Why The GOP Really Hates Medicaid

President Trump made news again when he abruptly switched gears and said that he wouldn’t keep hands off Medicaid as he kind of, sort of promised to do during the campaign. Now, says Trump, it’s fair game for a quick assault, namely, the part of the program that some governors, including GOP governors, used to expand coverage in their states. This was made possible under a provision of the Affordable Care Act. Trump ignored the warning that by attacking Medicaid it could screw up the time table for the GOP congressional assault on Obamacare.

This is incidental to the real reason Trump broke his promise and why the GOP’s manic obsession with savaging Medicaid. The GOP’s stock arguments that reining in Medicaid is about cutting costs, federal intrusion in health care, and restoring health care to the states is hogwash. It’s the program itself, who it benefits, and what it means politically to the GOP.

The root of the GOP attack and loathing of Medicaid starts with who created it and what it was created to do. It was a Lyndon Johnson era, Democratic Great Society, War on Poverty Program, that was unabashedly aimed at covering welfare recipients, and the poorest of the poor. Though the outrageous, and very serviceable, myth that is still happily fanned by conservatives, and many in the media, that Medicaid is a gigantic taxpayer health care give-away to the black poor, the majority of Medicaid recipients have always been whites. In time, Medicaid was tweaked, reconfigured, and expanded to provide health care for millions more who had absolutely no access to affordable, if any, health care coverage. The greatest beneficiaries, though, remained the poor, and especially their children. Medicaid cover the cost of prenatal care and hospitalization.

Medicaid has been wildly successful in controlling health care costs, providing the poor and working families with coverage unobtainable in the private insurance market, and in providing a brake on run-away medical care cost coverage in the states. Conservatives have seen deep political peril in this. And they saw even deeper peril when Obamacare expanded coverage even more and bumped the numbers of those now receiving health care coverage under the program to nearly 20 million persons. When conservative GOP governors such Ohio’s John Kasich publicly took the expanded coverage deal with Medicaid, and publicly said it was a boon to the state, the die was cast; Medicaid had to be assailed. The political horror to the GOP is that as long as Medicaid is seen as a Democratic measure, and more specifically an Obama measure, to aid the needy, the possibility is real that many of those millions of voters in crucial swing states such as Ohio, will began to connect the dots. The dots being that Medicaid is a health care program that helps families in need, the Democrats support it and fight for it, while GOP conservatives bitterly oppose it. Therefore, come election time, those families might, just might, cast a vote for the friends, not the enemies, of Medicaid.

This is an especially fragile political proposition for the GOP given that Trump won by only the barest margin in a handful of states, nearly all of Congress is up for re-election in 2018, and GOP governors and legislatures have only tenuous control in several states. Medicaid, and the lies and stereotypes told about it, appear to be a tailor-made issue to rally conservatives, and hopefully keep the GOP political ducks in contested states in line. That’s only the start, since Medicaid, because of those lies and stereotypes, is regarded as the easiest of pickings to go after, if successful, then it opens the gate wide to the next two perennial right-wing targets, Social Security and Medicare.

As with Medicaid, Trump claimed during the campaign that he wouldn’t touch Social Security and Medicare, but that almost certainly will go the way of his Medicaid hands-off promise. The two programs are, and have always been seen, as Democratic inspired and backed programs, and that has made them conservative whipping boys with the usual storehouse of lies about run-away costs, waste, and heavy handed federal intrusion.

Medicaid then is the proving ground to convince the millions that benefit from these foundational federal programs, they aren’t really in their best interests. The GOP will try to pound home that there are better alternatives, and the GOP, not the Democrats, is the party that can provide those alternatives. Trump got that message and will take the point in trying to deliver it to those voters who have grave doubts about hacking away programs that have been life-savers to them. For tens of millions, Medicaid has been at the top of that list of those life-saving programs. This is what makes it the enduring political target it is, or put bluntly why the GOP hates it.

