Facebook Bans Former President Donald Trump Until At Least January 2023

Facebook Bans Former President Donald Trump Until At Least January 2023


Reuters – Facebook Inc on Friday suspended former U.S. President Donald Trump until at least January 2023 and announced changes to how it will treat world leaders who break the company’s rules on postings on its site.

The social media giant suspended Trump’s account the day after the Jan. 6 Capitol Hill riot, determining he had incited violence. That suspension will last at least two years from the date of the initial block and would only be lifted if the risk to public safety has receded, Facebook said.

Trump criticized the decision as a form of censorship and an insult to his voters.

This new timeline denies Republican Trump a major social media megaphone ahead of the November 2022 national midterm elections, when his party will be competing for Congressional seats. However, it means he may be able to return to Facebook well before the next presidential election in late 2024.

Trump has been permanently banned by Twitter and remains suspended by Alphabet’s YouTube after the riot. The former president, who this week shut down his recently-launched blog, has teased plans to launch his own platform but his team has given little detail.

“Given the gravity of the circumstances that led to Mr. Trump’s suspension, we believe his actions constituted a severe violation of our rules which merit the highest penalty available under the new enforcement protocols,” Facebook’s head of global affairs Nick Clegg said in the post.

Facebook’s oversight board, an independent group funded by the company who rule on a small slice of controversial content decisions, in May upheld the company’s unprecedented block on Trump. However, the board ruled it was wrong to make the ban indefinite and called for a “proportionate response.”

In a statement on Friday, Trump slammed the decision and repeated false claims of voter fraud: “Facebook’s ruling is an insult to the record-setting 75M people, plus many others, who voted for us in the 2020 Rigged Presidential Election. They shouldn’t be allowed to get away with this censoring and silencing, and ultimately, we will win. Our Country can’t take this abuse anymore!”

Trump added, “Next time I’m in the White House there will be no more dinners, at his request, with Mark Zuckerberg and his wife. It will be all business!”

Facebook said it would work with experts to decide when the public safety risk had subsided for Trump to be restored to its platforms. It said it would evaluate factors including instances of violence, restrictions on peaceful assembly and other markers of civil unrest.

It also said there would be a set of escalating sanctions that would be triggered if Trump broke further rules that could lead to his permanent removal.

White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki, speaking to reporters, said of Facebook’s decision on Trump that it felt “pretty unlikely that the zebra is going to change his stripes over the next two years, we’ll see.”

POLICY CHANGES

Social media companies have grappled in recent years with how to handle world leaders and politicians who violate their guidelines. Facebook and Twitter have long held that world leaders, politicians and elected officials should be given greater latitude on their platforms than ordinary users.

In a major reversal that also came as part of Facebook’s Friday responses to its oversight board, Facebook said it was “removing the presumption we announced in 2019 that speech from politicians is inherently of public interest.”

The company said it now would weigh violative content from politicians against the potential risk of harm in the same way it does for all users. It will also disclose when it does use its “newsworthiness” exemption. Some of these policy changes were originally reported by The Verge.

However, a Facebook spokesman confirmed politicians’ posts will remain exempt from third-party fact-checking.

Facebook has come under fire from those who think it should abandon its hands-off approach to political speech, but has also been criticized by those, including Republican lawmakers and some free-expression advocates, who saw the Trump ban as a disturbing act of censorship.

The decision and the policy changes could have major ramifications for how Facebook handles rule-breaking world leaders and officials on its services. It said public figures who violate its rules by inciting violence or civil unrest could be restricted for one-month violations, while more serious violations would restrict in longer penalties.

Social media companies have faced calls from some rights groups and activists to be more consistent in their approach to other leaders who have violated or pushed their rules. Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Leader Ali Khamenei, Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro and lawmakers in India’s ruling party have drawn scrutiny.

Facebook, which previously had not shared how many “strikes” users could receive before a suspension, offered more transparency into this opaque system. It said five or more strikes would lead to a 30-day restriction from posting.

The Trump case has been seen as a test for how the company responded to the ruling and recommendations of its recently-established oversight board.

