Category: history

  • GCH holds induction ceremonies in two National Honor Societies

    • rho-kappaGreene County High School held its first student induction in the Rho Kappa National Social Studies Honor Society on Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2016. The Inductees included the following: Yasmeen Amerson, Lakia Coleman, Sabrina French, LeTerreia Hutton, Lauren Smith, Jasmine Williams, Destin Cockrell, Keyonna Dixon, Jameria Hood, Anthony McGee, Chiquita Williams, TeAron Wilson, Almotasem Al-naham, Lydasia Cochran, Siddiq Elnaham, LaTarius Montgomery, Miah Armour, Victoria Cotton, Toneyah Little, Asia Quinnie and Tony White.
      Mr. Larry Burnette serves as sponsor.
      Rho Kappa National Social Studies Honor Society is the only national organization for high school juniors and seniors that recognizes excellence in the field of Social Studies. Any accredited public or private high school can apply for a local chapter, through which individuals will be inducted into Rho Kappa Honor Society.
      A Rho Kappa chapter at a high school school provides national recognition for outstanding students, and encourages an interest in, understanding of, and appreciation for the social studies.
      mu-alpha-thetaMu Alpha Theta

    Greene County High School also held an induction ceremony into Mu Alpha Theta, the National High School and Two Year College Mathematics Honor Society, Tuesday, October 25. The 3 students inducted were: Lakia Coleman, Asia Quinnie and Tony White. Mu Alpha Theta’s current members are Yasmeen Amerson, Delorine Brown, Keyonna Dixon, Sabrina French, Anthony McGee, Lauren Smith and Jasmine Williams. Mrs. Ka’Needa Coleman serves as sponsor.
    The combined induction programs consisted of musical selections rendered by the Greene County High School Choir and congratulatory remarks by Superintendent Dr. James Carter and Principal Garry Rice.
    Mu Alpha Theta is the National High School and Two-Year College Mathematics Honor Society with 105,000 student members as of June, 2014 in more than 2,100 schools. Mu Alpha Theta is dedicated to inspiring keen interest in Mathematics, developing strong scholarship in the subject, and promoting the enjoyment of Mathematics in high school and two-year college students.
    The Honor Society strives to achieve these goals by: Providing a method for schools to recognize and encourage those students who enjoy and excel in mathematics; Organizing a national convention for students and teachers to participate in math-related events and interact with others from across the country; Rewarding outstanding extracurricular achievement by offering special awards to both students and their faculty advisors.

  • The KKK’s official newspaper has endorsed Donald Trump

    By Peter Holley Washington Post,  November 01, 2016

         Ku Klux Klan and  front page of KKK Crusader newspaper endorsing Trump

    WASHINGTON — Among the small number of American newspapers that have embraced Donald Trump’s campaign, there is one, in particular, that stands out.

    It’s called the The Crusader — and it’s the official newspaper of the Ku Klux Klan.

    Under the banner ‘‘Make America Great Again,’’ the paper’s current issue devoted its entire front page to a lengthy defense of Trump’s message — an embrace some have labeled a de facto endorsement.

    ‘‘While Trump wants to make America great again, we have to ask ourselves, ‘What made America great in the first place?’’’ the article continues. ‘‘The short answer to that is simple. America was great not because of what our forefathers did – but because of who our forefathers were.

    America was founded as a White Christian Republic. And as a White Christian Republic it became great.’’

    Reached by phone, Robb said that while the paper wasn’t officially endorsing Trump, the article signaled the publication’s enthusiastic support for his candidacy.

    ‘‘Overall, we do like his nationalist views and his words about shutting down the border to illegal aliens. It’s not an endorsement because, like anybody, there’s things you disagree with,’’ Robb said. ‘‘But he kind of reflects what’s happening throughout the world. There seems to be a surge of nationalism worldwide as nationals reclaim their borders.’’

    The 12-page-long, quarterly newspaper calls itself ‘‘The Political Voice of White Christian America!’’ and has a well-known white supremacist symbol on its front page. The latest edition includes articles about Jewish links to terrorism, black-on-white crime and a man who claims to be Bill Clinton’s illegitimate child. An article near the end of the paper writes that Trump’s candidacy is ‘‘moving the dialogue forward.’’