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. He is the author of In Scalia’s Shadow: The Trump Supreme Court ( Amazon Kindle). He is an associate editor of New America Media. He is a weekly co-host of the Al Sharpton Show on Radio One. He is the host of the weekly Hutchinson Report on KPFK 90.7 FM Los Angeles and the Pacifica Network.

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Source: HuffPost Black Voices

Actors Lakeith Stanfield And Xosha Roquemore Are Expecting Their First Child

Congrats are in order for “Get Out” actor Lakeith Stanfield and “The Mindy Project” star Xosha Roquemore. The two are expecting their first child!

Roquemore announced the big news on International Women’s Day, posting an Instagram slideshow of three photos showing her pregnant belly with the caption, “I am WOMBMAN.”

I am WOMBMAN. #internationalwomensday ❤

A post shared by @xoshroq on Mar 8, 2017 at 9:58pm PST

Roquemore and Stanfield, who also stars as Darius in “Atlanta,” hinted at their pregnancy at the Sundance Film Festival in January when the father-to-be placed his hand on her belly for a red carpet photo, E! News reported

The couple made their first appearance together at the Los Angeles premiere of “Straight Outta Compton” in August 2015, according to E!, but it appears they’ve known each other for longer. The duo was featured in Essence magazine in February 2015 as part of the next generation of big actors. 

Congratulations to these parents-to-be!

A post shared by @xoshroq on Aug 2, 2015 at 10:29am PDT

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In This Old Clip, The Spice Girls Call Out Dutch TV Host For Defending Blackface

Earlier this week, a clip of the Spice Girls appearing on the Dutch TV show “Laat de Leeuw” in 1997 resurfaced online, and it’s full of girl power.

The segment starts out with host Paul De Leeuw bringing some fans onstage to ask the U.K. group some questions. It’s all very nice and sweet. But things take a turn when De Leeuw introduces a group of people dressed as “Zwarte Piet,” aka “Black Pete.”

“Black Pete” is known as a companion to Sinterklaas (Saint Nicholas) in Dutch culture. He’s also a white person dressed in blackface.  

The Spice Girls — Mel B. especially — were not having it. 

“I think they shouldn’t paint their faces. You should get proper black people to do it,” she tells Leeuw. “I don’t think that’s very good.” 

When Leeuw tries to tell her it’s a cultural tradition, she hits back and tells him to “change it,” because “this is the ‘90s.”

Then Geri Halliwell chimes in with the zinger: “Update your culture!”

You can watch it all go down here:

Here’s an extended video, for your viewing pleasure. 

Fans have been loving the clip on Twitter, praising the group 

“Black Pete” has received criticism and protest for its racist depiction for some time now. In 2014, Amsterdam ruled that the tradition presented a negative stereotype. For that year’s Sinterklaas festivities, there were reportedly a “substantial” number of Petes with just “soot marks” (signaling that the character climbed down the chimney to deliver presents) and a “white Pete” was present. 

As BuzzFeed reports, De Leeuw has since changed his mind about “black Pete” after seeing “12 Years a Slave.” 

But really, it was probably all because of The Spice Girls.

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Source: HuffPost Black Voices

97 Ways Of Saying The Same Hateful Thing: 'Get Out Of America'

“Go back to your country” and “Get out of my country.” That’s what white men in Kansas and Washington state told Indian and Sikh men in recent weeks before shooting them ― it’s as if they were speaking from the same script.

Here are 97 times in the past two years that people hurled this kind of get-out-of-America hate, often with explicit language, at minorities ― whether it was yelled from car windows, spray-painted on buildings or written in threatening emails ― to make them feel lesser and like they don’t belong here. 

These quotes were collected, in part, using data from ProPublica’s Documenting Hate Project. If you’ve been a victim or a witness of hate, tell us your story.

 

“Get out of America!” and “Arab, you need to leave, asshole!”

― March 8, 2017, in Salem, Oregon

 

“Go back to Mexico.” 

― March 4, 2017, in Lansing, Michigan

 

“Go back to your country.” 

― March 3, 2017, in Kent, Washington. 

 

“Fucking Mexican. … Go back to your country.”

