landlord representatives on the board:

Ahead of the final vote, Scott Walsh, a project director at Lendlease and one of two landlord representatives on the board, criticized the voting process as “little more than a theater” that was manipulated by the mayor. He said the RGB’s public members didn’t adequately understand the issues surrounding rental housing nor their duty to property owners.

“Public members must understand: Owners are members of the public, and you have an obligation to them through your service on this board,” he said. He went on to call on property owners to “continue the dialogue with public members and to write and communicate with them often to tell their stories.”

“When you are wondering how you are going to pay your increased property tax bill on July 1 this year and avoid an 18 percent penalty for any late payment, call the public members,” he said. “When tenants with jobs elect to not pay rent or assert false claims against you, call the public members. When your insurance carrier won’t renew your policy … Call the public members often, make yourselves heard at their workplaces.”

.

 

Court rejects Trump bid to end young immigrants’ protections

0
Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) recipient Roberto Martinez, left, celebrates with other DACA recipients in front of the Supreme Court on Thursday, June 18, 2020, in Washington. The Supreme Court on Thursday rejected President Donald Trump’s effort to end legal protections for 650,000 young immigrants, a stunning rebuke to the president in the midst of his reelection campaign. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

By MARK SHERMAN (AP)

The Supreme Court on Thursday rejected President Donald Trump’s effort to end legal protections for 650,000 young immigrants, the second stunning election-season rebuke from the court in a week after its ruling that it’s illegal to fire people because they’re gay or transgender.

Immigrants who are part of the 8-year-old Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals Program will retain their protection from deportation and their authorization to work in the United States — safe almost certainly at least through the November election, immigration experts said.

The 5-4 outcome, in which Chief Justice John Roberts and the four liberal justices were in the majority, seems certain to elevate the issue in Trump’s campaign, given the anti-immigrant rhetoric of his first presidential run in 2016 and immigration restrictions his administration has imposed since then.

The justices said the administration did not take the proper steps to end DACA, rejecting arguments that the program is illegal and that courts have no role to play in reviewing the decision to end it. The program covers people who have been in the United States since they were children and are in the country illegally. In some cases, they have no memory of any home other than the U.S.

Trump didn’t hold back in his assessment of the court’s work, hitting hard at a political angle.

“These horrible & politically charged decisions coming out of the Supreme Court are shotgun blasts into the face of people that are proud to call themselves Republicans or Conservatives. We need more Justices or we will lose our 2nd Amendment & everything else. Vote Trump 2020!” he wrote on Twitter, apparently including the LGBT ruling as well.

In a second tweet, he wrote, “Do you get the impression that the Supreme Court doesn’t like me?”

Later, he said the decision showed the need for additional conservative justices to join the two he has appointed, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, and pledged to release a new list from which he would choose a nominee if another opening occurs on his watch. Both of his appointees dissented on Thursday, though Gorsuch wrote the LGBT rights ruling.

Democratic presidential contender Joe Biden pledged to send Congress proposed legislation on his first day in office to make DACA protections permanent.

Roberts, with whom Trump has sparred, wrote for the court that the administration did not pursue the end of the program properly.

“We do not decide whether DACA or its rescission are sound policies,“ Roberts wrote. “We address only whether the agency complied with the procedural requirement that it provide a reasoned explanation for its action. Here the agency failed to consider the conspicuous issues of whether to retain forbearance and what if anything to do about the hardship to DACA recipients.”

The Department of Homeland Security can try again, he wrote. But any new order to end the program, and the legal challenge it would provoke, would likely take months, if not longer.

“No way that’s going to happen before November,” said Stephen Yale-Loehr, a professor of immigration law practice at Cornell University Law School.

The court’s four conservative justices dissented. Justice Clarence Thomas, joined by Justices Gorsuch and Samuel Alito, wrote that DACA was illegal from the moment it was created under the Obama administration in 2012. Thomas called the ruling “an effort to avoid a politically controversial but legally correct decision.”

Alito wrote that federal judges had prevented DACA from being ended “during an entire Presidential term. Our constitutional system is not supposed to work that way.”

Justice Kavanaugh wrote in a separate dissent that he was satisfied that the administration acted appropriately.

DACA recipients were elated by the ruling.

We’ll keep living our lives in the meantime,” said Cesar Espinosa, who leads the Houston immigration advocacy group FIEL. “We’re going to continue to work, continue to advocate.”

Espinosa said he got little sleep overnight in anticipation of a possible decision. In the minutes after the decision was posted, he said his group was “flooded with calls with Dreamers, happy, with that hope that they’re going to at least be in this country for a while longer.”

From the Senate floor, the Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said of the DACA decision, “I cried tears of joy.”

“Wow,” he went on, choking up. “These kids, these families, I feel for them, and I think all of America does.

Republican Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas had a different take, labeling DACA illegal and focusing his wrath on Roberts.

“Yet John Roberts again postures as a Solomon who will save our institutions from political controversy and accountability. If the Chief Justice believes his political judgment is so exquisite, I invite him to resign, travel to Iowa, and get elected,” Cotton said in a statement.

The program grew out of an impasse over a comprehensive immigration bill between Congress and the Obama administration in 2012. President Barack Obama decided to formally protect people from deportation while also allowing them to work legally in the U.S.

But Trump made tough talk on immigration a central part of his campaign and less than eight months after taking office, he announced in September 2017 that he would end DACA.

Immigrants, civil rights groups, universities and Democratic-led states quickly sued, and courts put the administration’s plan on hold.

The Department of Homeland Security has continued to process two-year DACA renewals so that hundreds of thousands of DACA recipients have protections stretching beyond the election and even into 2022. No new applications have been accepted since 2017, and it probably would take a court order to change that, Yale-Loehr said.

The Supreme Court fight over DACA played out in a kind of legal slow motion. The administration first wanted the justices to hear and decide the case by June 2018. The justices said no. The Justice Department returned to the court later in 2018, but the justices did nothing for more than seven months before agreeing a year ago to hear arguments. Those took place in November and more than seven months elapsed before the court’s decision.

