Virginia governor apologizes for racist yearbook photo


Ralph Northam

Win McNamee/Getty Images

Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam on Friday apologized after admitting he is one of two people in a decades-old yearbook photo wearing blackface and Ku Klux Klan robes during his time in medical school.

“Earlier today, a website published a photograph of me from my 1984 medical school yearbook in a costume that is clearly racist and offensive,” Northam said in statement. “I am deeply sorry for the decision I made to appear as I did in this photo and for the hurt that decision caused then and now.”

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Northam added that it will “take time and serious effort to heal the damage this conduct has caused.”

The Virginia Republican Party has called on the governor to resign. Northam’s statement does not address which of the two men he is in photo on his half-page in the 1984 Eastern Virginia Medical School yearbook.

The news of the yearbook photos was initially reported by the conservative website Big League Politics, which was founded by former Breitbart reporter Patrick Howley and was subsequently confirmed by the Virginian-Pilot and other news outlets.

The Virginia Republican Party had called on the governor to resign if he was one of two men in the photo.

The progressive organization MoveOn.org and Guy Cecil, president of the liberal Priorities USA Super PAC, have both called on Northam to step down.

“If @RalphNortham is one of the two people pictured in the highly disturbing, horrific photo wearing either blackface or a KKK hood – or if he selected or approved of its use on his yearbook page — he should immediately resign,” MoveOn.org wrote on its Twitter account. “There are no excuses for such a racist display.”

“What Ralph Northam did was unforgivable. Given his statements on the right to life coupled with the most recent revelations, he has lost the moral authority to continue to govern and should resign immediately,” Cecil wrote.

Northam this week was criticized by Republican lawmakers for his comments about a proposed bill that would loosen restrictions on women seeking to have abortions in their third trimester. The governor’s office claimed his comments were taken out of context.

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Lyft, Uber offer Super Bowl discounts, free Uber Eats deliveries

The big game in Atlanta can mean discounts for you, wherever you are.
The big game in Atlanta can mean discounts for you, wherever you are.

Image: Rich Graessle/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

2016%252f10%252f18%252f6f%252f2016101865slbw.6b8ca.6b5d9.jpg%252f90x90By Sasha Lekach

It’s the Super Bowl this weekend and even if you’re not a fan, you can score some sweet deals. 

Uber and Lyft are offering discounts for riders in Atlanta, but everyone can take advantage of free delivery for Uber Eats orders. Starting Saturday, a promo code will be available in the Uber Eats app and is good for free food delivery through Monday. The fee is usually about $5.

SEE ALSO: Uber Rewards rolled out to more cities and we aren’t that impressed

For fans of the two teams, the Patriots and Rams, Uber is offering “Unhappy Hour” after the game. That’s right, instead of rewarding the winners, the losers get a consolation prize — free rides for Uber Rewards members for up to an hour after the game. You know, to mope in peace. 

Uber Rewards members in Boston or Los Angeles will see the promo code appear in the app on Sunday. As soon as the game ends, members can enter the promo code. It’s worth $50 toward an UberX, UberXL, and Pool ride. 

Seattle Seahawks quarterback, Russell Wilson, has experienced both the pain and glory of losing and winning a Super Bowl game, so he was part of an online ad campaign for the promo. 

In the host city, both Uber and Lyft are offering discounted rides to the Atlanta public transit system, Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority, or MARTA. For Uber riders two hours before and after the game any rides to stations will be half off with the code MARTA4GAME.

Lyft is offering half-off rides to MARTA stations this week leading up to the game. The code SUPERMARTA unlocks the discount, which can be used up to $10 for 10 rides.

Another Atlanta-based deal is a Delta Airlines mileage partnership with Lyft. Anyone riding Lyft in Atlanta Friday through Sunday can earn five airline miles for every dollar spent in the ride-hailing app.

To get around on game day, don’t forget about e-scooters (and e-bicycles). Both Jump (Uber’s e-bike and scooter company) and Lyft offer scooters in the Atlanta area. Bird and Lime are also in town, so there are plenty of e-scooting options. 

