Emmett Till's Cousin Urged Jeff Sessions To Make Civil Rights Cases 'A Priority'

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Family members of Emmett Till met with Attorney General Jeff Sessions on Tuesday morning to discuss the bill former President Barack Obama signed in December that allows the Department of Justice and FBI to reopen unsolved civil rights crimes that happened before 1980.

The Emmett Till Unsolved Civil Rights Crimes Reauthorization Act of 2016, an expansion of a 2008 bill, is named after the 14-year-old who was kidnapped and brutally lynched by two white men who accused him of whistling at a white woman in 1955.

Activist Alvin Sykes, who first pushed for the bill in 2005, invited Till’s cousin Deborah Watts and other family members to join his meeting with Sessions. After the meeting, Watts told MSNBC that the purpose of the meeting was to stress the importance of prioritizing cases under this act.

“We want it to be a priority and we wanted to let [Sessions] know how important it is that this bill is,” Watts said. “The implementation of the bill needs to take place. There are other families out there that have no justice, they don’t know the truth about some of their loved ones that have been murdered. There’s been no adjudication and no answers.”

Watts said in order for the act to effect change, the DOJ should have open lines of communication and families of victims should have the ability to work with the department as long as the law permits. 

Sessions has been criticized for racist practices in the past. During a 1986 confirmation hearing for a federal judgeship, one of his former black employees testified that Sessions demeaningly called him “boy” more than once and wanted to drop the case against two Ku Klux Klan members who allegedly lynched a black teen.   

Watts said that despite some initial concerns she had about Sessions, she believes the meeting went “very well.”

“With this situation, I felt very good about it,” she said. “I know that there’s been concerns and of course I can’t say that I didn’t have some of those concerns myself. But we left with very clear commitment, if you will, regarding the ability to work with the Justice Department as we move forward.”

How the DOJ proceeds with this act could impact Till’s family’s case, too. After a book exposing Till’s accuser’s lie was published in February, Watts said that the new information is cause enough to reopen her cousin’s case.  

Watch Watts’ full interview in the video above.

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Not Even John Legend Is Safe From Chrissy Teigen's Trolling On Twitter

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Chrissy Teigen, supermodel and Twitter queen extraordinaire, rarely misses an opportunity to troll someone ― even if that someone happens to be hubby John Legend.

It all started Monday evening, when Legend gave props to his wife for clapping back at Fox News when they tagged her in a tweet about the United Airlines leggings controversy

Legend wholeheartedly approved:

Sweet, husbandly support, right? But the exchange escalated quickly from there, thanks to Teigen:

Not even a minute later, the model figured maybe she should have toned it down a little: 

Whoops.

The tweets didn’t end there, though. Watching Legend’s work as a particularly judgmental team advisor on NBC’s “The Voice” only gave more fuel to Teigen’s fire: 

The more Legend criticized contestants, the more Teigen’s inner troll came out: 

Then, in typical troll fashion, she called him a “dick” again: 

Then a third time! 

Then lastly ― just to end the night on a high note ― she gave the world this hilarious Twitter search: 

For what it’s worth, Legend pretty much agrees with his wife:

 These two. <3

A post shared by chrissy teigen (@chrissyteigen) on Jan 14, 2017 at 8:31pm PST

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Uber Needs To Do Better When It Comes To Diversity

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After years of keeping its diversity data hidden away, Uber released its first diversity report Tuesday, under the direction of its new Chief Human Resources Officer Liane Hornsey.

The report revealed that Uber employees are mostly white and mostly male, especially at the more senior levels of the company. A full 78 percent of Uber’s workers at the director level or above are men, and 76.7 percent of the company leadership is white.

Tuesday’s disclosure is part of a concerted PR effort to right the ship at the company after a series of scandals. Uber has faced allegations of rampant sexual harassment from former employees; a high-profile lawsuit that contends Uber stole trade secrets from a Google-founded competitor; numerous high-profile departures; and a video showing CEO Travis Kalanick telling off a driver.

“​This report is a first step in showing that diversity and inclusion is a priority at Uber,” Kalanick said in a statement. “I know that we have been too slow in publishing our numbers — and that the best way to demonstrate our commitment to change is through transparency.”

Still, as dismal as Uber’s numbers are, Business Insider notes they’re slightly better than several other top companies in Silicon Valley.

