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Saturday, September 5, 2020

Ahmaud Arbery’s mother says 2:23 Foundation using son’s name without consent

Wanda Cooper-Jones publicly criticized people using Arbery’s name for non-profits and trademarks.

Ahmaud Arbery’s mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones, said she has not endorsed an organization called the 2:23 Foundation. The foundation started an, “I Run With Maud” Labor Day campaign.

Cooper-Jones said she feels disrespected because her late son’s name is being used without her approval.

READ MORE: Supporters organize 2.23-mile run in honor of Ahmaud Arbery

“This foundation did not have my blessings,” Cooper-Jones said, according to Newsweek .

However, the 2:23 Foundation founders told WSB-TV, an ABC-affiliated television station licensed to Atlanta, Georgia, that “[Cooper-Jones] said it was fine.”

In response to the founders, Cooper-Jones publicly criticized people using her son’s name for non-profits and trademarks, saying she felt people were exploiting her situation.

Wanda Cooper-Jones, mother of Ahmaud Arbery, listens as attorneys speak outside the Glynn County Courthouse on July 17, 2020 in Brunswick, Georgia. Gregory McMichael, Travis McMichael, and William ‘Roddie’ Bryan appeared before a judge for the murder of Ahmaud Arbery. (Photo by Sean Rayford/Getty Images)

“The ideas for the foundation likely started after national attention began to spread due to our advocacy efforts,” Cooper-Jones wrote, according to Newsweek. “Within seven days of the foundation’s launch, its organizers had already planned a large fundraiser.”

“The I RUN FOR MAUD committee (all five members who I do not know well),” she continued, “have known for months I did not want my child’s death to be exploited or used for monetary gain for anyone. I was disrespected and ignored.”

Newsweek reached out to the foundation’s head of PR and communications. They pointed the publication to a Facebook post made by the foundation.

READ MORE: Court docs say Ahmaud Arbery had previous connection with one of the men who shot him

“We have attempted countless times to reach out to [Cooper-Jones] and counsel to discuss this privately,” the post said.

“Our intention from the beginning was simple: Pursue justice for Ahmaud. Our team has not benefited financially from any of the work we have done to do just that. In fact, we have spent our own money to help pursue justice. And we have gotten the support from Maud’s family in the process.”

As theGrio previously reported, supporters of Ahmaud Arbery, who was ambushed and fatally shot in Georgia by two white men, organized a multi-mile run to raise awareness about his murder and honor him on what would’ve been his 26th birthday.

Many activists are still promoting the call for justice in Arbery’s case and the cases of the many other unarmed Black men and women have been killed.

Yesterday, tennis star Naomi Osaka wore an Ahmaud Arbery mask. Osaka also wore masks with the names of Breonna Taylor and Elijah McClain, CNN reported. 

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Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz prevented from entering mail facility

The entrance to the parking lot was blocked by a Postal Service police car and caution tape.

Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz was stopped by USPS police and told she could not go inside of two mail sorting facilities, according to MSNBC.

At 4 a.m., Wasserman Schultz was supposed to be on a tour of the Royal Palm Processing and Distribution Center in Opa-Locka, Florida, but the entrance to the parking lot was blocked by a Postal Service police car and caution tape.

She was blocked again at the Miami Processing and Distribution Center a few hours later. Wasserman Schultz was met in the lobby by two Postal Service police officers.

READ MORE: Postal chief DeJoy has long leveraged connections, dollars

Wasserman is responsible for the House Oversight Committee and was unable to do her job. She was informed by union members, who shared pictures with her, that mail was received on July 23, and was still undelivered.

Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL) speaks about her experiences during a trip to Israel and Auschwitz-Birkenau as part of a bipartisan delegation from the House of Representatives on January 28, 2020 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Samuel Corum/Getty Images)

The pictures have not been verified, NBC News reported.

As theGrio previously reported, Postmaster General Louis Dejoy, a Republican donor and ally of President Donald Trump, has been under fire for the sudden changes in the USPS.

These changes come as the nation relys on mail-in ballots for its upcoming election.

“If DeJoy thinks he can just throw a bed sheet [sic] over what’s going on behind these doors, he is sadly mistaken. It looked like the post master [sic] had something to hide,” Wasserman Schultz said in a statement.

READ MORE: Democrats investigate the head of USPS after sudden changes

“Without access to these public facilities, the public is blindfolded to the problems or fixes taking place there. DeJoy cannot delay the mail and delay oversight of these facilities.”

She also said DeJoy has already “obstructed the committee” by not providing documents and data as requested, NBC News reported.

Kim Fuller, a spokeswoman of the USPS, said the reason Wasserman Schultz was denied was because the facilities were not aware of her visit. Fuller advised her camp to set an appointment.

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Black leaders want to remove slavery references from Utah constitution

The bill passed the House, but now it needs to pass the Utah state senate in order to be on the ballot.

House Rep. Sandra Hollins of Salt Lake City sponsored a bill, Amendment C, that includes the removal of slavery references from Utah’s founding documents. The bill passed in the state legislature.

“This language in our constitution, it was written 32 years after the Emancipation Proclamation. It should never have been placed in our constitution,” Hollins told FOX 13. “It no longer reflects Utah values. It’s not who we are as a state.”

The bill, which is backed by a coalition of community groups, including the NAACP, the Utah Black Roundtable, Action Utah, the Alliance for a Better Utah, and the Greater Salt Lake Alumnae of Delta Sigma Teta, will need to be passed by voters in the community.

READ MORE: Utah protesters, accused of defacing government building, could get life in prison

On the 57th anniversary of the March on Washington, Aug. 18, hundreds were reported to have marched through Salt Lake City, according to The Salt Lake Tribune.

Local residents wearing Black Lives Matter shirts rallied for racial equality and police reform.