― March 1, 2017, in Brooklyn, New York 

 

 “Get out of my country.” 

― Feb. 22, 2017, in Olathe, Kansas

 

“Go back to where you came from.” 

― Dec. 31, 2016, in Las Vegas

 

“Go back to Africa.” 

― Dec. 28, 2016, in Kodiak, Alaska

 

“You fucking immigrant piece of shit. You Muslim. Go back to your country.”

― Dec. 11, 2016, in Bronx, New York

 

“Go back to Africa.” 

― Dec. 6, 2016, in Moonachie, New Jersey

 

“Go back to your own country.” 

― Dec. 5, 2016, in New York

 

“I will cut your throat — go back to your country.”

― Dec. 3, 2016, in Brooklyn, New York

 

“You can go back where you came from.”

― Nov. 31, 2016, in Cedar Falls, Iowa

 

“Go back to your country.” 

― Nov. 26, 2016, in San Diego

 

“You Muslims would be wise to pack your bags and get out of Dodge.” 

― Nov. 24, 2016, in San Jose, California

 

“You’re a terrorist. Get out of here.” 

― Nov. 23, 2016, in Albuquerque, New Mexico

 

“You don’t even — from here, you mothafucka. Fucking loser. Fuck you and your family, you terrorist motherfucker … You’re an Arab. You’re a fucking loser. Sand nigger … Trump is president, asshole, so you can kiss your fuckin’ visa goodbye, scumbag. We’ll deport you soon, don’t worry, you fuckin’ terrorist.”

― Nov. 17, 2016, in Queens, New York

 

“Go home.” 

― Nov. 17, 2106, in West Springfield, Massachusetts

 

“Go back to your country.” 

― Nov. 16, 2016, in Philadelphia

 

“Fucking Muslims, go back to where you fucking came from, you’re so ugly.”

― Nov. 15, 2016, in New York

 

“Hijab-wearing bitch. This is our nation. Get the fuck out.”

― Nov. 14, 2016, in Fremont, California

 

“Cunt, you don’t belong in this country. Go back to your fucking country.”

― Nov. 11, 2016, in Columbus, Ohio

 

“You can all go home now.” 

― Nov. 11, 2016, in Iowa City, Iowa

 

“Trump might deport you … I think you’re an ugly, evil little pig who might get deported and I pray that you do.”

― Nov. 11, 2016, in San Francisco

 

“Let me see your papers. Get out of my country and go back to Mexico.” 

― Nov. 10, 2016, in Cambridge, Massachusetts

 

“ISIS is calling! Muslims can leave!” 

― Nov. 10, 2016, in New Paltz, New York

 

“Go back to your country.” 

― Nov. 9, 2016, in Cambridge, Massachusetts

 

“You wetbacks need to go back to Mexico.” 

― Nov. 9, 2016, in Salt Lake City

 

“Go back to Mexico.” 

― Nov. 9, 2016, in North Bend, Oregon

 

“#GoBackToAfrica … Make America Great Again.”

― Nov. 9, 2016, in Maple Grove, Minnesota

 

“Go back to Mexico where you belong.” 

― Nov. 9, 2016, in Plano, Texas

 

“Have you started packing?” and “Go back to Mexico” and “Yeah, keep on packing” and “We’re more American than you.”

― Nov. 9, 2016, in Woodland, California

 

“Go back to Africa” and “Go back to Mexico.” 

― Nov. 8, 2016, in Edwardsville, Illinois

 

“Go back where you came from.” 

― November 2016 in Denver

 

“Go back to Mexico” and “Go back to Africa” and “Sorry, you have to go back.”

― November 2016 in Spokane, Washington

 

“Go back to Africa.” 

― November 2016 in Poughkeepsie, New York

 

“Go back to the jungle.” 

― November 2016 in Englewood, Colorado

 

“Go back to Mexico. You don’t belong here.” 

― November 2016 in Sonoma, California

 

“Go back to Mexico.” 

― Oct. 31, 2016, in Albuquerque, New Mexico

 

“Go home” and “Go back to your country.” 