Overall, 63.9 percent of Uber’s workers are male, and 36.1 percent are female. That’s not great, but it’s still slightly ahead of Facebook (33 percent women), Apple (32 percent), Google (31 percent) and Microsoft (25.8 percent).

In tech positions, however ― where Silicon Valley struggles as a whole ― women make up just 15.4 percent of Uber’s workforce.

Compared to the above companies, Uber also has a (slightly) more racially diverse employee base, with 49.8 percent of employees identifying as white, 30.9 percent identifying as Asian, 8.8 percent black, 5.6 percent Hispanic, 4.3 percent identifying as “two or more races,” and 0.6 percent identifying as “other.”

Again, not great, but still ahead of the companies listed above and Silicon Valley overall.

For comparison’s sake, as of June 2016, Apple’s U.S. workforce was 56 percent white (a 2 percent increase from 2015), 19 percent Asian, 12 percent Hispanic, and 9 percent black (up 1 percent).

In a release accompanying Tuesday’s report, Uber also noted it’s making an effort to hire more women and people of color. 

That includes ramping up recruitment efforts at historically black colleges and universities and Hispanic-serving institutions, and pledging to spend $3 million over the next three years to help boost the ranks of women and minorities in tech overall. 

Former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder and Uber board member Arianna Huffington are also conducting an independent investigation into the various sexual harassment claims at the company. (Huffington, previously the editor-in-chief of The Huffington Post, stepped down from her role last year.) And last week, Uber made three female executives at the company available for a conversation with reporters.

But there’s clearly much more work to be done.

“Every strength, in excess, is a weakness,” Hornsey told The New York Times. “What has driven Uber to immense success — its aggression, the hard-charging attitude — has toppled over. And it needs to be shaved back.”

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'The Daily Show' Is Creating A Real-Life Library Dedicated To Trump's Tweets

Donald J. Trump might say he loves to read, but what we know for sure is that the president loves to tweet. So, “The Daily Show” announced Tuesday that it has decided to open The Donald J. Trump Presidential Twitter Library to commemorate the many great tweets of our current commander in chief. 

Certainly, we should properly recognize great moments in American presidential history like this one:

The show said in a release that this is going to be an “actual library” located in New York City. It will be open to the public for free for a brief period starting in June. 

“It will be so tremendous that you’ll get tired of the tremendousness, so it will then close only a few days later,” the show said in the press release. “Sad!”

What, exactly, does any of this really mean? We can’t say for sure, but here is the most specific the release got: 

The exhibit will feature a fully interactive and hands-on experience for hands of all sizes, giving patrons the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to memorialize and celebrate the many “unpresidented” moments of President Trump’s Twitter history. More details to be announced later.

“The Daily Show” is currently in the midst of trying to figure out the greatest Trump tweet of all time in the bracketed styling of March Madness, so we’re just going to assume it’s related to that. 

Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin, Tom Hanks, Tracy Morgan, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Michael Moore, Padma Lakshmi and a whole host of other stars are teaming up for Stand for Rights: A Benefit for the ACLU. Donate now and join us at 7 p.m. ET on Friday, March 31, on Facebook Live. #standforrights2017 

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Video Breaks Down Why Machismo Isn't Synonymous With Latino Men

Kat Lazo wants people to stop thinking machismo goes hand in hand with being a Latino man. 

The video producer took on Latino male stereotypes in the latest installment of We are mitú’s series The Kat Call. In the three minute piece, Lazo explained what’s wrong with portraying Latino men as “innately machista.”

Lazo begins by showing how the media often depicts Latino men as womanizers or criminals. These images, she explains, have real-life consequences. 

“The media has always played a big role in influencing public opinion,” she said. “And these over the top sexual and aggressive messages of Latino men influence how teachers view Latinos boys, how the police interact with Latino men or how employers view Latino applicants.” 

The producer also breaks down how chauvinism and machismo have less to do with being Latino and more to do with the fact “we live in a male dominated society.”

Watch Lazo’s video above.

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How A Teen Girl's School Rape Case Became A Racist Witch Hunt

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14-year-old Maryland girl reported this month she was raped in a high school bathroom by two older boys. The accused assailants, also students at Rockville High School, reportedly solicited the young woman for sex in the hallway, and forced her into the restroom when she refused, according to CNN.

It’s a terrible story.

But in the weeks since, discussion has mostly focused on the immigration status of the accused assailants. The alleged attackers, aged 17 and 18, are undocumented immigrants.