The board also recommended Facebook review its role in the election fraud conspiracy that led to the Jan. 6 siege, which Facebook said it would partially implement through its partnership with academics studying the role it played in the 2020 U.S. elections. Facebook said it was implementing 15 of the 19 board recommendations.

(Reporting by Elizabeth Culliford and Akanksha Rana; Additional reporting by Steve Holland, Susan Heavey, Paresh Dave, and Trevor Hunnicut; Editing by Saumyadeb Chakrabarty, Arun Koyyur and Nick Zieminski)

Forge A Career In Cybersecurity And It With This Bundle On Sale

Forge A Career In Cybersecurity And It With This Bundle On Sale


The demand for cybersecurity skills is at an all-time high. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the employment of cybersecurity experts is projected to grow 31 percent from 2019 to 2029, a rate that is much faster than the average for all occupations.

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You can capitalize on this growing demand by forging a career in cybersecurity. Don’t know where to start? The Premium CompTIA & Cisco Networking Certification Prep Bundle can serve as a springboard to a successful cybersecurity and IT career.

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RELATED CONTENT: Black Security Company In Chicago Investing $500,000 To Expand Into Surging Cybersecurity Industry

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Tennis Superstar Naomi Osaka Responds To Fans After Announcing Withdrawal from French Open


Earlier this week, Naomi Osaka announced her withdrawal from the French Open.

On Sunday, May 30th, Osaka was fined $15,000 for declining media interviews for a post-match press conference. According to officials, Osaka failed to meet her contractual media obligations. Tennis officials expected her to attend a news conference after her first-round victory against Romania’s Maria Tig. But Osaka announced that she had to prioritize her mental health instead.

“I’ve often felt that people have no regard for athletes’ mental health,” Osaka wrote in a Twitter post on May 26th.”We’re often sat there and asked questions that we’ve been asked multiple times before or asked questions that bring doubt into our minds, and I’m just not going to subject myself to people that doubt me.”

Fans from all over the world supported her decision. But there were many who criticized her decision, citing her obligations as a pro athlete.

Her latest post on May 31st provided more transparency around her struggle with depression.

“The truth is that I have suffered long bouts of depression since the US Open in 2018. I have had a really hard time coping with that.”

She adds, “I’m gonna take some time away from the court right now. But when the time is right, I really want to work with the Tour to discuss ways we can make things better for the players, press, and fans.”

 

 

Osaka is the highest-paid female athlete in the world, Sportico reported. She’s also the second-ranked woman in Tennis. The 23-year-old pro athlete has been dominating the court, taking home four Grand Slam championships. But after maintaining a rigorous schedule and frequent media interviews, Osaka wants to devote more time to self-care.

Will Smith and other celebrities are standing by Osaka during this time. On June 3, Smith posted a message of support. “Hey Naomi, You are right. They are wrong! I am with you.”

 

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The Calm app, founded by a meditation and mindfulness company, announced a $15,000 pledge to a French mental health organization to support Osaka’s decision. The organization has also pledged to pay the fines of any other players who choose not to participate in Grand Slam press conferences this year.

Grand Slam authorities have promised to address the mental health concerns of its players, ESPN reported.

Osaka has been quiet on social media since making her big announcement. On Saturday, the Tennis superstar tuned back in to express her gratitude to her supporters.

“Just want to say thank you for all the love. Haven’t been on my phone much but I wanted to hop on here and tell you all that I really appreciate it.”

 

 

 

Remaining Tulsa Race Massacre Survivors Will Receive $100,000 Foundation Gift


Justice for Greenwood Foundation announced a monetary gift to the three known living survivors of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre.

Viola Fletcher, Hughes Van Elli, and Lesslie Benningfield Randle will each receive $100,000 payments. This marks a critical step towards justice.

The three centenarians recently testified before Congress, sharing the impact of the racial injustices in America. Even after 100 years, little has been done to acknowledge and compensate the community for the detrimental effects of the massacre. Justice for Greenwood Foundation, a Tulsa-based nonprofit, is stepping up to the plate. The organization is taking the lead in the fight for justice through its fundraising and activism work.