― Oct. 20, 2016, in Fort Smith, Arkansas

 

“Terrorist, leave, No one wants you here.”

― Oct. 14, 2016, in Dundalk, Maryland

 

“Go back to China … go back to your fucking country.”

― Oct. 9, 2016, in New York

 

“Go back to your country.” 

― Sept. 22, 2016, in Lakewood, New Jersey

 

“Go back to Africa.” 

― Sept. 22, 2016, in Norman, Oklahoma

 

“MUSLIMS GET OUT.” 

― Sept. 19, 2016, in Lonsdale, Minnesota

 

”Get the fuck out of America, bitches. This is America — you shouldn’t be different from us.”

― Sept. 8, 2016, in Brooklyn, New York

 

“Go back to China.” 

― September 2016 in Orange County, California

 

“You should take your black ass back to Africa so this campus and America can be great again.”

― August 2016 in Bowling Green, Kentucky

 

“Foreiger (sic) go home” and “Go Home Indian” and “I will kill you.”

― July 24, 2016, in Pahrump, Nevada

 

“I wish that you were not in the United States, and you don’t deserve to be here, either.”

– July 24, 2016, in San Francisco

 

“You Muslims need to go back to where you came from.”

― July 2, 2016, in Fort Pierce, Florida

 

“ISIS motherfucker. Get out of my country.”

― July 2016 in Omaha, Nebraska

 

“Go back to your country.” 

― June 22, 2016, in Waterbury, Connecticut

 

“Get the hell out of the country you bitchass Muslims!”

― June 22, 2016, in Germantown, Maryland

 

“American’s don’t want you here and when President Trump gets into office, your (sic) going home!!! Back to the (expletive) dry sand and the desert.”

― June 17, 2016, in Plainfield, Indiana

 

“Muslim trash go home!” 

― June 16, 2016, in Boston

 

“You are Muslim and not welcome … Go away killers … America hates Terrorist (sic) like you!”

― June 15, 2016, in Tucson, Arizona

 

“You white bitch. You don’t belong here. Go back to your people.” 

― June 14, 2016, in New York

 

“Go back home and take [your] bombs with you.”

― June 13, 2016, in Queens, New York

 

“Take your rag ass back to your country. I’m gonna fucking kill you.”

― June 9, 2016, in Richardson, Texas

 

“Go back to your country, wetback.” 

― June 2, 2016, in San Jose, California

 

“Leave now before it is too late … I tell every sand nigger that I see to leave … American’s don’t want you here and when President Trump gets into office, your going home!!!”

― June 2016 in Plainfield, Indiana

 

“Go back to your country or we will blow your ass up.” 

― May 25, 2016, in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan

 

“I don’t want [those two Muslim women] near my country.”

― May 23, 2016, in Orange County, California

 

“Fucking Mexican. Go back to Mexico.” 

― May 15, 2016, in Tulsa, Oklahoma

 

“Go the fuck back to where you came from.”

― April 30, 2016, in Marshfield, Wisconsin

 

“Go back to Africa.”

― April 21, 2016, in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania

 

“Go back to Mexico.” 

― April 7, 2016, in Elkhorn, Wisconsin

 

“Go back to Mexico.” 

― March 21, 2016, in Oakhurst, California

 

“If you call yourself an African-American, go back to Africa. If you’re an African first, go back to Africa.”

― March 12, 2016, in Cleveland

 

“Go to Auschwitz. Go to fucking Auschwitz.”

― March 12, 2016, in Cleveland

 

“You want to live in this country, you better leave … brown trash … Trump! Trump! Trump! … Trump will take our country from you guys!”

― March 12, 2016, in Wichita, Kansas

  

“Go back to China. Go back to China. Go back to China.” 

― March 2016 in Lexington, Kentucky

 

“Go back where you came from.” 

― Feb. 9, 2016, in College Station, Texas

 

“Stay in your desserts [sic] and follow your religion in your own countries. … Go back to your own country; America needs to get rid of people like you.”