Community members, political leaders, right-wing media outlets and President Donald Trump’s White House point to the crime as an example of why the U.S. needs to crack down on illegal immigration.

In the past several days, school leaders have been inundated with “hate-filled, racist and xenophobic” calls, and threats “saying they’re going to shoot up the illegals in our school,” said Montgomery County schools spokesman Derek Turner.

The reaction misses the point, say leaders in the fight against sexual assault at schools.

Sexual assault in K-12 schools is “all too common,” committed by all types of students ― regardless of immigration status, said Alexandra Brodsky, a fellow at the National Women’s Law Center. As of September 2016, the Department of Education Office of Civil Rights was conducting 99 investigations into school districts over occurrences of sexual violence and assault.

“We have heard about countless stories about white, native-born men and boys [committing sexual assault] and never hear politicians calling for a ban on boys in schools and a ban on football players entering the country,” said Brodsky.

Instances of sex crimes in schools should spur conversations around consent, healthy relationships, and support for survivors, Brodsky said.

But in the case of Rockville High School, the rape has been used to promote “draconian immigration enforcement,” she said.

We have heard about countless stories about white native-born men and boys [committing sexual assault] and never hear politicians calling for a ban on boys.

White House press secretary Sean Spicer last week made himself an example what Brodsky fears. He sounded off on the assault, calling it “horrendous, and horrible, and disgusting,” and added, “I think part of the reason the president has made illegal immigration and crackdown such a big deal is because of tragedies like this.”

Rockville students Henry Sanchez-Milian, 18, and Jose Montano, 17, have been charged as adults with first-degree rape, according to CNNSanchez-Milian reportedly fled Guatemala to escape gang violence. His father was arrested last week after a review of his immigration status. Montano is from El Salvador.

Each of the teens had been detained crossing the U.S.-Mexico border in 2016, the Baltimore Sun reported. Because they were unaccompanied minors, they were released to relatives in the U.S. under rules designed to avoid the long-term detention of children.

Defense lawyers have characterized the episode in school as a consensual sexual encounter.

Some parents and community members are calling for increased monitoring of undocumented students in the school system. They have packed town-hall meetings, demanding answers about how such a crime was allowed to occur inside a school building. 

“This little girl’s rape is the fruition of liberal policy in this county,” Sam Fenati, a Montgomery County resident, told WTOP last week after a community meeting with school officials. 

In response, school leaders have highlighted security protocols and policies dealing with new students. The district does not collect information about students’ immigration status, and schools cannot legally require that students prove their citizenship

However, by focusing on the alleged perpetrators’ immigration status, community members  and government leaders are obscuring more urgent questions about how to prevent sexual assault, said Esther Warkov who founded the nonprofit Stop Sexual Assault in School after her own daughter was sexually assaulted at school. She sees the Rockville reaction as a “diversionary tactic” that allows political leaders to skip the hard work of looking at sexual violence as a “systemic problem.”

“Our government should be focusing on widespread sexual harassment, sexual assault and violation of students’ civil rights,” said Warkov. “It’s easy to look like you’re doing your job when you focus on two perpetrators.” 

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All Lives Matter Didn't Show Up For A Meeting About Missing Black And Brown Teens

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WASHINGTON ― There was barely any standing room left at a recent town hall meeting on the unacceptable number of missing black and Latinx teenagers in the nation’s capital.

The March 22 gathering was tense. Local D.C. police attempted to answer questions from the predominantly black residents of Ward 8. Residents shared a range of stories about family members who had run away, who had been abducted and returned home safely, and who had never come home at all. The police chief was there.

But photos of the event, circulated later on social media, revealed a disturbing truth: Few, if any, white people showed up for the meeting.  

The lack of white faces at an event about missing girls of color provokes a familiar sense of outrage. White people don’t turn out for protests condemning police violence, calling for a living wage or pushing for immigrant rights at the same rates as black and Latinx folks.

White feminists, in particular, have been criticized for their tendency not to show up for issues pertaining to women of color. Signs from the Women’s March on Washington, a large-scale movement to protest the policy stances of President Donald Trump, targeted these women, asking them if they would be attending the next Black Lives Matter protest and reminding us all who helped put Trump in office.

It’s not as though the issue doesn’t affect everyone. Children of all races go missing. But black and Latinx kids are less likely to return home, more likely to be written off as runaways, and often don’t get as much media attention when foul play is suspected.

