Month: September 2016

  • Mass protests against Zimbabwe’s President, Robert Mugabe called ‘biggest in a decade’

    Robert Mugabe.jpg

    President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe, in Southern Africa

    Aug. 29, 2016 (GIN) – It all started with a flag.     Zimbabwe Pastor Evan Mawarire, posting on Twitter in a feed he called “ThisFlag”, was letting off steam about his children’s rising school fees. But that “steam” ignited a wildfire now raging among Zimbabweans long hungry for leadership change.

    Exhausted by shortages, unpaid salaries, limits on democratic freedoms, sky-high unemployment and a fast growing spread between rich and poor, Zimbabweans took to the streets last week in a demonstration approved by permit to ask the 92 year old President Robert Mugabe to step down.

    Some had seen the pastor’s Twitter posts but others heard about the protest over the human internet.

    Despite the permit, police were out in full force and began firing tear gas and water cannons at opposition leaders and the demonstrators at Friday’s protest which swept across large parts of the capital, Harare. Pictures posted of the violent police action were seen widely around the world.

    Some 68 people were detained and charged with burning public property, attacking police officers and looting shops.

    The pastor is now in the U.S. after charges that he intended to overthrow the state were dropped. Stopping first in South Africa, he spoke to students at Wits University in Johannesburg where his speech in English and Shona was posted online by various news sources.

    “Thank you fellow citizens for the voices we have raised… Whether I’m in Zimbabwe or not, we keep moving… Our strength is in our numbers, not in one person or in one movement.

    “Don’t stop building these movements that are protesting the government… Don’t depend on Mawarire. Depend on you. That’s what the strength of this movement is about.”     Supporters of President Mugabe attacked the movement in articles belittling the pastor. “Evan Mawarire – a cry baby or a cry boy?” jeered a columnist in Bulaway24 News. Mawarire, he wrote, “is masquerading as a Pastor” and “shedding tears for the alleged crises in Zimbabwe.”

    But the Pastor’s #ThisFlag movement has lit an unstoppable fire, wrote Kitsepile Nyathi, a Kenyan correspondent in Harare. “There are now a plethora of movements that includes Tajamuka (We have rebelled), that lead daring protests against President Mugabe’s rule,” he wrote. Another group, “build Zimbabwe,” can be found on Facebook.

    “Protests have become the order of the day in Zimbabwe’s major cities as calls grow louder for one of the world’s oldest leader to step down,” Nyathi wrote. “Unemployed graduates, rural teachers, vendors and opposition political parties led by former deputies Joice Mujuru and ex-Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai are some of the groups that have taken to the streets demanding change in the last two months.

     

    Arriving last week in Dallas, the Pastor met with famed Zimbabwean musical icon Thomas Mapfumo, composer of Chimurenga (revolutionary) songs, who supports the pastor.    Mapfumo, seen in an online video, said Mugabe and his party have “a wrong understanding of what freedom is… A country is not led by a few individuals but by a majority… That is what is called power to the people,” he said.    A rally is planned for President Mugabe’s arrival for the U.N.’s General Assembly on Sept. 17. Pastor Mawarire is expected to attend.

     

  • Trump ally apologizes for Hillary Clinton Blackface Tweet as candidates battle for voters of color

    Another tweet showed her sporting blonde braids.

    Written By Charise Frazier, Newsone

    Tweet of Hillary in Blackface

    Mark Burns that shows Hillary Clinton in Blackface

    Pastor Mark Burns, a Black Trump surrogate, apologized for tweeting out two controversial photos of Hillary Clinton on Monday. One depicted her in Blackface, while the other showed her with blonde braids.

    The tweets accused Clinton of pandering to Black voters and set off a firestorm of reaction, only one month after Burns gave a bizarre benediction at the RNC, calling Clinton “the enemy.”

    The photo caption for the first tweet reads, “Black Americans, THANK YOU FOR YOUR VOTES and letting me use you again..See you again in 4 years.” Clinton is holding a sign that says “#@!** the police,” and is wearing a shirt that says “no hot sauce, no peace,” a reference to comments earlier this year during which the candidate confessed her love for the condiment. Many lashed out at Clinton after, saying she played into the tired stereotype that references Black people and their love for hot sauce. The tweet also played into Burns’ criticism that Clinton’s views don’t side with those who support police.