― Early 2016 in Elmwood Park, New Jersey

 

“Go back to your country.” 

― Jan. 28, 2016, in Edina, Minnesota

 

“Terrorist, go back to where you came from!”

― January 2016 in Tucson, Arizona

 

“Go back to your country. Fuck you.” 

― Dec. 20, 2015, in Brooklyn, New York

 

“Mother fucking tacos! Go back to Mexico! Go back to Mexico! Nobody wants you!”

― Dec. 16, 2015, in Phoenix

 

“Go back to your country.” 

― Dec. 11, 2015, in Lancaster, New York

 

“GO BACK TO MEXICO NOW.” 

― Dec. 8, 2015, in Pittsburgh

   

 “Go home.” 

― Dec. 1, 2015, in Bismarck, North Dakota

 

“Go back to your country.” 

― December 2015 in Clifton, New Jersey

  

“Go back home, you terrorist.” 

― Nov. 17, 2016, in New York

 

“Get out of my country. Go back to where you came from.” 

― Nov. 14, 2015, in Cedar Rapids, Iowa

 

“Yeah, go back where you came from.” 

― Nov. 10, 2015, in Milwaukee

 

“Go back to your country.” 

― November 2015 in Queens, New York

 

“FUCK THE KURAN. FUCK MUSLIMS … TRUMP FOR PRESIDENT … Get out of my country, yes my MUTHA FUCKIN COUNTRY”

― November 2015 in Hudson County, New Jersey 

 

“Go back to Mexico.” 

― Oct. 10, 2015, in Spokane Valley, Washington

 

“Learn English or go back to Mexico.” 

― Oct. 7, 2015, in Waterloo, Iowa

 

“Terrorist, go back to your country.” 

― October 2015 in Columbus, Ohio

 

“Go back to Mexico.” 

― Sept. 14, 2015, in Dallas

 

“Go back to your country.” 

― Sept. 10, 2015, in Sterling Heights, Michigan

 

“Terrorist!” and “Bin Laden!” and “Go back to your country.” 

― Sept. 8, 2015, in Darien, Illinois

 

“You Muslim scum, go back to your country.” 

― September 2015 in Austin, Texas

 

“Go back to Mexico.” 

― Aug. 27, 2015, in Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania

 

“Get out of my country.” 

― Aug. 25, 2015, in Dubuque, Iowa

 

“You guys need to get out of this country” and “go back to where you belong. … Go back to your country. … We don’t like you, especially your kind.”

― July 26, 2015, in Lewiston, Maine

 

“Go back where you came from.” 

― July 4, 2015, in Houston, Texas

  

This story was reported using data from ProPublica’s Documenting Hate Project. This project is collecting reports to create a national database of hate crimes and bias incidents for use by journalists and civil-rights organizations. If you’ve been a victim or a witness, tell us your story.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Source: HuffPost Black Voices

Girl Scouts Portray Iconic Women To Celebrate Women's History Month

It’s Women’s History Month, and the Girl Scouts of the USA are celebrating trailblazing women with a photo shoot and video posted on the Girl Scouts blog Thursday.

Photography studio Toddlewood styled the girls, who were chosen by application in the New York area. They dressed up as Katherine Johnson, Dorothy Vaughan and Mary Jackson, the NASA pioneers who were the focus of the film “Hidden Figures,” as well as Amelia Earhart, Mae Jemison, Hillary Clinton, Condoleezza Rice, Celia Cruz, Madam CJ Walker, Lucille Ball, Whoopi Goldberg and Girl Scouts’ founder, Juliette Gordon Low.

Rather than just talking to girls about women’s history, the organization wanted to give them a chance to walk in the shoes of the 11 iconic women who broke barriers in their fields, according to Andrea Bastiani Archibald, Chief Girl and Parent Expert at Girl Scouts of the USA.

According to Bastiani Archibald, the girls not only had a great time playing and laughing at the shoot, but they were truly inspired by the boundary-shattering women they were portraying. 