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Rapper gets trolled by production company after allegedly not paying for music video

By Chloe Bryan

Rapper Sheck Wes hired the production company Ridge Production to shoot a music video for his song “Gmail.” Now, Ridge alleges that Sheck Wes didn’t like the completed video and stiffed them on their work — so, naturally, they’re trolling him into oblivion.

On Thursday, Ridge uploaded a YouTube video called “Sheck Wes Didn’t Like Our Music Video, So We Made This.” It’s the “Gmail” video, but the song has been replaced with troll-y narration making fun of Sheck. (Listen for highlights like “I’m outside; kiss my gun” and “kick sand.”)

The video blew up on the subreddit r/videos, where people were 99 percent on Ridge’s side. 

“I work in music videos as well, sadly this happens way too often and people suffer from it,” one Reddit wrote. “I’ve joked about doing something like this before and I’m so happy to see it done,” one user wrote. “You guys are not only sticking up for yourselves, but for everyone in this industry who gets shit on by these artist and labels … Thank you.”

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Could Booker’s ‘love’ for all become a liability?


Sen. Cory Booker is pictured. | AP Photo

In today’s angry political climate, Booker’s warm remarks for his controversial New Jersey colleagues could provide plenty of fodder for his rivals to cut sharp-edged attack ads in the Democratic primary or general election. | AP Photo

Cory Booker is all about love. He incessantly brings up the term “love” in his speeches. He has called for countering the president’s darkness with “universal love.” And on Friday, as he officially launched his own campaign for the presidency, Booker said the nation needs leaders who believe “patriotism means love of country, and you can’t love your country if you don’t love your countrymen.”

Booker has also generously extended love to intensely polarizing figures — and some skeptics think that could come back to bite him.

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As Booker has risen through the political ranks, he has developed close relationships with people in New Jersey many on the left or right loathe: Former Republican Gov. Chris Christie and Democratic Sen. Bob Menendez.

In today’s angry political climate, Booker’s warm remarks for his controversial New Jersey colleagues could provide plenty of fodder for his rivals to cut sharp-edged attack ads in the Democratic primary or general election.

“When both were at their darkest moments, I remember being surprised and reflecting that [his] comments aren’t going to hold up well if he ever runs for president,” Jay Lassiter, a liberal grassroots activist in New Jersey who says he has been frustrated with Booker’s deference to both Menendez and Christie, said in an interview.

In 2015, after reports surfaced that Menendez would be indicted on federal corruption charges, Booker took on the role of his colleague‘s most vociferous defender.

“I am the Robin to his Batman. The Starsky to his Hutch. On bad days, the Laverne to his Shirley,” Booker, New Jersey’s junior senator, said of Menendez at that time.

He didn’t quit there, frequently offering praise for Menendez, showing up as a character witness at his trial and then, after Menendez beat the charges, becoming one of his most valuable campaign surrogates.

“I stand with Menendez. I stand with Menendez. I stand with Menendez,” Booker, who wasn’t alone in defending his colleague, said the day before Menendez won reelection last year. “And if you stand with me, if you believe in me, if you support me as your senator, then I need you to stand with Menendez to support Menendez to believe in Menendez.”

Booker was never quite so effusive in his praise of Christie, who was governor when Booker was the mayor of Newark. But what was more notable was his refusal to criticize Christie — even during the Republican‘s darkest hour, or as his approval rating sank to a record low of 14 percent.

After federal prosecutors said during the Bridgegate trial in 2016 that Christie knew about the closing of access lanes to the George Washington Bridge as they happened, Booker wouldn’t pile on.

“I don’t believe we should be trying somebody in the court of public opinion. We should be looking at the facts of this particular case,” Booker said at the time. “Right now, there are a lot of real issues in New Jersey we should deal with.”

Booker’s relentlessly positive attitude has caused Democrats to roll their eyes at him before.