Thursday’s ruling was the second time in two years that Roberts and the liberal justices faulted the administration for the way it went about a policy change. Last year, the court forced the administration to back off a citizenship question on the 2020 census.

In 2018, Roberts joined his conservative colleagues to preserve Trump’s travel ban affecting several countries with largely Muslim populations. In that instance, Roberts wrote the administration put the policy — or at least its third version — in place properly.

___

Persistently high layoffs suggest a slow US economic rebound

0
In this June 4, 2020, file photo, a customer walks out of a U.S. Post Office branch and under a banner advertising a job opening, in Seattle. The U.S. government will issue its latest snapshot Thursday, June 18, of the layoffs that have left millions unemployed but have slowed as businesses have increasingly reopened and rehired some of their laid-off workers. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson, File)

By CHRISTOPHER RUGABER (AP)

Three months after the viral outbreak shut down businesses across the country, U.S. employers are still shedding jobs at a heavy rate, a trend that points to a slow and prolonged recovery from the recession.

The number of laid-off workers seeking unemployment benefits barely fell last week to 1.5 million, the government said Thursday. That was down from a peak of nearly 7 million in March, and it marked an 11th straight weekly drop. But the number is still more than twice the record high that existed before the pandemic. And the total number of people receiving jobless aid remains a lofty 20.5 million.

The figures surprised and disappointed analysts who had expected far fewer people to seek unemployment aid as states increasingly reopen their economies and businesses recall some laid-off people back to work. The data also raised concerns that some recent layoffs may reflect permanent losses as companies restructure their businesses, rather than temporary cuts in response to government-ordered closures.

The report is “telling us that the scars from the job losses in the recession will be longer-lasting than we expected,” said Gregory Daco, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics.

At the same time, Thursday’s figures may have raised as many questions about the state of the job market as they answered. Jobless claims generally tracks the pace of layoffs. But they provide little information about how much hiring is occurring that would offset those losses. In May, for example, employers added 2.5 million jobs — an increase that caught analysts off-guard because the number of applications for unemployment aid was still so high.

Some likely factors help explain why applications for jobless benefits remain so high even as businesses increasingly reopen and rehire some laid-off workers. For one thing, many businesses that deal face-to-face with customers — from restaurants and movie theaters to gyms and casinos — remain strictly limited to less-than-full capacity. Some of those establishments are still cutting jobs as a result.

Casinos in Louisiana, for example, can open at half-capacity. But Boyd Gaming Corp., which operates five casinos in the state, has informed 1,500 of its workers that with financial losses mounting, they could be laid off by early July.

And in some especially hard-hit sectors, like the hotel and travel industries, corporations are now slashing white-collar workers because their business remains far below pre-pandemic levels. This week, Hilton Hotels said it would cut 22% of its corporate global workforce — about 2,100 jobs.

Although consumer spending, the primary driver of the U.S. economy, is recovering from its low in mid-April, it remains far below its pre-pandemic level, according to data compiled by Opportunity Insights. That trend may be forcing changes at some companies that managed to withstand the initial shutdowns. AT&T, for instance, said this week that it plans to cut 3,400 technical and clerical workers over the next few weeks. It also plans to permanently close 250 of its Mobility and Cricket Wireless stores.

“We’re starting to see more job losses among higher-skilled positions that are harder to recall,” said Brad Hershbein, a senior economist at the Upjohn Institute.

And some states may still be clearing backlogs of applications from weeks or months ago.

Corinne Cook, who lives in Kissimmee, near Orlando, just received her first unemployment payment last week, after being laid-off from her job in mid-April. Cook, 28, moved to the area in September for an 18-month contract position as a 3-D modeler for Walt Disney, a job involving sculpting character prototypes that were printed on 3-D printers. She lost her job when the parks closed down.

She’s receiving the minimum state unemployment benefit from Florida, $125 a week, because the state has no record of her prior earnings in New Jersey, even though she said she has uploaded, mailed and faxed her documents from her job there. If her previous earnings were properly credited, her state benefits would more than double. She is grateful, though, for the extra $600 in federal unemployment benefits, which have allowed her to pay some bills.

Dealing with the state’s bureaucracy “was very stressful,” she said.

Daco of Oxford Economics said he still expects the June jobs report, to be released in early July, to show another hiring gain. But these figures will be particularly hard to forecast. Tens of millions of people may be flowing in and out of work each month, he noted, making it much more difficult to forecast where the job market is headed.

The jobs report for May had suggested that the damage might have bottomed out. The unemployment rate declined from 14.7% to a still-high 13.3%.

Even so, nearly 21 million people are officially classified as unemployed. And including people the government said had been erroneously categorized as employed in May and those who lost jobs but didn’t look for new ones, 32.5 million people are out of work, economists estimate.

Thursday’s report showed that an additional 760,000 people applied for jobless benefits last week under a new program for self-employed and gig workers that made them eligible for aid for the first time. These figures aren’t adjusted for seasonal variations, so the government doesn’t include them in the official count.

Other recent data have been more encouraging and suggest that the lifting of shutdown orders has sparked some pent-up demand from consumers. Most economic gauges remain far below their pre-pandemic levels, though, and some analysts question whether the recent gains can be sustained, especially if the virus were to surge back.

Last month, retail and restaurant sales jumped nearly 18%, the government said Tuesday, retracing some of the record plunges of the previous two months. Still, retail purchases remain a sizable 6% below their year-ago levels.

One key reason why consumer spending has somewhat rebounded is that government aid programs, from one-time $1,200 stimulus checks to $600-a-week in supplemental federal unemployment aid, have helped offset the loss of income for laid-off Americans. Yet nearly all the stimulus checks have been issued. And the supplemental federal jobless aid is set to expire July 31.

“Recently, some indicators have pointed to a stabilization, and in some areas a modest rebound, in economic activity,” Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said Tuesday in testimony to a Senate committee. Yet “until the public is confident that the disease is contained, a full recovery is unlikely.”