“It wasn’t just a dress up day: each of them learned the stories behind these iconic women, and honored their achievements. They truly became that woman for a while – they walked out of that shoot a little more inspired, confident, and assured of their own strength,” she told The Huffington Post. 

Bastiani Archibald says that this is the message that the Girl Scouts wish to broadcast to the world with their photo shoot. 

“We want every girl to know she can be a leader, shatter ceilings, and make a difference in the world. Girl Scouts are making history every single day, and they become the history-makers of tomorrow as well,” she said. 

Judging by the photos, these girls are off to a great start.  

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Source: HuffPost Black Voices

How The Racist Backlash To Barack Obama Gave Us Donald Trump

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WASHINGTON ― Remember when pundits hailed the election of Barack Obama as the beginning of a “post-racial” America?

After the election of Donald Trump to the presidency, it seems like a distant memory. But in 2008, it was the prevailing wisdom among political commentators.

Cornell Belcher, a long-time Democratic pollster who worked on both of Obama’s presidential campaigns, started seeing through the mirage of racial harmony well before Trump’s election made it obvious. In Belcher’s book, A Black Man in the White House: Barack Obama and the Triggering of America’s Racial-Aversion Crisis, released weeks ahead of Trump’s election, he presents years of research showing that white resentment grew steadily under Obama.

He too had hoped Obama’s presidency would usher in a period of post-racial politics. But in his public opinion research in the ensuing eight years, he told HuffPost on Thursday, he saw a “rise in racial aversion … which accumulated in a sort of perfect storm for a candidate like Donald Trump.”

To measure “racial aversion,” Belcher surveyed people’s responses to “a range of questions … from affirmative action questions to government doing too much for people of color, to people of color not being as patriotic.”

The answers, collected over the course of eight years, showed a hardening of white attitudes toward people of color. Belcher attributes that trend not just to Obama, but to the rising coalition of communities of color that elected Obama.

Obama won reelection with just 39 percent of the white vote nationwide, not just by turning out more people of color, but also by taking advantage of the fact that the country simply had more voting-age people of color to turn out, Belcher noted. The changes that made that victory possible scared many of the white voters who went on to vote for Trump, according to the pollster.

Trump “is a George Wallace-like historical figure. The difference is that George Wallace could not win the Republican primary. He couldn’t win the nomination and become president,” Belcher said.

“But Donald Trump could, because now, with the rise of really, not Obama, but the Obama coalition, the wolf is now at the door,” he continued. “And what I mean by the ‘wolf is at the door’ is, I mean America is going through dramatic shifts, demographic shifts.”

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Now Belcher is warning against Democratic analysts who see a message of economic empowerment alone as the key to rebuilding the party.

“[The country is] only going to get browner, so we have to solve for this, or we lose the future,” he concluded. “And again, that’s not pointing fingers at so many working-class whites, who, you know what, their world has changed, and the changes that are happening in our country, in this country, are stark. And we shouldn’t be surprised that some people are uneasy about it. But we should have that conversation about that unease, and a prescription about that unease that doesn’t pit us against each other.”

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Source: HuffPost Black Voices

Kerry Washington Is Turning One Of Last Year’s Most Important Books Into A Movie

Kerry Washington will play a hand in bringing an impressive debut novel ― Brit Bennett’s The Mothers ― to the screen, The Hollywood Reporter reports.

The novel is the story of Nadia, a girl living in a black community in California, who begins dating the son of the small town’s preacher, Luke. At 17, she gets an abortion, choosing her promising collegiate future over raising a family with Luke, a decision that reverberates through their young adult lives. Luke begins a relationship with Nadia’s more chaste friend, Aubrey, but Nadia and Luke’s past creeps up on the couple.

A rich examination of religion, judgement, masculinity (Luke, an injured ex-athlete, copes with life post-sports), and the public conversations that so often surround the private decision to get an abortion, The Mothers lends itself well to adaptation. (Full disclosure: HuffPost praised the book as full of psychological insight when it was released last year.)