    The publication’s website states that its ‘‘number one goal’’ is to ‘‘stop white genocide.’’

    Trump campaign aligned with white supremacists

    Since the earliest days of his presidential bid, Donald Trump has attracted the support of prominent white nationalists across the country, setting off fears that a dormant fringe faction of the GOP base — one steeped in xenophobic and white supremacist rhetoric — would be folded back into mainstream politics.

    In the early months, white nationalists said they were reluctant to publicly throw their support behind the controversial billionaire for fear of harming his strengthening campaign. But the group said as Trump became more emboldened, they did too.

    In January, Jared Taylor, editor of the white supremacist magazine American Renaissance, lent his voice to a robo-call recording urging registered voters in Iowa to back Trump. Those potential voters, Taylor said, are part of a silent majority who are tired of being asked to celebrate diversity but are afraid of being labeled bigots.

    A month later, Trump was embraced by former KKK Grand Wizard David Duke, which led to a controversial exchange between CNN’s Jake Tapper and the Republican candidate. Asked by Tapper to ‘‘unequivocally condemn’’ Duke, Trump pleaded ignorance.

    ‘‘Just so you understand, I don’t know anything about David Duke, OK?’’ Trump said. Tapper pressed him several more times to disavow Duke and the KKK, but Trump again declined.

    ‘‘I don’t know anything about what you’re even talking about with white supremacy or white supremacists,’’ he said. ‘‘So I don’t know. I don’t know — did he endorse me, or what’s going on? Because I know nothing about David Duke; I know nothing about white supremacists.’’

    That same month, Rachel Pendergraft — the national organizer for the Knights Party, a standard-bearer for the Ku Klux Klan — said that Trump’s campaign offered the organization a new outreach tool for recruiting new members and expanding their formerly dwindling ranks.

    The Republican presidential candidate, Pendergraft said, provided separatists with an easy way to start a conversation about issues that are important to the dying white supremacist movement.

    ‘‘One of the things that our organization really stresses with our membership is we want them to educate themselves on issues, but we also want them to be able to learn how to open up a conversation with other people,’’ Pendergraft said.

    Using Trump as a conversation piece has been discussed on a private, members-only website and in ‘‘e-news, stuff that goes out to members.’’ In addition to opening ‘‘a door to conversation,’’ she said, Trump’s surging candidacy has electrified some members of the movement. ‘‘They like the overall momentum of his rallies and his campaign,’’ Pendergraft said. ‘‘They like that he’s not willing to back down. He says what he believes and he stands on that.’’

    In August, the American Nazy Party’s chairman Rocky Suhayda agreed, declaring on his radio show that Trump offers ‘‘real opportunity’’ to build the white nationalist movement.

    Recently – Trump’s rallies marred by racially charged incidents

    Last week, a black Trump supporter was booted from a North Carolina rally after he was mistaken for being a protester. Trump’s security detail escorted a man out of the rally as the audience cheered. ‘‘You can get him out,’’ Trump said, making a sideways motion with his thumb. ‘‘Get him out.’’

    The person in question turned out to be C.J. Cary, a North Carolina resident, who claims to be a longtime Trump supporter.

    Cary, in a phone interview Saturday, said he had gone to the rally because he wanted to hand-deliver a note to the Republican presidential nominee. He made his way to about 20 to 30 feet from the stage and was shouting ‘‘Donald!’’ while waving his note around to try to catch his attention.

    ‘‘Everyone else is waving Trump signs, and I’m waving this white letter,’’ Cary, 63, said. He said that, coupled with the fact that he was wearing sunglasses during an evening rally to deal with his sensitivity to light, may have been what set people off.

    Cary said a security official noticed he appeared to be a supporter but said he should not have disrupted the rally. ‘‘He asked me, ‘What happened? You have on a GOP badge,’ ‘‘ Cary said. ‘‘I said, ‘I’m yelling at Donald, and he thinks I’m a protester.’ ‘‘

    Days later, Donald Trump’s campaign manager Kellyanne Conway forcefully disavowed a supporter as ‘‘deplorable’’ for chanting ‘‘Jew-S-A!’’ at a weekend rally, the latest incident of anti-Semitic rhetoric used by some of the GOP nominee’s backers, according to two reporters.