“Singing in the Rain” Telethon Raises $3M for the Special Children’s Center 

0
On Monday evening a very unique telethon event was hosted by The Special Children’s Center in Lakewood in honor of the inner song and joyful spirit of special children and their families. Photo Credit: Rachel Mishanieh Portraiture

By: Fern Sidman

On Monday evening a very unique telethon event was hosted by The Special Children’s Center in Lakewood in honor of the inner song and joyful spirit of special children and their families. A live streaming and entertaining program was presented by internationally renowned singer Yaakov Shwekey, distinguished philanthropist Harry Adjmi and many more devoted supporters of The Special Children’s Center. Thousands of viewers of the Singing in the Rain extravaganza were inspired by their personal accounts and life’s lessons through these trying times and everyone felt the unity as they sang together.

A live streaming and entertaining program was presented by internationally renowned singer Yaakov Shwekey, distinguished philanthropist Harry Adjmi and many more devoted supporters of The Special Children’s Center. Photo Credit: Rachel Mishanieh Portraiture

The Singing in the Rain telethon began at 6:00 pm and entertained throngs of people well beyond midnight. Thanks to the incredibly generous donations of hundreds of thousands of people, as of this writing (10:30 pm) the Special Children’s Center has raised over $3 million for their new building and for a litany of exciting programs that the kids at the center take part in each and every day.

When a special child is born, the entire family is affected. The special child, parents, and siblings face enormous physical and emotional challenges. According to the Special Children’s Center web site, “The Special Children’s Center is there for them every step of their arduous journey Their needs are our needs, their pain is our pain. Their triumphs are our triumphs. And they know that we are their extended family- for life.”

The Special Children’s Center would not be in existence today if it were not for the tireless work of Jenine Shwekey and Chaya Bender, who as teenage girls in high school began working with special children and through their tireless efforts the Special Children’s Center has grown exponentially over the years.

Thousands of viewers of the Singing in the Rain extravaganza were inspired by the personal accounts and life’s lessons (of those involved in the center) through these trying times and everyone felt the unity as they sang together. Photo Credit: Rachel Mishanieh Portraiture

Now, the Special Children’s Center is raising money for a new building on their campus to provide everything that any special child needs for their healthy development and growth.

The Singing in the Rain telethon was dedicated to the loving memory of philanthropist extraordinaire, Stanley Chera, of blessed memory who was the financial and emotional backbone of the Special Children’s Center. Mr. Chera passed away recently from the coronavirus and was special friends with President Trump who spoke of him in exceptionally glowing terms.

Over the many years of his personal involvement in the Special Children’s Center, Mr. Chera was on the frontlines in organizing countless fundraisers for the center as the work that they do meant a great deal to him. In his memory, Mr. Chera’s widow, Cookie Chera donated $36,000.

The Singing in the Rain telethon was dedicated to the loving memory of philanthropist extraordinaire, Stanley Chera, of blessed memory who was the financial and emotional backbone of the Special Children’s Center. Mr. Chera passed away recently from the coronavirus and was special friends with President Trump who spoke of him in exceptionally glowing terms. Photo Credit: CNN Newsource

Mr. Chera’s granddaughter said that what inspired her was her grandfather’s ability to make such a tremendous impact in the world by constantly giving to others, to doing good deeds, to offering one’s self with enthusiasm. She spoke of her grandfather’s special devotion to the Special Children’s Center and asked others to be a part of this great center. She said that her grandfather said her grandfather promised to always help these children as he never wanted them to be forgotten.

Other people who have made the Special Children’s Center the focus of their time and resources are Harry Adjmi and Richie Dweck. Mr. Adjmi just recently recovered from the coronavirus.

Speaking about his experience with the Special Children’s Center was philanthropist Jeff Sutton, who spoke of how the center helped his daughter Frieda and how he had previously given $1 million to them.

According to the Special Children’s Center web site, “The Special Children’s Center is there for them every step of their arduous journey Their needs are our needs, their pain is our pain. Their triumphs are our triumphs. And they know that we are their extended family- for life.” Photo Credit: Rachel Mishanieh Portraiture

Speaking to the Jewish Voice about his special connection with the Special Children’s Center was Rabbi Shlomo Farhi, the rabbinical leader of the Edmund Safra Synagogue in Manhattan. Rabbi Farhi said, Before he married Jenine, Yaakov Shwekey and I were chavrusas together in yeshiva. I can tell you that both Jenine and Chaya just jumped into this noble venture together and they did it with the highest degree of alacrity and total devotion.  Jenine does not take a paycheck. She works harder than a a Fortune 500 executive. She and Chaya put so much into this.”

He added that, “The Kotzker Rebbe once said that one is obligated to do what is necessary. The Special Children’s Center is absolutely necessary and Jenine and Chaya knew this when they were much younger and I applaud them wholeheartedly. In life, one needs to have an unwavering and indomitable faith in Hashem to do the right thing. Just as Nachson ben Aminadav jumped into the Yam Suf and led the way for their people who had just left Egypt after hundreds of years of brutal slavery, we too must summon up that kind of faith and we need only look to Jenine and Chaya as our examples of faith, hard work and total dedication.”

Rabbi Farhi said that the Special Children’s is a ‘first class organization’ and that when they give to these children’s both Jenine and Chaya give in a first class manner. There is nothing too good for these kids and they want them to have everything they need and much more.

“When HaShem gives someone wealth and he sees that they are a vessel with one opening to receive and at the other end they give back generously then HaShem continues to reward them with even more bounty,” he said.

The Special Children’s Center is raising money for a new building on their campus to provide everything that any special child needs for their healthy development and growth. Photo Credit: Rachel Mishanieh Portraiture

One of the programs that the Special Children’s Center provides is the Center House. Center House is a 24/7 loving home away from home for special children. When difficult circumstances at home arise, such as family illness or other extenuating needs, as well as the happy occasion of the birth of a new sibling, the stay can be extended for as long as the family needs. All children who stay at Center House are members of the Center House family, are treated with loving care, and are provided with personal needs such as haircuts, clothing, medication and other basic essentials. Families feel a great sense of security knowing that their loved one is being cared for by their extended family.