The film will be produced under Simpson Street, the Warner Bros. arm behind the Emmy-winning show “Confirmation.” Washington will co-produce it with Natalie Krinsky, who has worked on book adaptations in the past. Bennett will write the movie’s script.

The news comes at a time when the lack of diversity in both the film and book industries is being called into question. Washington and Bennett’s project is just one more step in the right direction.  

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Source: HuffPost Black Voices

Peaches Monroee Seeks Trademark For Viral Phrase 'On Fleek'

Peaches Monroee is back to take what’s hers.

The internet star, who’s real name is Kayla Newman, told Teen Vogue that she plans to trademark “on fleek.” Newman uploaded a video to the now defunct Vine on June 21, 2014 in which she sits in a car and says, “We in this b***h. Finna get crunk. Eyebrows on fleek. Da fuq.” 

Newman’s clip gained millions of views. “On fleek” quickly became a viral sensation and a cultural staple. Celebrities and companies a like profited off of incorporating the phrase into their music and marketing. But the 18-year-old didn’t see a dime.

Newman, who’s currently studying nursing, told Teen Vogue that she was pleased to see the cultural impact she had, but disappointed that she wasn’t given any credit. Which is why she recently launched a GoFundMe to raise $100,000 for her new cosmetic and hair line. As of Friday, she’s raised more than $13,000.

On her fundraising page, Newman wrote that this is her chance to follow her dreams and finally receive her dues.

“Just so everyone can know my plans, with this money I plan on starting a website, get this project on legal papers with a good team of lawyers, etc. and making sure my dreams come true as far as this ‘fleek’ thing,” she wrote. “I feel like this is my second chance and I will not mess this is up.”

The teen plans to create a multicultural hair and makeup line, which will include eyebrow pencils, eye shadows and foundation. She told Teen Vogue that she doesn’t have a name for the line yet, but she wants her line to send a positive message.

“I want to send a message that everyone can enjoy makeup and be ‘on fleek,’” she said. “I want people to use my products and feel good about themselves. I would consider that to be my impact on beauty.”

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Source: HuffPost Black Voices

The Creator Of Barbaric 'Ex-Gay Conversion Therapy' Practice Dies

Joseph Nicolosi, the pioneering force behind the torture practice known as “conversion therapy,” has died. 

Thomas Aquinas Psychological Clinic confirmed his death in a Facebook post on Thursday, citing complications from the flu as the cause of death. He was 70 yeas old.

Nicolosi founded the clinic and served as its director, where he claimed to assist “men and women ― mostly, persons who are still at a crossroads about their sexual identity ― to reduce their same-sex attractions and explore their heterosexual potential,” according to his website.

Conversion therapy can involve a number of different practices, including talk therapy, electroshock therapy, treating LGBTQ identity as an addiction issue like drugs or alcohol, in an effort to get gay men and women to align their sexual desires with heteronormative expectations. There are no mainstream psychiatric organizations that support conversion therapy as a reputable practice.

Conversion therapy can have life-long effects on its victims. In an interview last November, one survivor stated that “we were no longer people at the end of the program.”

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Source: HuffPost Black Voices

This Is What Happens When You Grow Up Being Told You Have ‘Pelo Malo’

Julissa Calderon remembers clearly how her family disparaged her curly hair as a little girl, and she’s not alone.

The Pero Like producer sat down four Latinx for a video about the impact of being told they have “pelo malo” (or bad hair) growing up and how they feel about their curls today. 

“I am all too familiar with that phrase, I grew up thinking that my hair was of pelo malo,” one woman says in the video. “I was like kind of ostracized and they would bully me for my hair because I was different.”

Another woman says her hair gave her “some deep-rooted anxiety” and was hurt by how much anxiety it gave her grandmother. The participants also discuss getting their hair chemically straightened, or relaxed, and how long it’s taken them to love their natural hair. 

“I remember the first time I got my hair relaxed, I felt beautiful. I felt like was happy, it really sucks,” Calderon says in the video, holding back tears. “Yea I felt happy, I felt pretty, I felt like I belonged.” 

Watch the full video above.  

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Source: HuffPost Black Voices