“We are immensely proud to play our role in rectifying these injustices,” said Damario Solomon Simmons, executive director of the Justice For Greenwood Foundation in a statement. Simmons is also the attorney representing the three remaining survivors in the lawsuit.

He adds, “Nothing can undo the immense pain inflicted upon the remaining survivors of the massacre, but alleviating their current financial burdens inflicted not only by the massacre itself but subsequent systemic racism is the least we could do for them as we continue to push for reparations.”

Honoring the Survivors and Legacy of the Tulsa Massacre

On March 31, 2021, people all over the world shared memories to mark the 100th anniversary of the Tulsa massacre.

A few days earlier, the Black Wall Street Legacy Festival 2021 was held in Tulsa. Viola Fletcher, the oldest living survivor of the Tulsa Massacre, attended the festival, Buzzfeed reported. Fletcher is now 107 years old. Last month, she testified before lawmakers seeking remedies.

“I will never forget the violence of the white mob when we left our home,” says Mother Fletcher. “I still see Black men being shot. I still see Black businesses being burned. Our country may forget this history, but I cannot. I will not, and other survivors do not. And our descendants do not.”

100 years ago, a white mob attacked the thriving Black district of Tulsa. Approximately 300 Black people were killed. White supremacists burned down Black businesses, homes, and churches. The destruction of Black Wall Street was not officially acknowledged and no one was held accountable. A massive pool of Black wealth was lost during the massacre.

“We cannot allow Tulsa’s leaders to champion their revisionist history and continue to exploit the very people affected by this national tragedy,” said Rashad Robinson, President of Color Of Change, in a statement. “Thanks to the leaders of the Justice for Greenwood Foundation, and so many others who continue to fight for reparations that are rightfully owed, this gift for the survivors of the Tulsa massacre shows that we have the power to demand justice for Black communities in Tulsa and all across the country.”

Color of Change shared a petition to support Justice for Greenwood.

Angela Washington Blasted West Point Consolidated School District Over Valedictorian and Salutatorian Debacle


Two Black teens, Ikeria Washington and Layla Temple, were initially named valedictorian and salutatorian of the 2021 graduating class at West Point High School South. On graduation day, the families of the two brilliant teens discovered that they had to share the spotlight with two white students– Dominic Borgioli and Emma Claire Berry.

Angela Washington, Ikeria’s mother, called a spade a spade. 

Via Facebook, Washington accused the superintendent of acquiescing to the white parent’s whining even though their children didn’t deserve the honor. She also added emphasized that Ikeria and Layla took harder classes than Borgioli and Berry.

According to WCBI News, the school’s handbook determined the valedictorian and salutatorian by GPA– which Borgioli and Berry did not have.

West Point Consolidated School administrators in West Point, Mississippi, basically invented a new two-point system to determine the additional recipients because Black excellence was too much for the racist school district.

“We apologize for any confusion and problems this has caused. The school district takes full responsibility for this misunderstanding,” the district said via statement.

The district has since deleted its Facebook page.

 

 

On Twitter, users sounded off about the district’s double standard. 

 

Although West Point Consolidated Schools tried to make an illogical situation logical, the community, social media users and Washington and Temple’s parents know that the district can’t put sh*t in a box and call it chocolate.

Blue Ivy Carter’s $500 Million Net Worth Makes Her One of the Richest Kids in the United States


Jay-Z and Beyoncé’s daughter, Blue Ivy Carter, is only 9-years-old and has already accumulated a massive net worth. The young singer has an estimated net worth of $500 million, according to the U.S. Sun.

“Generational wealth, that’s the key. My parents ain’t have s— so that shift started with me,” Jay-Z raps in his song “Legacy” which unravels the legacy for the Carter family.

 

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Blue Ivy Carter’s $500 Million Net Worth

Blue Ivy Carter was born a celebrity. As the first-born daughter of billionaire music moguls Jay-Z and Beyoncé, there were already big plans in the works. A couple of days after she was born, Time magazine declared Blue Ivy “the most famous baby in the world”.