    ‘‘[The man’s] conduct is completely unacceptable and does not reflect our campaign or our candidate. Wow,’’ Conway said during an interview on CNN’s ‘‘State of the Union.’’ ‘‘That man’s conduct was deplorable. And had I been there, I would have asked security to remove him immediately.’’

    The Saturday afternoon incident in Phoenix was captured on video that showed a man confronting reporters at the rally with shouts and a three-fingered hand gesture that resembled hate symbols flagged by the Anti-Defamation League.

    ‘‘You’re going down! You’re the enemy!’’ the man yelled. As the rest of the crowd broke into a chant of ‘‘USA! USA!,’’ the man repeatedly chanted, ‘‘Jew-S-A! Jew-S-A!’’

     

  • Federal lawsuits filed in 5 states after African-American voters purged from registration rolls, targeted for intimidation by the Trump campaign

    By: Sophia Tesfaye, Salon

     

    voting

    People Voting

    New federal lawsuits were filed in five different states Monday, alleging that thousands of Black voters are illegally being purged from voter registration lists by Republican officials and threatened with intimidation by the campaign of Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump.

    Democratic officials in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Arizona and Nevada argue that the Trump campaign, led by notorious longtime advisor Roger Stone, is “conspiring to threaten, intimidate, and thereby prevent minority voters in urban neighborhoods from voting.”

    Democratic officials are concerned that Stone’s pro-Trump voter intimidation group Stop the Steal, which is recruiting right-wing volunteers to conduct unscientific “exit polls” outside swing state precincts, could violate both the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which outlawed discriminatory voting practices in the American South, and the Ku Klux Klan Act of 1871, which outlawed intimidation against African American voters particularly.

    The Guardian recently reported that the Trump-affiliated group plans to send volunteers to 600 different precincts in nine Democrat-leaning cities with large populations of black and Hispanic voters to act as so-called poll watchers.

    This comes after the Democratic National Committee asked a federal judge in New Jersey last week to block the Republican Party from supporting efforts to discourage minorities from voting based on Trump’s baseless claims that the presidential election is “rigged.”

    On the campaign trail, Trump has called for his supporters to “watch the polling booths” while speaking in places like Philadelphia. According to the DNC’s suit, the RNC is supporting Trump’s recruitment of so-called watchers at polling places, which is in breach of consent decrees going back to 1982 that forbid the group from engaging in such efforts.

    And in North Carolina, where the Republican-led legislature recently passed voting restrictions that the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit found “target[ed] African Americans with almost surgical precision,” the NAACP filed a lawsuit on Monday alleging that local elections boards have illegally purged thousands of Black voters from the registration lists as early voting is already underway in the state.

    In the pivotal battleground state, any registered voter in the state can challenge another voter’s registration. And according to the historic civil rights group, Republicans in the state have taken up aggressive efforts to challenge the vote registration of thousands in heavily African-American parts of the state since the Supreme Court revoked the requirement for the state to submit all voting changes to the federal government for pre-clearance under the Voting Rights Act in 2013.

    The group’s lawsuit zeroes in on Cumberland, Moore and Beaufort counties, where thousands of voters’ names have been challenged.

    The NAACP says Black voters comprise more than 65 percent of challenges in Beaufort county. In Moore County the secretary of the county’s Republican Party single-handedly challenged nearly 400 registered voters. And in Cumberland County, the right-wing group Voter Integrity Project, whose director Jay Delancy thinks the mentally ill should be barred from voting, has challenged voters’ eligibility with no other evidence than a single piece of mail that was sent to their home and bounced back as undelivered.

    Federal standards state that voters should not be stripped from the voter rolls fewer than 90 days before an election. North Carolina law allows for the practice up to 25 before election day. Early voting began in the Tar Heel state last week. So far, estimates show that early voting numbers for African-American voters are down 17 percent since 2012.