    Another tweet shows Clinton with blonde braids, with the caption, “When you need the Black vote.”

    Burns initially doubled down on his statements in a fiery interview on MSNBC with Kristen Welker, but then later in the day released an 11-minute Periscope post acknowledging his actions.

    “The last thing I want to do is to offend people. The tweet was not designed to anger or stir up the pot like it did. It was designed to bring how I feel a very real reality as to why the Democratic party and how I view it have been pandering and using black people just for their votes…,” he said on Periscope.

    The tweets come on the heels of Trump’s visit to Detroit on Saturday, where he plans to address the Great Faith Ministries Church and tape an interview with Bishop Wayne T. Jackson, according to a statement Jackson released Monday via The Detroit Free Press.

    Trump’s visit is part of his campaign’s new focus to reach out to Black voters. A recent NBC News poll shows Trump only has 8 percent of the Black vote. In the first few weeks of August, Trump has repeatedly made tone-deaf statements to Black voters at rallies with mostly White audiences, asking them, “What the hell do you have to lose?”

    Jackson also offered an invitation to Clinton in his statement. “The goal for this interview is to get real answers and Trump’s views and plans on policies that affect our community,” he said.

    Burns also weighed in on Trump’s visit, saying the candidate will “answer questions that are relevant to the African-American community, such as education, unemployment, making our streets safe and creating better opportunities for all. He will then give an address to outline policies that will impact minorities and the disenfranchised in our country.”

    Do you think these tactics are helping Trump win self-loathing Blacks and White moderate voters?

  • Teamsters Union endorses Clinton, slaps Trump as unworthy of working people’s support

    Hillary Clinton ( AP Photo/Carolyn KasterAP_16238726919175-744x466By : Bill Hoffmann

    Hillary Clinton on Friday received a pivotal endorsement as the International Brotherhood of Teamsters announced that the Democratic nominee should be the nation’s next president.

    The Teamsters General Executive Board says it unanimously voted to endorse the former senator and secretary of state.

    “We are proud to endorse Hillary Clinton for President of the United States. She is the right candidate for the middle class and working men and women across the country,” Teamsters General President James P. Hoffa said.

    “She will stand strong for the workers of America by fighting to reject job-killing trade deals, enforcing labor laws and working to provide retirement security for millions of people who have sacrificed so much for the chance to retire with dignity.”

    Hoffa said the commander-in-chief must be “a serious candidate who understands what it means to govern responsibly.

    “Donald Trump supports national right-to-work laws that are proven to weaken the middle class and has a long track record of shipping jobs out of the country as a businessman. He is no friend to working Americans.”

    The Teamsters, which represent 1.4 million workers throughout the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico, is the latest major union to endorse Clinton, following the AFL-CIO and SEIU.

  • Barack woos Michelle: How Tika Sumpter, Parker Sawyers, and their newbie director brought the first couple’s first date to screen

    by Tirdad Derakhshani, Philadelphia Inquirer

    Parker Sawyers and Tika Summer

    Parker Sawyers and Tika Sumpter are the young Barack and Michelle as they go on their first date in “Southside With You.”

    Hollywood hasn’t exactly been shy when it comes to churning out presidential biopics, from well-researched and ponderous entries such as Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln to speculative potboilers like Oliver Stone’s JFK to fanciful numbers like Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter.

    But a film about the love life of a sitting president?

    No need to cringe: Southside With You, which opened Friday, isn’t a lurid exposé, but a charming romantic drama that recounts Barack Obama and Michelle Robinson’s first date, in 1989.

    A singularly nonpartisan entry, it’s a sweet indie pic that uses the moving, eventful encounter between the two young Chicago lawyers to tell a universal story about youth, identity, ambition, and love.

    Written and directed by 31-year-old newcomer Richard Tanne, Southside With Youstars up-and-coming actor Parker Sawyers (SurvivorMonsters: Dark Continent) as Barack and Tika Sumpter (Gossip GirlBessie) as Michelle. Sumpter also produced, backed by executive producer and Obama friend John Legend.