The minimal white attendance at the town hall highlights the hypocrisy of the All Lives Matter crowd. That phrase, constructed to both mirror and contradict Black Lives Matter, supposedly advocates for the lives of all people by cautioning against focusing on one demographic. The same criticism applies to Blue Lives Matter folks, who attack the Black Lives Matter movement any time a person of color commits an act of anti-police violence. When white people kill police, they usually have nothing to say.

In reality, All Lives Matter and Blue Lives Matter are racist attempts to distract from the black-led push against police violence. If the people crying those slogans cared about each life, as they proclaim, they would be fighting to save black and Latinx kids, too.

The missing white people at last week’s meeting also highlighted the terrible power of residential segregation. Washington remains one of the country’s most segregated cities. The town hall was held at a school convenient for many worried black residents and completely off the radar for most white residents ― because everybody knew who wasn’t coming anyway.

They probably won’t show up until white children go missing en masse.

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PSA Autocorrects A Text Exchange To Make A Point About Rape Culture

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A new PSA is showing how language can subtly reinforce rape culture. 

The 30-second video is simple but powerful, focusing on a text message conversation between two guy friends. As the conversation goes on, it becomes increasingly clear that a non-consensual sexual interaction between one of the men and a woman may have occurred the night prior. The PSA takes the casual language used between two bros and makes its subtext the actual text. 

When one guy asks his friend if he remembers that “drunk chick” he was “talking to” at a recent party, the chat autocorrects “talking to” to “targeting.” When the friends asks if he “got some,” the guy responds, “Well… I had to encourage her a bit.” “Encourage” quickly autocorrects to “force.”

The spot was created by marketing company Mekanism for sexual assault awareness and prevention organization It’s On Us, which was spearheaded in 2014 by former President Barack Obama and former Vice President Joe Biden.

It’s On Us Director Rebecca Kaplan explained to The Huffington Post why it’s so important to call out these subtleties of language. 

“At It’s On Us, we believe it’s important to highlight the subtle and common language that perpetuates rape culture because it’s so pervasive in our society and often goes unnoticed,” Kaplan said. “When we don’t check ourselves and our friends who are using that type of language, we make it acceptable. This is dangerous because language can make rape culture acceptable, and even perpetuate it.”

Towards the end of the video a voiceover sums up the PSA: “Don’t ignore the subtexts.” 

As Kaplan added: “What we say matters and this video was created to demonstrate that it’s on all of us to choose our words wisely.”

Head over to It’s On Us to read more about the organization’s work. 

Need help? Visit RAINN’s National Sexual Assault Online Hotline or the National Sexual Violence Resource Center’s website.

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AP Adds Singular 'They' To Stylebook

The Associated Press made an inclusive acknowledgement of the spectrum of gender identity on Friday by announcing that the 2017 AP  Stylebook will contain the singular “they” pronoun.

The AP Stylebook provides guidelines for journalists for everything from punctuation to, in this instance, how to refer to marginalized communities. 

According to the AP, while the singular “they” will be included in the print edition of the 2017 stylebook later this year, the change has already gone into effect for online subscribers.

A portion of the entry reads:

In stories about people who identify as neither male nor female or ask not to be referred to as he/she/him/her: Use the person’s name in place of a pronoun, or otherwise reword the sentence, whenever possible. If they/them/their use is essential, explain in the text that the person prefers a gender-neutral pronoun. Be sure that the phrasing does not imply more than one person…

“They” is oftentimes used as a singular pronoun by individuals who don’t feel comfortable identifying with he/his or she/hers pronouns.

The AP also noted that they now consider LGBTQ an acceptable acronym, following suit with GLAAD’s standards change in 2016 to add the “Q” to LGBT.

H/T NNN

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Sexy Women Ask For Healthcare That Keeps Them Sexy … And Alive

Do you like sexy women? Sure, we all do. Well, you know what the sexiest thing of all is? Receiving the necessary healthcare coverage necessary for being a living woman!

In this Funny or Die video, Blac Chyna, Rebecca Romijn and Nina Dobrev have a favor to ask. They want to stay sexy, but to do so, they first need women’s healthcare to stay alive.

Tina Fey, Alec Baldwin, Tom Hanks, Tracy Morgan, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Michael Moore, Padma Lakshmi and a whole host of other stars are teaming up for Stand for Rights: A Benefit for the ACLU. Donate now and join us at 7 p.m. Eastern on Friday, March 31 on Facebook Live. #standforrights2017 

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