In 2012, Booker — who is consistently one of Wall Street’s top campaign donation recipients — said he was “nauseated” by President Barack Obama’s attacks on private equity. He wound up partially walking back those remarks in a YouTube video.

Booker also has a long history of friendship with Silicon Valley titans who have fallen out of public favor, including Mark Zuckerberg, who in 2010 donated $100 million to Newark City Schools during a joint appearance with Booker and Christie on “The Oprah Winfrey Show.“

That’s to say nothing of his friendship with Trump family members Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump, who held a fundraiser for his 2013 campaign, back when they were Democrats. (Booker has said he wouldn’t take their money now.)

On Christie, Lassiter was perplexed.

“I realize that those two need to have a good relationship, but Cory’s inability or unwillingness to go after Christie, who was just a huge existential threat to the whole progressive agenda, reveals a lack of ruthlessness,” he said. “He lacks a killer instinct. He’s not mean enough. And we need that now.”

Booker’s people say there’s no reason to believe the senator’s ability to get along with everyone is going to hurt him. Rather, they believe, his willingness to work with others will help him in his bid for the White House.

Jeff Giertz, Booker’s spokesman, said it’s the sort of attitude “people are hungry for in this moment.” They want “somebody who will unite us,” he said.

“The entire notion of Cory running toward the toughest challenges and building unusual coalitions — to build a more just and fair country — is a feature of this campaign, not a bug,” Giertz said in an interview Friday. “I think we have a really interesting story to tell about Cory never sacrificing his values, but finding a way to build those bridges.”

To be sure, Booker wasn’t the only one who stuck by Menendez. Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, testified to Menendez‘s character. Christie, who had called on other politicians to resign after they were indicted, passed no judgment before or during Menendez’s trial. Voters were satisfied with the result, reelecting Menendez to another six-year term.

Bill Palatucci, widely considered to be Christie’s closest political confidant, said the relationship between Booker and the former governor is genuine and developed organically. The two met when Booker was a Newark city councilman and Christie was the U.S. attorney for New Jersey.

“As time went on, there was very little that Chris Christie and Cory Booker agreed on in terms of policy and government,“ Palatucci told POLITICO. “But I’ve always seen them to have a cordial relationship because they really knew each other before either one became the national figures that both have become.“

The two men would have lunch together, comparing notes on Newark with an “interest of helping the city of Newark at its core,” Palatucci said.

There’s no reason to believe that relationship could hurt Booker, Palatucci said.

“Nobody’s going to care that Kamala Harris dated Willie Brown, and no one in a presidential primary is going to care who Cory Booker had lunch with when he was a city councilman,” he said. “The issues today transcend those types of minor matters and focus on people‘s vision for the future and the ability to deliver on that vision.”

Patrick Murray, who runs the Monmouth University Polling Institute, also said he doubts Booker’s relationship with Christie could be used against him in any effective way in the primary, given how crowded the field is getting. And in the general election, there will be bigger issues for voters to worry about, he said.

“If he wins the nomination, Democrats are going to vote for him. They’re voting against Trump,” Murray said. “The number of voters who are willing to put their policy and personal differences aside to support the nominee is higher than I’ve ever seen it.”

And, regardless of whether it matters, neither Christie nor Menendez are going away. Both gave Booker some encouragement in the race on Friday.

“I can’t think of anyone better to represent and unite the American people,” Menendez tweeted on Friday. “Cory makes a great friend, and will make an even greater president. I can’t wait to support you on this journey—I’m all in!”

Christie, on a media tour to sell his new book, sang Booker’s praises Thursday night — just hours before the senator declared his candidacy.

“Cory Booker: talented, smart, articulate,” Christie said during a Washington Post Live event. “I like him. He’s a friend. We’ve been friends for 15 years. He’s a good person, and I like Cory Booker.”

By Friday, though, Christie seem to think Booker’s message of love was a liability. He said on a town hall edition of SiriusXM Patriot’s “The David Webb Show” that Booker might “flame out” with that messaging strategy.