    Tanne, from Livingston in North Jersey, had been mulling the idea for years. “I’ve always been really struck by the Obamas and their relationship and the way they look at each other,” the director said in a conference call that also included Sawyers.

    “Their public displays of affection look so real and so alive, something that’s so rare in people, especially public figures, that I was intrigued.”

    Tanne said that when he heard about the Obamas’ first date, he felt sure it would make a compelling movie. The backstory is widely known: After rebuffing the future president, then a summer associate at her Chicago law firm, Michelle finally agreed to accompany Barack to a community meeting in the impoverished neighborhood where he had served as an organizer and advocate. She did not consider it a date.

    In a sly move, Barack asked her to meet him hours before the event so they could spend time together. The film captures that day, which took them to an exhibition of Ernie Barnes’ paintings, to the park for a picnic lunch, to the meeting where Barack impressed Michelle with his passionate commitment to helping the residents. After the meeting, they went to the movies, where they watched Spike Lee’s Do the Right Thing.

    Barack and Michelle married three years later, in 1992.

    “That first date involved the classic boy-girl conflict because she wasn’t interested in him,” said Tanne. “So he gave himself that one day to prove to her why she should be with him.”

    Tanne’s tight script opens as each lawyer is preparing to go out and ends with their first kiss, a structure that appealed to Sumpter, 36, who said she signed on as a producer after her first meeting with Tanne. “Richard [Tanne] had asked me to play Michelle, but in the beginning I just wanted to produce, to make sure the film got made even if I wasn’t going to star,” Sumpter said during a visit to Philadelphia this summer.

    “Once I saw the script, I was like, ‘Oh yeah, I want to play this role!’ “It’s playing a woman every girl wants to become,” she said. “And it’s so rare to play a woman with so much strength and complexity and beauty. She is so unapologetic about her intelligence. In a lot of romantic films, the lady is always crying or chasing after the guy and I’m always like, ‘Really, y’all?’ “Now, Michelle, she’s strong.”

    Sumpter said Tanne’s film also transcends the typical romance. “Yes, it’s about love, but it’s much more, it’s about these people defining who they are at a young age. And to me it’s also about a woman who doesn’t want to be overshadowed by this hotshot guy coming in from Harvard.”

    Is that why she refuses to date him? “She tells [Barack] that, as a woman, she has to work twice as hard to be noticed in a male-dominated [law] firm and four times as hard as a black woman. She’s not going to jeopardize that.”

    Sumpter said Tanne, who did extensive research for his screenplay, had creative freedom, but she would nudge him gently when she felt his dialogue rang false. “I’d say, ‘I don’t think she’d say it that way. It’s what a white guy might say!’ ” she said, laughing.

    She said she was surprised to find that much of the dramatic weight rests on Michelle’s shoulders. “I remember thinking that next to this amazing man as Barack, no one would see me,” she said of Sawyers. “But I guess her journey fluctuates a little bit more, as her character has to travel greater emotional distance.”

    Sawyers said he was impressed by Tanne’s ability to humanize the characters. Barack, for one, is shown chain smoking, a habit Michelle doesn’t particularly like. “In writing him, Richard tried to get to the essence and truth of the guy, and he was a chain smoker,” said Sawyers. “And he did smoke a lot of pot in high school, as he admits to Michelle.”

    The movie Michelle sums up the movie Barack as “definitely a smooth-talking brother,” Tanne said. But what clinches their date, Sawyers chimed in, isn’t the suave movie choice or their goodnight kiss but the community meeting, “which gave Barack a chance to reveal other parts of him, a different side.””By the end you realize he’s a smooth-talking brother with a lot of substance.”

  • North Carolina’s Voter ID Law struck down, but questions remain

    By Cash Michaels, Contributing Writer (Carolina Peacemaker, NNPA Member)

    ncvoterid_jdaniels_web120

    Democrats and activists who supported efforts by the N.C. NAACP and others to legally overturn parts of North Carolina’s “Monster Voting Law,” were certainly thrilled to hear that a three-judge federal appellate panel indeed struck down key elements of the 2013 measure, effective immediately.