    As Salon reported last week, North Carolina’s voter purge has already ensnared a 100-year-old African-American woman who was nearly denied her right to vote after her voter-registration status was challenged.

    The NAACP is demanding that North Carolina reinstate all voters challenged since 2012 as eligible to vote, notify them that they have been reinstated, and allow them to cast regular ballots.

     

     

  • Fire Fighters Association holds 4th annual banquet and awards program

    Shown above: The planning committee for the program included Geraldine Walton Chairman, Hodges Smith, Bennie Abrams, Iris Sermon, Mollie Gaines Willie Mae Austin and Janetta Hall – not pictured Kenny Young and James Crawford.

    Shown above Bennie Abrams IV and Hodges Smith of the Greene County AVF

    Shown L to R: Jamie Cox, Kenny Young, Lamar Ingram, James Crawford, Barry Lusk and Bennie Abram IV

    The Greene County Association of Volunteer Fire Fighters Departments (AVFD) held its Fourth Annual Volunteer Fire Fighters’ Banquet and Awards program, Friday, October 14 , 2016 at the former Greene County National Guard Armory.
    Bennie Lee Abrams IV was selected as Distinguished Fire Fighter of the Year for 2016 and presented with a plaque by Hodges Smith, President of the Greene County AVFD. Abrams was recognized for Exceptional Courage and Dedicated Service to the Citizens of Greene County. Receiving 2nd place was Kurt Turner of the Tishabee Department and 3rd place went to Barry Lusk of the Boligee / Forkland Department for Distinguished Volunteer Fire Fighter of the Year Awards.
    Sheriff Jonathan Benison, Chief Derick Coleman, Kenneth Smith and James Crawford received Presidential Awards.
    Eutaw VFD Chief Bennie Abrams rang the bell in honor of fallen firefighters. Guest speaker for the occasion was Rev. Dexter Thornton, with an ensemble featuring Marvin Thornton and the Angels of Faith.
    Each of the 14 Volunteer Firefighters Departments received a Good Standing Membership Award.

  • Black Belt Community Foundation honors Johnny Johns at Legacy Dinner

    lucky-robinson

    Shown above Johnny D. Johns, Felicia Lucky and Darlene Robinson

    The Black Belt Community Foundation (BBCF) held its third annual Legacy Dinner on Tuesday, October 18, 2016 at the Harbert Center in downtown Birmingham.
    300 friends and supporters attended the fundraising dinner to honor Johnny D. Johns, President and CEO of Protective Life Insurance Company for their support of the work and mission of the Black Belt Community Foundation.
    The Foundation’s work covers 12 Alabama counties that include Bullock, Choctaw, Dallas, Greene, Hale, Lowndes, Macon, Marengo, Perry, Pickens, Sumter, and Wilcox counties. A little over 212,000 hard-working, community-loving people live in these counties. The foundation’s focus is on improving education, economic development, health and wellness, and arts and culture.
    Johns serves as head of the Protective Life Insurance Company that has made numerous grants to support the work of the BBCF.
    John’s is active in the business and civic community of Birmingham including serving on the Boards of Regions Bank, Southern Company and Genuine Parts Corporation as well as the Board of Trustees of the University of Alabama system.
    Felicia Lucky, BBCF President, Darlene Robinson of Greene County, BBCF Board Chair, and Carnetta Davis, BBCF Board member and Dinner Chair welcomed quests. Sherri Jackson, News Anchor with WAIT-TV news served as Mistress of Ceremony for the event. Lucky reviewed a video of some of the recent community development work of the foundation with people and organizations in the Black Belt.
    Hon. Circuit Judge John H. England, Jr., who serves on the BBCF Board, introduced Johns who serves with him on the University of Alabama Trustees.
    In his remarks accepting the award, Johns lauded the work of the Black Belt Community Foundation in fighting poverty in the Alabama Black Belt. “The foundation uses an inside out strategy, not an outside in strategy in changing the Black Belt, which has been labeled Alabama’s third world region. The foundation gives local people and community leaders in the Black Belt the support and sense of hope that they need to do things for themselves,” said Johns.
    “The Black Belt Community Foundation is a credible model for development. We need the poor in Alabama and around the world to succeed and have a fair shot at prosperity. Respecting the poor and helping them to change their conditions is a valuable benefit of the work of the foundation. This is why I and my company support the work of BBCF and you should consider helping as well, “ stated Johns.
    Past honorees have included Judge John H. England, Jr., George Duncan Hastie McMillan, former Alabama Lieutenant Governor, Henry “Hank” Sanders, Alabama Senator, Julian H. Smith, Jr., retired vice president of Alabama Power, and Dr. Carol Prejean Zippert, a Black Belt community organizer and author. “Each of these leaders has a strong commitment to community and to upholding the belief that bringing many to the table to create solutions is the true mechanism for community change,” said Lucky.
    Adding to her closing comments, Felecia Lucky said, “ We really feel that Johnny Johns is worthy of this honor and now you understand as well.”
    Lucky urged others at the dinner to support the work and programs of the BBCF and suggested people could contribute by going to the website: http://www.blackbeltfound.org.