A warm and meaningful Shabbat program with home-cooked meals, singing and socialization together with their other Center friends, make it a fully joyful experience.

Families are better able to cope knowing that Center House is always there to provide a home for their special needs child, no matter when or whatever the reason.

Inclusion has shown important benefits not only for the disabled child but also for typically developing children. By participating in activities together, special children learn by modeling and, as a result, show greater gains in learning resulting in higher levels of social play, greater confidence and initiation in interactions and improvements in cognitive, motor and self-help skills.

Internationally renowned singer Yaakov Shwekey

Among the multitude of people who generously donated to the Special Children’s Center was Charles Kushner, the father of White House senior advisor Jared Kushner and friend of Stanley Chera, zt’l. Mr. Kushner donated $100,000 and an anonymous donor gave a matching grant of $500,000 to the center.

The palpable electricity that helped make the evening not only extremely lively but quite enjoyable was supplied by the in incomparable voice of Yaakov Shwekey and a panoply of other singers and entertainers. Singing songs of praise to Hashem, these singers inspired others to grasp the power of giving from the heart and doing the ratzon of the Ribono Shel Olam.

Trump Signs Sanctions Law Over China’s Treatment of Uighurs

0
President Donald Trump addresses the annual U.N. General Assembly in New York on Sept. 24, 2019. Credit: UN Photo/Cia Pak.

(AP) President Donald Trump signed legislation Wednesday that seeks to punish China for a crackdown on ethnic minorities, even as a new book by former national security adviser John Bolton said the American leader expressed support for the brutal campaign in a private conversation with his Chinese counterpart.

The Uighur Human Rights Policy Act of 2020 passed with overwhelming support from Republicans and Democrats in Congress. Trump signed it with no ceremony, issuing a statement in which he said a sanctions provision intruded on executive authority and he would regard it as non-binding.

Still, Uighur activists see the approval as an important step. It is the first time any government has sought to punish China for a campaign of mass surveillance and detention of Uighurs and other mostly Muslim ethnic groups in the western Xinjiang region.

“Globally this should be a model for other counties who have been very lukewarm in their response to the ongoing atrocities in the Uighur region,” said Nury Turkel, a Uighur activist and member of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom.

The bill, which includes sanctions on Chinese officials directly involved in the crackdown, was expected to further inflame already tense relations with China amid the Trump administration’s criticism of Beijing’s response to the outbreak of the coronavirus.

The signing came as Secretary of State Mike Pompeo was meeting in Hawaii with a senior Chinese diplomat, and as revelations from the soon-to-be-released Bolton book were emerging.

The former national security adviser said Trump asked at a White House Christmas dinner in 2018 why the U.S. wanted to sanction China over the treatment of the Uighurs, who are ethnically and culturally distinct from the country’s majority Han population and are suspected of harboring separatist tendencies.

Bolton wrote that at the opening dinner of the Osaka G-20 meeting in 2019, with only interpreters present, Chinese President Xi Jinping explained the Chinese campaign to Trump.

“According to our interpreter, Trump said that Xi should go ahead with building the camps, which he thought was exactly the right thing to do,” Bolton wrote.

Bolton said another National Security Council official, Matthew Pottinger, told him Trump had made a similar remark during his 2017 trip to China, “which meant we could cross repression of the Uighurs off our list of possible reasons to sanction China, at least as long as trade negotiations continued.”

Trump issued a statement upon signing the legislation Wednesday that the new law would hold “perpetrators of human rights violations” accountable.

Members of Congress intended the legislation to increase pressure on China over the crackdown in Xinjiang, where authorities have detained more than a million people — from ethnic groups that include Uighurs, Kazakhs and Kyrgyz — in a vast network of detention centers. Many have been subjected to torture and forced labor and deprived of adequate food and medical treatment.

The law would impose sanctions on specific Chinese officials, such as the Communist Party official who oversees government policy in Xinjiang. Trump said in his signing statement that a provision dictating when sanctions could be terminated interfered with executive authority and would be considered non-binding.

Even with the signing statement, Turkel said the measure is “still an effective legal mechanism to address human rights abuses” and he thanked members of Congress for their support.

The legislation also requires the U.S. government to report to Congress on violations of human rights in Xinjiang as well as China’s acquisition of technology used for mass detention and surveillance. It also requires American authorities to look into the pervasive reports of harassment and threats of Uighurs and other Chinese nationals in the United States.

China has publicly brushed away criticism of its crackdown in Xinjiang, which it launched in 2014 as the “Strike Hard Against Violent Extremism” campaign in a vast resource-rich territory whose inhabitants are largely distinct, culturally and ethnically, from the country’s Han Chinese majority.

Politicians React to Google’s Demonetization Threat to the Federalist, ZeroHedge

0
AP
ROBERT KRAYCHIK (BREITBART)

Elected officials reacted to Google’s threat of demonetization of the Federalist, which would restrict ad revenues to the news media outlet. Sean Davis, co-founder of the Federalist, spoke with Fox News’s Tucker Carlson on Tuesday’s edition of the latter’s eponymous TV program, describing coordination between NBC, Google, and a foreign left-wing organization in Europe.

NBC worked with the Center for Countering Digital Hate, an organization that smears conservative websites — including Breitbart News — while advocating digital boycotts and blacklists against them.

Rep. Jim Banks (R-IN) noted Google’s opposition to the Federalist’s characterization of protests, riots, and unrest following the death of George Floyd.

Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) highlighted Google’s capacity to censor information given the company’s domination of online advertising.


Donald Trump Jr., President Donald Trump’s eldest son, called for Republicans to investigate Google as an “out of control monopoly” using its monopoly of the flow of information to advance left-wing politics.