Now, she’s turning her fame into success. In 2019, Blu Ivy received the Ashford & Simpson Songwriter’s Award. She co-wrote her mom’s award-winning hit “Brown Skin Girl”. The song celebrates different shades of brown.


Blu Ivy took home her first award at the 51st NAACP Image Awards in early 2020. At 8-years-old she was recognized in the Outstanding Duo, Group or Collaboration category. That same year, she won her first BET award for Brown Skin Girl. According to The Hollywood Reporter, Blue Ivy was the youngest winner in BET history.

In March 2021, Blue Ivy became the second-youngest Grammy award winner. She won her first Grammy award for the ‘Brown Skin Girl’ music video.

There’s no doubt that Blue Ivy is following in her parent’s footsteps when it comes to garnering national attention. But Jay-Z and Beyoncé have also provided her with opportunities to build a financially secure future. She’s racked up writing credits and features that continue to add more zeros to her net worth.

When it comes to accumulating wealth, net worth is not the same as net income. Net worth is the sum of all your assets minus your liabilities. Net income is the sum of money that you accumulate in any given year. Jay-Z and Beyoncé are both positioning Blue Ivy to create income-generating opportunities so that she can invest in assets. She’s getting hands-on experience of what it takes to build a billion-dollar empire. Jay-Z’s recent investments and financial moves continue to boost the Carter’s net worth.

Johniqua Charles Of ‘You About To Lose Yo’ Job’ Fame Celebrates One Year of Blessings Since Going Viral


Johniqua Charles’ life has changed for the better since she became a viral sensation after she told an officer who was arresting her, “You about to lose your job.” The camera footage of the incident with Charles served as a gamechanger for the mother of two. 

In the video, Charles, then homeless and addicted to cocaine in South Carolina, taunted a cop after she was handcuffed.

“Why are you detaining me? You about to lose yo’ job,” the 27-year-old woman said in the video as she sang and danced. “You about to lose yo’ job. You about to lose yo’ job. Get this dance! You about to lose yo’ job ‘cause you are detaining me for nothing.” 

One year later, Charles is celebrating sobriety, a new outlook on life and a new baby. On June 3, she took to her Instagram to show gratitude for the opportunities she had been given since the video’s debut.

“You about to lose yo job” changed my life. Only God knows where I would have been– if not dead if it wasn’t for that song going viral!!!!! Lord, I just wanna thank u,” she wrote. 

The chocolate beauty also revealed that June 5 is the anniversary of her becoming clean and sober. 

“Wow, it’s really been a year since ‘you about to lose your job’ went viral, and to me, it’s hitting different because, on the fifth, I will actually be celebrating a year clean of cocaine and clear off of those streets. Thank God. And it might not mean much to nobody else, but it means everything to me because for one– this is the longest that I’ve ever been clean and off of those streets for this long. And it’s just a blessing.”

 

 

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Charles also thanked her supporters and her haters.

“Everything that came for me because of ‘you about to lose your job’ and everything that is still to come I am just so thankful for. And I am thankful for everybody that wasn’t in my corner and everybody that supported me through all of this, and I am just grateful. And I just want to thank everybody. Have a blessed day.”

In June 2020, her sister, Andrea, raised roughly $56,000 to help her via GoFund Me.

Charles did hit a few snags after her come up. She discussed how she severed the relationship between her and her sister. Andrea served as her manager. When the two women fell out, her sister locked her out of her original Instagram account, causing Charles to miss out on much-needed financial opportunities. 

Now that the storm is over, Charles is relishing in sobriety and the recent birth of her daughter, Dexire Antoniya Williams.

We wish her the best.

This 18-Year-Old Just Graduated From Top Ranking HBCU Debt-Free; Now She’s Taking a Year Off To Pursue Her Dreams


Nadiya Blair just graduated from one of the world’s leading HBCUs debt-free, according to Defender Network.

At only 18-years-old, Blair has earned her Bachelor’s degree from Howard University. Despite the challenges associated with remote learning during the pandemic, she was able to achieve honors status, graduating Summa Cum Laude as a member of the Class of 2021.