  • Louis Harper re-elected as mayor of Boligee

    Boligee Mayor Louis Harper was re-elected as Mayor of Boligee with 119 votes defeating Marvin E. Oliver who received 26 votes. The Boligee City Council consist of District 1: Halee Vogt, Teresa Mack, who were unopposed. In District 2: Michael D. Gibson, Sr., Hattie Samuel and Earnestine Wade were elected with the most votes in their district. Eddie Mae Brown and James E. Morrow were defeated in the election.
    Mayor Harper would like to thank the City of Boligee citizens for allowing him an opportunity to serve them a second term and the support shown to him. “We will move Boligee forward”, stated Harper.
    City Council Meetings are held every 2nd Monday at 5:30. All are welcome.

  • Joe Lee Powell, Alphonzo Morton Jr, LaJeffrey Carpenter absent Mayor Edwards last City of Eutaw Council meeting not held due to lack of quorum

    The regular Eutaw City Council meeting scheduled for Tuesday, October 25, 2016, at 6:00 PM was not held due to a lack of a quorum. The Mayor and three council-members must be present to have an official meeting. This was to be Ms. Edwards last regular meeting before the newly elected city officials take office on November 7, 2016.
    “The three City Council members – Joe Lee Powell, Alphonzo Morton Jr. and LaJeffrey Carpenter – did not inform me that they were going to be absent. Ms. Shelia Smith was present and Reginald Spencer called and said he would be late.
    “ I feel those three council-members deliberately skipped the meeting to delay progress on the improvements to our water system. They knew the important business that was on the agenda for the meeting,” said Mayor Hattie Edwards.
    Mayor Edwards advised that she was planning to continue with firing the three police officers: Lonnie Glenn, Robert Clayton and Rodriquez Jones, who she deemed to be insubordinate and unwilling to abide by city policies. The police had a closed hearing with the City Council on October 18. Edwards said, “ I am moving ahead with these firings because it is my duty and responsibility to do so. If the next Mayor and Council wants to reinstate those police officers that is up to them. It is my responsibility to act when city employees do not abide by our policies and treat the Mayor disrespectfully.”
    When reached by the Democrat, Alphonzo Morton Jr. said, “I did not go to the City Council meeting because I support the police and I did not want to go.” Councilman Joe Lee Powell said, “ I had another obligation and could not attend.” When asked if he had informed the Mayor of his absence, he said that he had not but he was familiar with other times that other members of the Council had been absent without reporting to the Mayor.Efforts to reach LaJeffrey Carpenter were unsuccessful.
    Mayor Hattie Edwards said that the $3.1 million loan and grant with USDA Rural Development was being held up because the City Council had not agreed and accepted an offer of interim financing from Co-Bank, which was willing to provide these funds, at a favorable interest rate.
    “I have done everything to put this project in place and I am sad to see that things will be delayed because we were unable to have a quorum for our meeting. I have asked Councilwomen Smith to poll the Council to see if they are willing to hold a special meeting to approve this interim financing agreement before our terms have ended,” said Edwards.
    Mayor Edwards also provided the Democrat with a copy of a procedures report from Principal & Associates CPA firm on the financial status of the City of Eutaw, as of September 30, 2016. The report shows the bank balances in 19 bank accounts maintained by the City of Eutaw showing $895,861.68 as of that date.
    The CPA report indicates that the City of Eutaw has paid all outstanding bonds and warrants. The City has no outstanding long-term debt as of September 30, 2016. There is one major outstanding bill of $15,667 owed to Waste Management for garbage collection at the end of the fiscal year, which the report calls a normal obligation.
    Employee tax returns to IRS were reviewed and found to be over paid. The City has requested a refund from IRS.
    The billing for the City Water Department is three months behind (August-October 2016) with an estimate of $147,176 in uncollected revenues. The CPA firm recommends hiring additional staff to read the water meters because those readings are needed to process up-to-date billings for water and other city services.