“He’s going to be talking about love, and peace, and uniting the country again,” Christie said. Democrats want to be Trump so bad, the governor predicted, that “Cory’s campaign will end very quickly.”

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Ariana Grande’s unfortunate ‘BBQ grill’ tattoo is a meme now

2018%252f04%252f02%252f74%252fheadshot.edeb7.jpg%252f90x90By Morgan Sung

Sorry, Ariana. 

Although Ariana Grande probably meant well, her  botched tattoo tribute to her single “7 Rings” — which was mistranslated in Japanese to “BBQ grill” and then “fixed” to “BBQ grill finger” — is a meme now. 

People are writing their favorite phrases in different languages on their hands, and then horribly mistranslating it, like calling the constantly advertised Shen Yun performances. 

So I got a palm tattoo too! I wanted it to say puerta (Door) but it hurt like hell so I shortened it a bit. Still means the same thing I think! pic.twitter.com/Iq1j4rBehV

— brianna (@breeishly) January 31, 2019

This one apparently has something to do with eating ass, not peace and prosperity.

This one is especially colorful

Stan culture ate it up, and people began writing their favorite celebrities on their hands, from famous actors to legendary producers.

If you do want to get a tattoo in a language you don’t understand, maybe check with a native speaker first. Or don’t get it at all and get a nice sticker of it instead!

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NBA Rumors: Markelle Fultz Trade Being Explored by 76ers Ahead of Trade Deadline

PHILADELPHIA, PA - NOVEMBER 19: Markelle Fultz #20 of the Philadelphia 76ers shoots the ball against Isaiah Canaan #0 and Devin Booker #1 of the Phoenix Suns at the Wells Fargo Center on November 19, 2018 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images)

Mitchell Leff/Getty Images

The Philadelphia 76ers are gauging league interest in second-year guard Markelle Fultz as the Feb. 7 NBA trade deadline approaches, according to Jon Johnson of SportsRadio 94WIP and KYW Newsradio.

Philadelphia drafted Fultz first overall in 2017, but the former University of Washington star has played just 33 regular-season games in a 76ers uniform.

Shoulder injuries have prevented the promising guard from seeing the court regularly. The Sixers announced in December that Fultz has been diagnosed with thoracic outlet syndrome.

The 20-year-old has shown some promise in his limited time on the court. He notably dropped a triple-double in 25 minutes during the 76ers’ regular-season finale last year and also had 12 points, nine rebounds and five assists in 21 minutes against the Los Angeles Clippers this season.

But the 76ers may not have much room for him in their rotation. They added swingman Jimmy Butler to the team in November, and rookie guard Landry Shamet has been impressive off the bench thanks to his 41.0 percent shooting stroke from three-point range.

Shooting guard JJ Redick and point guard T.J. McConnell also have a firm hold on rotation spots, so there aren’t many minutes left for Fultz.

The 76ers are also on a roll with 11 wins in their past 15 games, highlighted by a statement victory at the Golden State Warriors on Thursday.

The 76ers’ reported desire to deal Fultz makes sense, although another team could be getting a bargain. Fultz was a highly touted collegiate prospect who scored 23.2 points per game on 47.6 percent shooting. He also hit 41.3 percent of his threes, dished 5.9 assists and grabbed 5.7 rebounds.

Fultz needs to solve the shooting woes that have plagued him in the NBA (41.4 percent from the field, 26.7 percent from three, 53.4 percent from the free-throw line). If he does that, recovers fully and gets a fresh start, Fultz can remind everyone why he was drafted first overall.

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El Salvador’s presidential hopefuls skirt talking about violence

San Salvador, El Salvador – Insecurity and violence are top concerns among Salvadoran voters as they head to the polls on Sunday to choose their next president, but days ahead of the election, candidates have hardly confronted the topic of gang violence head-on.

“It’s an issue that all the candidates have avoided,” Carlos Rodriguez, a deputy public defender with the office of El Salvador’s Human Rights Ombudsman, told Al Jazeera.