Breitbart News reported that NBC’s Adele-Momoko Fraser thanked two foreign non-profit organizations for their “collaboration” in urging Google to demonetize the Federalist.

As of this article’s publication, Alphabet Inc., which owns Google, is valued at $985 billion. Its market capitalization is the third-highest of all companies in the world.

Follow Robert Kraychik on Twitter.

Will El Al Airlines Declare Bankruptcy? Company Extends Halt on Passenger Flights until End of July

0

Edited by: JV Staff

El Al has extended its halt on all scheduled passenger flights to and from Israel until July 31, the airline informed the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange on Wednesday, with the exception of cargo flights and one-off services.

The previous date announced by El Al earlier this month was June 30th. Some 6,000 of the carrier’s 6,500 staff are also on unpaid leave until July 31.

In its notification to the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange (TASE), El Al said that while Israel continues to bar foreigners from entering and requires Israelis returning from abroad to undergo 14 days self-isolation, it will continue its suspension of flights, according to a report on the Globes web site.

As was reported by Globes, El Al is not hopeful of a resumption in August after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced yesterday that he only plans opening Israel’s borders between Greece and Cyprus on August 1, if the rate of Covid-19 infections does not climb.

El Al is deep in debt and is under pressure to fire at least 2,000 employees, reduce its fleet and the number of destinations it flies to in order to receive a government bailout, as was reported by Globes.

Observers of the airline have stated that service on the carrier has dramatically declined over the years and have attributed the exceptionally poor service to the fact that El Al employees are protected by a very strong union. “There is absolutely no accountability whatsoever amongst El Al employees because they know they are protected as are their salaries. They have no incentive to perform well and to receive positive customer satisfaction comments,” said a company official that spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Others have critiqued the upper level management of the company for its stagnant performance. “I happen to know that El Al has had the same person heading up their public relations department for the last 30 years. This person has single handedly alienated potential vendors and partners, but the real question is, who decides who stays in power at El Al and who decides who does not,” said the official.

Rumors have been circulating for quite some time that El Al is considering bankruptcy as an option to deal with its growing financial woes.

Regular travelers to Israel and other destinations have taken note of the rising stars in El Al’s competition. They have remarked that at one time, El Al had a monopoly on the security aspect of air travel and that passengers could rest assured that they were safe from terrorism or any other mishap that could possibly happen on an international flight, but that is no longer the case.

“Every airline that flies to Israel has extraordinary security and El Al’s does not stand out from the rest,”  said the official.

 

Aunt Jemima Brand Retired by Quaker due to Racial Stereotype

0
box of Aunt Jemima pancake mix sits on a stovetop Wednesday, June 17, 2020, in Harrison, N.Y. Pepsico is changing the name and marketing image of its Aunt Jemima pancake mix and syrup, according to media reports. A spokeswoman for Pepsico-owned Quaker Oats Company told AdWeek that it recognized Aunt Jemima’s origins are based on a racial stereotype and that the 131-year-old name and image would be replaced on products and advertising by the fourth quarter of 2020. Quaker did not say what the name would be changed to. (AP Photo/Courtney Dittmar)

By ALEXANDRA OLSON and MATT OTT (AP)

America’s painful struggles over racism have finally caught up with Aunt Jemima, that ubiquitous fixture served up at breakfast tables for 131 years.

Quaker Oats announced Wednesday that it will retire the Aunt Jemima brand, saying the company recognizes the character’s origins are “based on a racial stereotype.” Indeed, the logo was inspired by 19th century minstrel celebrating the “mammy,” a black woman content to serve her white masters. A former slave, Nancy Green, became the first face of the pancake product in 1890.

Aunt Jemima’s downfall is the latest signal of the powerful cultural moment unleashed by the Black Lives Matter protests, which have spread around the world and prompted companies to rethink their policies, from hiring practices to giving employees off for Juneteenth, the anniversary of the end of the slavery in the U.S.

Other companies said they are reconsidering racial imagery in their branding.

The owner of the Uncle Ben’s rice says the brand will “evolve” in response to concerns about racial stereotyping. Caroline Sherman, a spokeswoman for parent company Mars, said the company is listening to the voices of consumers, especially in the black community.

Geechie Boy Mill, a family-owned operation in South Carolina that makes locally-grown and milled white grits, said it is “listening and revising our overall branding,” though no decisions have been made. Geechie is a dialect spoken mainly by the descendants of African-American slaves who settled on the Ogeechee river in Georgia, according to Merriam-Webster.com. In a statement to The Associated Press, the company said a name change has been under consideration for the past year and discussions have ramped back up given the current climate.

Earlier this year, Land O’Lakes announced that it would no longer use the Native American woman on its packages of butter, cheese and other products since the late 1920s.

But reconsideration of the images also raises questions about why they have endured for so long in the first place, beyond the Civil Rights movement and ensuing decades of protests against discrimination and violence against African-Americans. Brands with ethnic and racial stereotypes still abound, from Nestle’s Eskimo Pie and Miss Chiquita of banana fame, to the ongoing debate over the Washington Redskins football team.

Riché Richardson, an associate professor of African American literature at Cornell University, called for Aunt Jemima’s retirement five years ago in a New York Times opinion piece — part of a wider discussion about Confederate statues and other imagery after the massacre of nine black parishioners at a church in Charleston, South Carolina.

Richardson said Aunt Jemima epitomizes the dark comfort that some Americans take from imagery of black servitude, so normalized that it’s on their box of pancake mix. She said it was problematic that Aunt Jemima is such a ubiquitous symbol of black femininity when there are so many real women who are icons of African American history.

“The question becomes, ‘do we want to hold onto images that hearken back to a past when blacks were servants and expected to know their place?’” Richardson said. “People who are holding onto these symbols are almost suggesting that those are times they are nostalgic about. I don’t think people intend to send that message but at this time, we cannot afford to send mix messages.”