  • Rising sea levels threatening Ghana’s coastal villages

    coastal-village-of-fuvemeh

    Oct. 24, 2016 (GIN) – Fuvemeh, one of Ghana’s coastal villages, is vanishing because of coastal erosion.

    Waves have taken whole parts of the village with them into the sea. What was once a thriving fishing community was three miles from the coast a few years back. Now the waves are just a few feet away.

    “This used to be a very beautiful village – a lot of coconut trees, sea turtles, sea gulls, dolphins, sharks and whatnot,” recalled local resident Frank Kofigah. “It’s been horrible. As a result of climate change we are suffering.”

    The only school in the area and a temporary replacement have also been washed away by the waves, resident Bright Agbeko told the Ghanaian news site MyJoyOnLine.

    Fuvemeh was once a thriving community of 2,500 people, supported by fishing and coconut plantations that are now completely underwater. But in the past two decades, climate change and industrial activity — such as sand mining and the construction of dams and deep-sea ports, which trap sediments and prevent them from reaching the coastline — have accelerated coastal erosion here, observed Matteo Faggoto of Foreign Policy magazine..   “Gradually but inexorably, the ocean has swallowed up hundreds of feet of coastline, drowning the coconut plantations and eventually sweeping away houses,” Faggoto said.

    Thousands of communities along the western coast of sub-Saharan Africa, from Mauritania to Cameroon, are at risk of being washed away.  Sea levels around the world are expected to rise by more than two-and-a-half feet by the end of the century, but they are expected to rise faster than the global average in West Africa, according to the West African Economic and Monetary Union.

    Kwasi Appeaning Addo, a professor in the University of Ghana’s department of marine and fisheries sciences, shared his fears. “In West Africa, infrastructure and economic activities are centered along the coastal region, so as sea levels continue to rise, it threatens our very existence and source of income. We are sitting on a time bomb.”

    Residents of Fuvemeh have been appealing to government for a sea defense wall to protect the coastal belt as they not ready to relocate as suggested by the Municipal Assembly and Member of Parliament Clemence Kofi Humado. He warned that should residents continue to live in the affected areas ,their lives may be endangered.

    “If we can’t find a balance between our insatiable appetite for modernity and allowing nature to replenish itself,” said Fredua Agyeman of Ghana’s Ministry of Environment, Science, Technology, and Innovation, “we will always run into problems, no matter the advancements in modern science or engineering.”

    Local climate activists include the Ghana Youth Environmental Movement, on Facebook. w/pix of Fuvemeh

     

  • Donald Trump still sure he’s ‘the least racist person you’ve ever met’

     

    Elise Foley Immigration & Politics Reporter, The Huffington Post

     

    dump-trump

    Demonstrators with a ‘Dump Trump’ sign

    GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump ― the man who accused America’s first Black president of lying about his birthplace and called for banning Muslims from the country ― insisted Thursday that not only is he not a racist, but he’s actually “the least racist person you’ve ever met.”

    Trump made the comment just before a rally in the swing state of Ohio. “Nineteen days out from the election, you’ve been labeled a racist, you’ve been called a sexist, how …” reporter Colleen Marshall, of Columbus’ WCMH-TV, began to ask.

    At that point, Trump turned and started to walk away, saying, “Thank you very much.” But he stopped a moment later when she asked how he responded to those criticisms. “I am the least racist person you’ve ever met,” Trump said.