In past elections, violent street gangs have served as a compelling collective enemy. Tough-on-crime policies, though ineffective, have been popular. 

But analysts suggest failures of both left- and right-wing governments to make strides in public security have weakened promises to tackle gangs as a winning electoral strategy, even as the task remains an urgent priority.

The three leading candidates scarcely mention gangs explicitly in their platforms and, while they put forward security strategies based loosely on prevention, crime-fighting and social reintegration, the proposals lack details, critics say.

With security on the sidelines, candidates have focused more on corruption in light of scandals embroiling past presidents of the two main political parties, the National Republican Alliance (ARENA) and Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN).

El Salvador closed 2018 with a rate of 50 murders per 100,000 inhabitants, cutting the statistic in half compared with 2015 when homicides spiked to 103 per 100,000 – a level not seen since the country’s civil war.

The first four weeks of 2019 saw fewer murders than the same period last year, but a string of homicides in mid-January jolted many.

That surge, which included the killings of eight police officers, sparked speculation that gangs were flexing their muscles ahead of the elections to pressure for concessions or exact revenge on security forces. 

Failed strategies

The race’s frontrunner, former San Salvador mayor and businessman Nayib Bukele, has joined forces with the conservative Grand Alliance for National Unity (GANA) after being ejected from the left-wing FMLN.

Critics say Bukele has failed to grapple with the root causes of gang membership, such as social exclusion and poverty, by focusing on prevention through sports and cultural programming. I RE

For Veronica Reyna of the Passionist Social Service (SSPAS), the suggestion that Bukele, if elected, could tap GANA legislator Guillermo Gallegos as security chief is “very worrying”.

Despite the United Nations highlighting a pattern “amounting to extrajudicial executions and excessive use of force” among security forces, Gallegos has proposed granting amnesty to police officers who kill in self-defence.

Bukele’s rivals, supermarket mogul Carlos Calleja of the conservative National Republican Alliance (ARENA) and Hugo Martinez of the governing FMLN, refuse to dialogue with gangs.

Supporters of conservative presidential candidate Carlos Calleja cheer during an electoral event [Jose Cabezas/Reuters] 

With the exception of a secretly government-facilitated gang truce in 2012 under former FMLN President Mauricio Funes, both ARENA and FMLN have championed an “iron fist” security policy, known as mano dura, that has failed for 15 years to control violent crime.

Reyna believes anti-gang rhetoric may have lost currency in election campaigns after so many years of unsuccessful strategies. “Now, it’s better if they don’t even talk about it because the supposed solutions haven’t been achieved,” she told Al Jazeera.

Since entering office in 2014, President Salvador Sanchez Ceren’s left-wing FMLN government has deepened heavy-handed security, including ramping up militarisation and putting incarcerated gang leaders on lockdown to cut communication with their ranks.

Reyna believes effectively tackling the gang problem requires breaking systemic impunity and overly punitive measures that stigmatise marginalised communities, but she doesn’t trust any of the top candidates will “dismantle this logic”. 

The FMLN has made gains in health and education since ending 20 years of ARENA rule when the Funes government came to power in 2009.

But on the security front, under Sanchez Ceren, deadly clashes between police and gang members have spiked, the United Nations has condemned extrajudicial killings and rampant extortion continues to drive displacement.

“Every president has strengthened intervention of the armed forces in public security instead of strengthening the appropriate institutions,” Rodriguez of the Ombudsman Office said, slamming mano dura as an “absolutely” failed policy.

Covert dealings

Both ARENA and FMLN bought votes from gangs in the 2014 election for a combined price tag of $350,000. The pacts came to light in court testimony when government officials – later acquitted – faced trial for facilitating the 2012 gang truce, which temporarily slashed the homicide rate by half.

Meanwhile, frontrunner Bukele negotiated with gangs in central San Salvador to carry out projects when he was mayor of the capital city from 2015 to 2018, Salvadoran newspaper El Faro revealed.