Quaker, which is owned by PepsiCo, said its overhauled pancake mix and syrup will hit shelves by the fourth quarter of 2020. The company will announce the new name at a later date. PepsiCo also announced a five-year, $400 million initiative “to lift up black communities and increase black representation at PepsiCo.”

“We recognize Aunt Jemima’s origins are based on a racial stereotype,” said Kristin Kroepfl of Quaker Foods North America. “While work has been done over the years to update the brand in a manner intended to be appropriate and respectful, we realize those changes are not enough.”

Quaker tried over the years to purge Aunt Jemima of her “mammy” roots, exchanging her kerchief for pearls by 1989. Still, the image was of eager domesticity and her name could not be dissociated from its racist origins.

Aunt Jemima’s years of success as a marketing image made it risky for the company to part with it completely, said Brenda Lee, founding director of the marketing research firm Vision Strategy and Insights.

“It’s a huge deal. They’ve invested quite a bit in establishing that brand with all that goes along with the logo,” Lee said. “The calling to make this change has been around for years and the most they had been willing to do was update her looks, but they were not willing to relinquish the name.”

Lee said the risk calculation for companies is quickly changing, in part because of the Black Lives Matter movement’s effort to draw attention to where black dollars are spent.

Earlier this week, the singer Kirby posted a TikTok video called “How to Make a Non Racist Breakfast” explaining some of the backstory of the Aunt Jemima brand. That video went viral.

Officer who shot Rayshard Brooks charged with felony murder

0
This combination of photos provided by the Atlanta Police Department shows Officer Garrett Rolfe, left and Officer Devin Brosnan. Rolfe, who fatally shot Rayshard Brooks in the back after the fleeing man pointed a stun gun in his direction, was charged with felony murder and 10 other charges. Brosnan, who prosecutors say stood on Brooks' shoulder as he struggled for life after a confrontation was charged with aggravated assault. (Atlanta Police Department via AP)

By KATE BRUMBACK (AP)

Prosecutors brought murder charges Wednesday against the white Atlanta police officer who shot Rayshard Brooks in the back, saying that the black man posed no deadly threat and that the officer kicked him and offered no medical treatment for over 2 minutes as he lay dying on the ground.

Brooks was holding a stun gun he had snatched from officers but was running away and was 18 feet, 3 inches from Officer Garrett Rolfe when Rolfe opened fire, District Attorney Paul Howard said in announcing the charges five days after the killing outside a Wendy’s restaurant rocked the city

I got him!” the district attorney quoted Rolfe as saying.

The felony murder charge against Rolfe carries life in prison or the death penalty, if prosecutors choose to seek it. He was also charged with 10 other offenses punishable by decades behind bars.

“We’ve concluded at the time that Mr. Brooks was shot that he did not pose an immediate threat of death,” Howard said.

A second officer with Rolfe, Devin Brosnan, stood on a wounded Brooks’ shoulder as he struggled for his life, Howard said. Brosnan was charged with aggravated assault and other offenses but is cooperating with prosecutors and will testify, according to the district attorney, who said it was the first time in 40 such cases in which an officer has come forward to do this.

Rolfe was fired after shooting, while Brosnan was placed on leave.

An attorney for Tomika Miller, Brooks’ widow, welcomed the prosecutor’s decision and said Miller wasn’t aware of many of the details released Wednesday, such as Brooks being kicked.

“It’s heartbreaking, but it’s an attempt to redefine justice,” L. Chris Stewart said.

The news came as Republicans on Capitol Hill unveiled a package of police reform measures and the movement to get rid of Confederate monuments and other racially offensive symbols reached America’s breakfast table, with the maker of Aunt Jemima syrup and pancake mix dropping the 131-year-old brand.

The shooting sparked new demonstrations in Georgia’s capital against police brutality, after occasionally turbulent protests in response to George Floyd’s death in Minneapolis had largely simmered down. Atlanta Police Chief Erika Shields resigned less than 24 hours after Brooks died, and the Wendy’s restaurant was burned.

About 50 demonstrators were gathered in the parking lot of the restaurant — now a burned shell with “RIP” and “Rayshard” spray-painted on it — as the charges were announced. The news prompted a few raised fists.

Police were called to the restaurant over complaints of a car blocking the drive-thru lane. An officer found Brooks asleep behind the wheel of the car, and a breath test showed he was intoxicated.

Police body camera video showed Brooks and officers having a relatively calm and respectful conversation for more than 40 minutes before things rapidly turned violent when officers tried to handcuff him. Brooks wrestled with officers, snatched one of their stun guns and pointed it at one of them as he ran through the parking lot.

An autopsy found that Brooks was shot twice in the back. One shot pierced his heart, the districtd attorney said.

Ahead of the district attorney’s scheduled announcement, Rolfe’s lawyers issued a statement saying the officer feared for his safety and that of others around him and was justified in shooting Brooks. Rolfe opened fire after hearing a sound “like a gunshot and saw a flash in front of him.”

“Mr. Brooks violently attacked two officers and disarmed one of them. When Mr. Brooks turned and pointed an object at Officer Rolfe, any officer would have reasonably believed that he intended to disarm, disable, or seriously injure him,” the lawyers said.

But the district attorney said the Taser that Brooks held had already been fired twice, and that it was empty and no longer a threat.

The district attorney said both Rolfe and Brosnan were given until 6 p.m. Thursday to surrender. He said would request $50,000 bond for Brosnan on account of his cooperation and would ask that Rolfe be held without bail.

Wednesday’s decision in Atlanta comes as the country is experiencing a dramatic shift in its opinions on policing and race. A new poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research finds that more Americans today than five years ago believe police brutality is a very serious problem that too often goes undisciplined and unequally targets black Americans.

Elsewhere around the country, Senate Republicans in Washington announced the most ambitious GOP police-reform package in years, including an enhanced use-of-force database, restrictions on chokeholds and new commissions to study law enforcement and race.