Utah State Capitol Building (via Google Maps Street View)

“Register to vote! You can do it on your phone. Go vote!” longtime community activist Darlene McDonald told the crowd, according to The Tribune. “The 13th Amendment did get rid of slavery but not in its entirety,” she said.

“Slavery should not be a part of the Utah constitution or any constitution in this country, especially in 2020,” she continued.

“I do anticipate some pushback, yes, because of the criminal justice system. And prison labor and corporations using prison labor for cheap labor. That’s the reason why we anticipate some pushback.”

READ MORE: Utah man yelling ‘All Lives Matter’ aims bow and arrow at protestors

The bill has to go through the state senate, which is controlled by Utah Republicans.

Luckily for Black activists, Sen. Jake Anderegg, a Republican, sponsored her bill in the state Senate, hoping it would encourage his colleagues to vote for the amendment on Election Day.

“Removing this outdated provision sends a strong, bipartisan statement about our values as citizens of Utah,” Anderegg said.

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Black Lives Matter forces South African sports to face racist past

Opportunities have been scarce for Black players across a wide range of sports, despite the end of Apartheid.

The Black Lives Matter movement has forced South African sports to take a hard look at its post-apartheid history and the dissension between former teammates in a county still trying to heal from its racist past.

BLM has shined a light on how people of color are treated around the world, and in South Africa the focal point is the sports world.

The debate has led to the acknowledgement that opportunities have been scarce for Black players across a wide range of sports, despite the end of Apartheid, a system of racial segregation that existed in South African from 1948 until the earl 1990s.

The inequities between white and Black players has been a heated discussion that jeopardizes amicable relationships between current teammates as well as former teammates from an older generation, according to Reuters.

READ MORE: Yankees’ Stanton, Hicks vow to keep kneeling during the national anthem as Trump Yankee Stadium visit looms

Showing support of BLM, South Africa’s World Cup-winning former rugby captain, Francois Pienaar took a knee before a cricket match in July, and was criticized by his former teammates who felt his position linked them to being in support of BLM as well.

According to a report in news24.com, one of Pienaar’s former teammates, Ollie Le Roux, retweeted a post that compared BLM to devil worshipping.

Francois Pienaar, who took a knee in support of Black people, and Fikile Mbalula during the Memorial service of Joost van der Westhuizen at Loftus Versfeld on February 10, 2017 in Pretoria, South Africa. (Photo by Johan Rynners/Gallo Images/Getty Images)

Public backlash against Pienaar’s decision to support BLM has included death threats. Pienaar, however, defended his position, stating that he was showing solidarity against “any form of racism and suppression.”

“I think a discussion must be held to fully understand the Black pain, but the other side of the coin is the farm murders, which has caused a lot of white pain,” Le Roux told Rapport, referring to the ongoing violent attacks against usually white-owned farms in South Africa.

READ MORE: Alabama’s Nick Saban leads players, coaches in BLM march

When eight South African members of the premiere rugby team, the Sale Sharks wore ‘Rugby Against Racism’ t-shirts, but refused to take a knee before a game in England, the country’s minister of sport, Nathi Mthethwa called for action against those players.

“Racism is no longer in the statues books but some are practicing it covertly and we are saying that we will hunt them down because we know the pain that is caused by this pain called racism,” Mthethwa said in a statement.

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Anita Hill pledges to vote for Joe Biden and work with him on gender issues

Biden presided over hearings in which Hill accused Clarence Thomas of sexual harassment.

Back when Joe Biden first announced his run for the presidency, Anita Hill said she could not support his candidacy. Today, despite their troubled history, she has had a change of heart.

28 years ago, Biden, then chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee presided over the confirmation hearings in which Hill accused Clarence Thomas, nominee to the Supreme Court, of sexual harassment during the time they worked together at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

Biden was criticized for doing little to stop the all-white, all-male members of the committee from attacking Hill during the hearings. Critics also claimed that Biden’s own questioning of Hill was unfair and set an accusing, skeptical tone.

READ MORE: Anita Hill says she could vote for Joe Biden if he becomes the nominee in 2020

But given today’s contentious political climate, Hill is not only going to vote for the democratic nominee, she has also vowed to work with him on gender issues if he becomes president.

“Not withstanding all of his limitations in the past, and the mistakes that he made in the past, not withstanding those — at this point, between Donald Trump and Joe Biden, I think Joe Biden is the person who should be elected in November,” Hill told CNN‘s Gloria Borger.

Hill stated that those 1991 hearing altered her life. “One of the impacts of 1991 was my desire not to really work with the government in any way. I always said, I think I can be more effective as an outsider as opposed to an insider. And now, I’m willing to evolve myself, to work for change inside,” Hill said.

Anita Hill speaks onstage as Audible presents: “In Love and Struggle” at Audible’s Minetta Lane Theater on February 29, 2020 in New York City. (Photo by Craig Barritt/Getty Images for Audible)

Defending the criticism he has received regarding Hill’s treatment at the during the hearings, Biden told CNN in an exclusive 90-minute interview in July, “I believed her story from the beginning. I wish I could have protected her more. I did get in shouting matches, as you remember, with some of the witnesses who were saying things that were off the wall.”

The two spoke briefly on the phone shortly before Biden launched his campaign in April 2019, and Biden said he apologized to Hill during the call.

Hill called the conversation “unsatisfying” and would not characterize Biden’s words as an apology. After the call, Biden told ABC Good Morning America that he acknowledged his role as chairman in Hill’s treatment.

READ MORE: Biden: ‘I take responsibility’ for treatment of Anita Hill during Thomas hearings

“As the committee chairman, I take responsibility that she did not get treated well,” he told ABC.

Apparently Hill was listening, and she now says that she believes that Biden has evolved.

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