“It’s clear that in the territories there are powers, and those powers determine who can go there, when they go, and what they go to do,” said David Ortiz, lawyer and public security expert with the Foundation for Studies on the Application of Law (FESPAD).

Speaking to Al Jazeera, Ortiz noted that an estimated 40,000 gang members in the country of 6.4 million can move significant votes. “This contact (with gangs) still exists, it has just changed.”

A top ARENA official recently admitted the party has to pay or otherwise negotiate with gangs to secure access to campaign in certain territories. If ARENA is doing so, it is likely other parties are too, Ortiz said.

Like the 2012 truce, the 2014 vote pacts and apparent ongoing negotiations to carry out campaign activities point to the political power gangs wield through territorial control, said Amparo Marroquin, professor of communication and culture at the Jose Simeon Cañas Central American University in San Salvador.

“My impression is that as gangs become a political actor, they stop being a scapegoat,” she told Al Jazeera of candidates’ campaign silence on gangs.

Living in fear

While dodging security debates, candidates have also avoided addressing migration. Nearly 3,000 Salvadorans have joined the Central American exodus since October, and nearly half – 46 percent – cited insecurity as a reason, according to the International Organization for Migration.

“People live in deplorable conditions that don’t guarantee safety,” Reyna said. “There is such a generalised fragility that at any time you can find yourself in a situation of (facing) threats against your life.”

That uncertainty partly prompted 35-year-old Javier Garcia to join a caravan of some 200 Salvadorans last month. Though unemployment was his tipping point, he also hopes to eventually move his wife and children out of the San Salvador neighbourhood where they live hemmed in by rival gangs.

“We’re in between the two (most powerful gangs), that’s why it’s complicated,” Garcia told Al Jazeera before departing the capital city.

Worried about risks his three small children might face as teenagers, he plans to save money working in the United States to relocate his family to Europe. “My fear is the gangs.”

El Salvador has a decades-long history of migration to the US, and remittances made up 18 percent of the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) in 2017.

“The commitment of our country shouldn’t be to reduce migration, but rather to help people migrate with more dignity,” said Marroquin, adding that such efforts should involve creating conditions that allow people to choose not to flee home.

“And both – those who go and those who stay – should be able to do so enjoying the privileges and rights they are entitled to.”

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Nets’ D’Angelo Russell Replaces Victor Oladipo in 2019 NBA All-Star Game

Kyle Newport@@KyleNewportTwitter LogoFeatured ColumnistFebruary 1, 2019
Brooklyn Nets guard D'Angelo Russell handles the ball during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the New York Knicks, Saturday, Dec. 8, 2018, at Madison Square Garden in New York. The Nets won 104-112. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

Mary Altaffer/Associated Press

Brooklyn Nets guard D’Angelo Russell has been named as the replacement for Indiana Pacers guard Victor Oladipo for the Eastern Conference reserves for the 2019 NBA All-Star Game, the league announced on Friday.

Oladipo is out for the season after suffering a ruptured quad tendon in his right knee on Jan. 23.

This article will be updated to provide more information on this story as it becomes available.

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Will UAE face sanctions over Venezuelan gold?

The economic crisis in Venezuela has forced millions of people to leave the country, as they can not afford basic goods such as food and medicine.

In an attempt to buy in imports and meet the demands, President Nicolas Maduro has been using the country’s gold reserves.

Reuters news agency said that he is planning to sell 29 tonnes of gold this month from the central bank vaults to the United Arab Emirates (UAE) in return for cash in euros.

The United States is warning anyone involved in dealing in the gold faces Treasury sanctions. So will Washington take action against the UAE? and what comes next? 

Presenter: Martine Dennis

Guests:

Bill Law – Middle East analyst who writes for the website, Gulf Matters

Tom Long – associate professor of politics and international studies, University of Warwick

Naeem Aslam – chief market analyst at the online brokerage firm, Think Markets

Source: Al Jazeera News

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