The 106-page bill is not as sweeping as a Democratic proposal set for a House vote next week, but it shows how swiftly the national debate has been transformed since Floyd’s death.

The Senate’s lone black Republican, Tim Scott of South Carolina, led a task force of GOP senators in compiling the package and spoke of his own experiences being stopped by police.

“We hear you,” he said to the families of Americans killed by police. “We’re listening to your concerns.”

Meanwhile, Quaker Oats said it is getting rid of its Aunt Jemima brand because the character was “based on a racial stereotype.” While Aunt Jemima’s image on packages was changed in recent years to make her look like a modern housewife, she was for most of her existence a stout, kerchief-wearing figure who evoked the plantation-era “Mammy” stereotype.

The owner of the Uncle Ben’s brand of rice likewise said it will “evolve” in response to concerns about racial stereotyping.

The University of Nevada, Las Vegas removed a statue of its “Hey Reb!” mascot outside its alumni center, and Houston officials took down a figure of a Confederate soldier in a downtown park.

Vandals spray-painted “White Lives Matter” on a statue of African American tennis legend Arthur Ashe in Richmond, Virginia.

New York’s governor signed an executive order recognizing Juneteenth as a paid holiday for state employees to commemorate the emancipation of slaves in the U.S. It has been a state holiday in Texas since 1980, and Virginia’s governor has also proposed making it a state holiday.

In the Minneapolis case, Derek Chauvin, the officer who put his knee on Floyd’s neck for several minutes as he pleaded he couldn’t breathe, has been charged with murder. Three other officers have been charged with aiding and abetting. All four were fired and could get up to 40 years in prison.

__

Social Media Finds Statues of Historical Anti-slavery Figures Destroyed by ‘Woke’ Revolutionaries

0
The statues on the Confederate monument are covered in graffiti and beheaded after a protest in Portsmouth, Va., Wednesday, June 10, 2020. Protesters beheaded and then pulled down four statues that were part of a Confederate monument. The crowd was frustrated by the Portsmouth City Council’s decision to put off moving the monument. (Kristen Zeis/The Virginian-Pilot via AP)

By Jared Evan

Police in various American cities especially on the East and West coasts have stood down while fanatical mobs of leftists unilaterally determine which public monuments and statues should be toppled, destroyed, and in some cases beheaded — as in the recent “beheading” of a Christopher Columbus statue at a public park in Boston.

The destruction has not been contained to historical figures associated with slavery and racism. Almost any American historical figure memorialized via a statue or monument has become a target, as the movement has clearly revealed itself and it’s true goals, which have little to do with racism and reigning in bad police.

Reporters and commentators on social media have been tracking this trail of destruction. We have seen this before throughout history, toppling of historical and political statues, destruction and attacking of art, the underpinnings of an attempted ‘cultural revolution’ is underway by the far left.

American history is under attack.

Their target is not the Confederacy. It is the United States, as the Federalist recently reported.  Here is just some proof 

Rayshard Brooks Criminal Background Revealed , Cop Who Killed Him had Multiple Prior Complaints

0
This screen grab taken from body camera video provided by the Atlanta Police Department shows Rayshard Brooks speaking with Officer Garrett Rolfe as Rolfe writes notes during a field sobriety test in the parking lot of a Wendy's restaurant, late Friday, June 12, 2020, in Atlanta. Rolfe has been fired following the fatal shooting of Brooks and a second officer has been placed on administrative duty. (Atlanta Police Department via AP)

edited by Jared Evan

In the latest developments regarding the shooting of Rayshard Brooks by an Atlanta cop in a Wendy’s parking lot, it was discovered that Brooks had a serious criminal background including child endangerment, and the officer who killed him, Garrett Wolfe had a long disciplinary history including excessive use of force.

Epoch Times reported :

According to court records, there was a fugitive warrant out for his(Brooks) arrest on Dec. 30, 2019, for violation of probation to notify the community of his new address, and failure to complete theft prevention class for the original offenses of false imprisonment, cruelty to children, family violence, battery, and simple battery.

 

He was later arrested in Ohio on behalf of the state of Georgia on Jan. 6, 2020, according to documents obtained by The Gateway Pundit.

In a video posted on his YouTube channel on May 24, Brooks said he was waiting for probation to give him an interstate compact for his probation. A compact is the only legal mechanism in the country for the interstate transfer of the parole or probation of an adult criminal.

“It’s been two or three weeks now I’ve spoken with probation and I haven’t heard anything back,” he also shared in the video, which is a recording of an online call with another individual. “I’ve been doing my part, but the moment I do something out of hand, back to jail I go”- from Brook’s YouTube video posting.

These revelations have received little attention from the media. It was also reported that former officer Garrett Rolfe, had been investigated for his conduct 12 prior times by Atlanta Police Dept.

11-ALIVE reported

Friday’s shooting is the twelfth time Atlanta Police Department’s Office of Professional Standards has investigated Rolfe, in his almost seven years with the department, according to a summary released by the department. Four of the complaints were filed by citizens between 2015 and 2018. One of those complaints was “not sustained” and he was completely exonerated in the other three.

READ: The full summary of Rolfe’s disciplinary records below

In October 2017, APD issued a written reprimand to Rolfe after internal affairs ‘sustained’ an allegation of improper use of force involving a firearm.  We don’t know any of the details of these internal investigations yet, because APD has only released a summary of the disciplinary records. 

NY UPDATE: Cuomo Ending Daily Briefings on Friday , COVID Numbers Plummet, US Open to Be Held With No Fans

0

Edited by TJV news

Gov. Andrew Cuomo will hold his final daily coronavirus briefing this Friday – ending a 97-day streak of press conferences.

“Well do briefings as necessary,” Cuomo told reporters at a Wednesday press conference in Albany. “And I’m sure they will often be necessary, but we’re going to turn the page on the immediacy of this crisis.”

17 – The number of deaths from the coronavirus in New York on June 16. The date with the highest single-day total was April 8, with 799 deaths.