    Trump abruptly ended a second interview with local media on Thursday when asked about the allegations of sexual assault against him. “I know nothing about that,” he told Columbus’ 10TV and again walked away from the reporter.

    It’s impossible to really know what goes on in another person’s mind, but Trump has publicly demonstrated plenty of racist thinking ― enough to attract white nationalists, many of whom support his campaign.

    He launched his bid for president by saying Mexico was sending rapists and criminals across the border.

    He has stuck by his assertion that the Central Park Five, a group of four black men and one Latino man, were guilty of a notoriously violent rape in 1989, even though they’ve long since been exonerated. His pitch to black voters implies that all African-Americans live in abject poverty in “inner cities” riddled with crime. He supports stop-and-frisk policing despite its known problems with racial targeting.

    He called for a ban on Muslims entering the U.S., only to amend it to a ban on people from certain countries, which still seemed to cover the Middle East. And the list goes on.

    The charges of sexism also go on. Accusations of sexual assault specifically have multiplied in recent weeks after The Washington Post published a 2005 recording of Trump bragging about kissing and groping women without their consent. More than a dozen women have come forward since and said he assaulted them. He has denied those allegations.

    Trump has also made a habit of judging women by their attractiveness. Among many, many examples, he has mocked his accusers for their looks, insulted Republican primary opponent Carly Fiorina’s appearance, and allegedly sought to have female workers fired if they weren’t, in his view, pretty enough.

    At Wednesday’s presidential debate, Trump called Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton a “nasty woman.” Yet even then, he denied that he harbored any sexism. “Nobody has more respect for women than I do,” Trump said. “Nobody.” The audience in the room laughed.

  • Emmett Till sign In Mississippi vandalized by dozens of bullets

    By: Zeba BlayVoices Culture Writer, The Huffington Post

     

    emmett-till-sign

    Emmett Till sign with bullet holes

        A memorial sign dedicated to commemorating the murder of Emmett Till has been vandalized in Money, Mississippi. The sign, marking the spot where Till’s body was discovered in August 1955, had been riddled with at least 50 bullet holes.

    At only 14, Till fell victim to racist violence when he was kidnapped, tortured and killed by an angry white mob for apparently whistling at a white woman. The disfigured body of the Chicago-born teen was found three days later floating in the Tallahatchie River.

    J.W. Milam and Roy Bryant, the two white men charged with killing Till in 1955, were acquitted of the crime, though they later bragged about kidnapping and murdering the teen. Till’s death and the lack of justice against his murderers became a catalyst for the civil rights movement throughout the United States in the ‘50s and ‘60s.

    In 2007, eight signs marking key locations in the last days of Till’s life were erected by the Emmett Till Memorial Commission. By 2013, as revealed in a 2013 tweet by writer Christopher Hooks, the sign marking the location Till’s body was found had been shot at dozens of times.  More recently, on Oct. 15, a North Carolina man named Kevin Wilson Jr. posted an updated photo of the memorial sign, now riddled with at least 50 bullet holes, on Facebook.

    There doesn’t seem to be any leads on the identities of the vandals, though efforts are already being made to fix the sign. According to the New York Daily News, the Emmett Till Interpretive Center is attempting to raise $15,000 to replace the damaged sign. Until then, it stands as a reminder that the racism that killed Till still lives on today.

    It was not the first time that this particular sign has been vandalized since it was erected in 2007. The Emmett Till Memorial Commission put up eight site markers at important locations, including near the Mississippi river where Emmett’s body was found after he was kidnapped, tortured and killed for allegedly whistling at a white woman while visiting relatives down South.

    As the Daily News notes, officials have said that replacing and restoring the sign every time someone damages it or steals it goes beyond their financial capabilities. However, after news spread across social media, donations came pouring in, raising the amount to go toward replacing the sign to a whopping $19,200 as of 3 p.m. EDT on Monday. More than 400 people have contributed to the effort so far. In Greene County, Alabama, signs naming Highway 14 as “Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Drive have attracted similar bullet hole attacks by vandals.