    “The U.S. Fourth Circuit Court [of Appeals] ruling [Friday] is a people’s victory and a victory that sends a message to the nation,” said Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II, president of the North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP. “The court found — under the sensitive inquiry required by law — that how the law was enacted and its impact made crystal clear that discriminatory intent impermissibly motivated this General Assembly.

    “Under our Constitution, and under the core principles and dictates of the Voting Rights Act…” Rev. Barber continued, “… these provisions have no legitimacy under the law.”

    In its ruling, the federal appellate court stated that the Republican-led N.C. General Assembly was racially-motivated with “discriminatory intent” in passing the 2013 voting restrictions, saying, that African Americans were targeted “…with almost surgical precision.”

    “The Court’s decision reinforces that race-based decision-making in the electoral system will not stand,” said Penda D. Hair, lead attorney for the N.C. NAACP. “We know that voters of color rely most heavily on these voting measures, and that, without this decision, they would have borne the brunt of the burden this November.”

    Unless a timely stay on the ruling is granted by the entire U.S. Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals before the November 8th General Elections (something Gov. Pat McCrory and Republican leaders have vowed to seek, but legal experts say isn’t likely), then voters will have their early voting period restored to 17 days prior to Election Day instead of the current 10 days; maintain same-day registration and out-of-precinct provisional balloting; reinstate voting pre-registration for 16 and 17 year-olds; and most importantly, will not have to show a government-issued photo ID in order to vote.

    This means Democrats no longer have to educate voters at rallies or by phone banks about making sure they have some form of official government-issued ID, or legal excuse for not having one. They can continue their door-to-door canvassing of neighborhoods for candidates to “Get Out To Vote” (GOTV). Now, not only should excessive long lines be eliminated during early voting and on Election Day, but voters will still have their ballots counted, even if they go to the wrong precinct.

    But there’s a holdup as to how grassroots activists and others proceed in the aftermath of the momentous ruling. Local Boards of Elections (BOEs) have not met yet to determine how to carry out the appellate court’s mandate.

    When asked about meeting, Gary Sims, director of the Wake County Board of Elections, said, “We need to, and are awaiting direction from the N.C. Board of Elections and the executive director because whatever action does or does not happen, needs to come from their guidance.”

    Ironically, all local BOEs were required to have their early voting sites locked in by July 29th, the same day the federal ruling came down. Sims added, that while the 17-day early voting period is reinstated, the longer hours of operation per early voting location currently in force could be relaxed since the period is being extended from 10 to 17 days. But, exactly what to do with that seven-day extension would be up to local county BOEs.

    One of the other challenges BOEs face is that they are already locked into budgets prior to the July 29th ruling. That reality will also constrain how quickly and adequately local BOE’s will be able to comply. Having only one early voting site open, namely the local BOE office itself and no satellite sites for the seven-day extension, is a possibility.

    Prior to the July 29th ruling, voting rights advocates had been distributing materials educating voters about the photo ID requirement, which went into effect this year during the March and June primaries.

    Now the community must also be clear that not all of the voter ID law was knocked down. They will still be faced with no straight-ticket balloting, meaning that instead of voting for all candidates of a single party with just one mark, voters will have to individually mark, race by race, which candidates they choose.

    Critics of the 2013 law have always said that voters may not be aware of all of the candidates, especially during a presidential election year, and thus, only vote for a few of the major offices, leaving judicial or local races blank.

    Another element of the 2013 “Monster Voting Law” left untouched is the provision that allows anyone from anywhere in the state, to confront any voter on line at a precinct, and challenge their right to vote. That means the challenged voter is required by law to leave the line, and report to the precinct judge’s table with the challenger to answer questions about their voting qualifications.

    Activists say they have to have a strong voter protection plan in place – observers making sure that people are educated, and that they are not intimidated at the polls.

    The Carolina Peacemaker is a member publication of the National Newspaper Publishers Association. Learn more about becoming a member at http://www.nnpa.org.