1,479– The number of people currently hospitalized with the coronavirus in New York, as of June 16. The date with the highest single-day total was April 12, with 18,825 people hospitalized.

431– The number of patients in intensive care units in New York, as of June 16.

Out of the 60,568 tests conducted in New York State yesterday, only 631, or 1.05 percent, were positive

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today announced the U.S. Open will be held in Queens without fans from August 31st to September 13th. The USTA will take extraordinary precautions to protect players and staff, including robust testing, additional cleaning, extra locker room space and dedicated housing and transportation.

Governor Cuomo also announced that hospitals and group homes will be allowed to accept visitors at their discretion. Any facility that chooses to allow visitors must follow state guidelines, including time-limited visits and requiring visitors to wear PPE and be subject to symptom and temperature checks. The hospital visitation program expands on a pilot program that was launched in May, which demonstrated that hospitals could provide safe visitation for patients and families. Hospitals statewide will now be able to provide visitation. Group homes certified by the NYS Office for People with Developmental Disabilities will be allowed to accept visitors beginning Friday provided they adhere to state guidance and certify compliance to OPWDD prior to commencing visitation. The prohibition on nursing home visitors remains in place as the state Department of Health continues to review.

The Governor announced global public health experts have cleared the Capital Region to enter Phase Three tomorrow, June 17th. Business guidance for phase three of the state’s reopening plan is available here.

“I am so proud what the people of this state have done to defeat this virus. The numbers are looking very good, and today we are excited to announce that the U.S. Open will be held in Queens without fans this August,” Governor Cuomo said. “We must remain vigilant and the USTA is taking all necessary precautions with players and staff, but this is an exciting day for the state.”

REPORT: DOJ to Propose Rolling Back Big Tech’s Legal Immunity

0

ALLUM BOKHARI (Breitbart) 

The Department of Justice is preparing proposals to roll back the legal immunities enjoyed by Big Tech companies under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act (CDA), in measures that will be announced as early as Wednesday, sources told the Wall Street Journal.

Section 230 gives Big Tech companies immunity from lawsuits arising from user-generated content. If a person is defamed on Google, YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, or other big tech platforms like Reddit, those platforms are not legally liable for the content like a traditional publisher might be. This allows social media platforms to host billions of posts from users without a potentially crippling legal risk.

As Big Tech platforms have grown increasingly interested in censoring content posted by their users, however, many lawmakers have argued that they are behaving like traditional publishers, censoring and editing and approving their users’ posts. As such, a growing number of lawmakers have argued that the legal immunities of Section 230 should be contingent on platforms maintaining a hands-off approach to the speech of their users.

Another problematic element of Section 230 is subsection c-2, which grants tech companies immunity from lawsuits arising from their censorship of “objectionable” content. This immunity gives them broad leeway to censor users, leaving no legal recourse for those who are censored — even if their social media accounts are critical to their livelihood or career.

However, according to the Wall Street Journal, the Justice Department’s proposals go beyond merely addressing the question of censorship:

The department’s proposal, for instance, would remove legal protections when platforms facilitate or solicit third-party content or activity that violates federal criminal law, such as online scams and trafficking in illicit drugs.  The department also wouldn’t confer immunity to platforms in instances involving online child exploitation and sexual abuse, terrorism or cyberstalking.  Those carve-outs are needed to curtail immunity for internet companies to allow victims to seek redress, the official said.

The Justice Department also will seek to make clear that tech platforms don’t have immunity in civil-enforcement actions brought by the federal government, and can’t use immunity as a defense against antitrust claims that they removed content for anticompetitive reasons.

According to the report, it also appears that the Justice Department won’t try to strip tech companies of their immunity for censoring “objectionable” content, instead aim to spur Big Tech to be “fairer and more consistent in their decisions to take down content they find objectionable.”

Are you an insider at Google, Reddit, Facebook, Twitter, or any other tech company who wants to confidentially reveal wrongdoing or political bias at your company? Reach out to Allum Bokhari at his secure email address [email protected]

Allum Bokhari is the senior technology correspondent at Breitbart News.

Sen. Cotton: ‘Twitter Thought Police’ Tried to Censor Account

0
AP

By Sandy Fitzgerald(NEWSMAX)

Sen. Tom Cotton Wednesday accused the “Twitter thought police” of trying to censor his account after he’d posted a tweet saying that military troops could be used to support local police against people who were rioting and looting after the death of George Floyd.

“I came on this program a couple Mondays ago and we talked about the rioting and looting and the need, if necessary, to use the military to back up their police where they are outnumbered by these rioters and looters and anarchists,” the Arkansas Republican said on Fox News’ “Fox and Friends,” after writing an opinion piece for the network about his experience with the social media giant. “Apparently that didn’t sit well with the Twitter thought police.”

In his article, Cotton said that “first on television, then on Twitter, I noted that the National Guard and active-duty troops could be called out to support local police if necessary, as happened during the 1992 Los Angeles riots.”

Sen. Tom Cotton Wednesday accused the “Twitter thought police” of trying to censor his account after he’d posted a tweet saying that military troops could be used to support local police against people who were rioting and looting after the death of George Floyd.

“I came on this program a couple Mondays ago and we talked about the rioting and looting and the need, if necessary, to use the military to back up their police where they are outnumbered by these rioters and looters and anarchists,” the Arkansas Republican said on Fox News’ “Fox and Friends,” after writing an opinion piece for the network about his experience with the social media giant. “Apparently that didn’t sit well with the Twitter thought police.”

In his article, Cotton said that “first on television, then on Twitter, I noted that the National Guard and active-duty troops could be called out to support local police if necessary, as happened during the 1992 Los Angeles riots.”

The senator added his office “called their bluff for 30 minutes,” but Twitter didn’t lock down his account. After two hours, “they got back to us and said okay, you can keep your post up.”

Cotton’s experience came after his opinion piece for The New York Times on the use of the military against protesters was met with protests, including among the newspaper’s workers, leading to the resignation of the company’s editorial page editor.