“I definitely give credit to my creator. But also my parents are just exceptional people,” she said. “The amount of love my parents have poured into me was awesome. They weren’t helicopter parents. But they did encourage me and were extremely supportive, but they didn’t force me to do anything. They took the approach, ‘If you get a bad grade, that’s on you, and you can’t do the things you want in life with bad grades.’ That onus just made me want to do well.”

Graduating Debt-Free From Top HBCU

In 2015, Blair started high school. She took advantage of a dual credit program that expedited her educational success. According to her LinkedIn page, the young achiever was able to earn college credit from San Jacinto College while pursuing her high school diploma.

Four years later, Blair accomplished her goal of reaching two educational milestones. First, she walked across the stage as a high school graduate from the Grace Christian Academy. At the same time, she received her Associate of Arts degree with honors. At only 16-years-old, Blair had put herself on the fast track to academic success.

In 2019, Blair matriculated to Howard University as a junior. She received a tuition scholarship but that wasn’t enough to cover her college expenses. Blair turned to scholarships to fill in the funding gaps. She applied for multiple scholarships during her program — even those that were only $100.

“My number one tip is don’t snub your nose at small scholarships,” Blair told Defender Network. “I spent a lot of time going after $100, $300, $500 scholarships because they add up. Everybody wants to apply for the big 10, 50 grand. Those scholarships are fantastic, but it’s easier to get the smaller ones.”

Applying for scholarships can add up to the hours associated with a full-time job. But graduating debt-free may be worth the time. According to The Institute for College Access & Success, over 60% of the class of 2019 graduated college with student debt. Many students rely on loans, making the average loan debt for a bachelor’s degree $28,950.

Blair recommends that students devote time to filling out scholarship recommendations. Although Blair had a full list of activities on her plate, she prioritized scholarship applications to eliminate debt worries.

“Take a weekend and just dedicate time to applying for as many small scholarships as possible. You may not get them all. But if you keep persevering, it will work.”

Next Steps

Now that Blair has her degree in hand, she’s looking forward to taking a year off. First, she plans to recuperate and indulge in self-care. Before graduating from Howard, Blair had to produce a 40-page thesis. Now, she’s on a mission to regain her mental energy to prepare for the next leg of her journey. Spending time with family and learning how to play the guitar are fun priorities on the list. In addition, she hopes to enhance her Spanish fluency.

Blair also has her eyes set on receiving the Presidential Lifetime Service Award. She plans on accumulating over 2,000 hours of service within the next year. She’s partnered with many community organizations in the past, earning two president’s volunteer service awards.

After her one-year sabbatical, Blair’s goal is to pursue a master’s in public policy and focus on nonprofit management. There’s no doubt that Blair will be successful in whatever direction she decides to go in. The opportunities are already looking bright. She’s running a multi-million dollar franchise for her own vector marketing business that could impact the next steps of her journey.

Kennedy Hobbs Gunned Down Hours After Her High School Graduation

Kennedy Hobbs Gunned Down Hours After Her High School Graduation


A Jackson, Mississippi, family is grieving immediately after celebrating a teen’s milestone. According to the Associated Press, Kennedy Hobbs had just walked across the stage at her high school graduation on June 1. Little did anyone know, the young woman’s life would end in a tragic hail of gunfire at a local gas station hours later. 

On Tuesday night, Hobbs, 18, went to a local Texaco gas station. An unidentified gunman shot the graduate three times and fled the scene. She was pronounced dead at the scene. Ironically, the young woman’s family revealed that Hobbs’ boyfriend, 21-year-old Jaquan Williams, had been gunned down at a local convenience store two months before, following a dispute at the retailer.

Now, the Hobbs family is trying to make sense of the senseless murder. Her mother is a faculty member in the district, AP reported. 

Jackson Public School Superintendent Errick Greene said that Hobbs’ death cast a somber shadow on the other graduations in the district.

“To get the news this morning of the passing of one of our dear graduates, it’s tough,” Greene told AP. “It’s really tough. And it brings into view just how important this work is that we do.”

The district’s leader also explained that he stressed the importance of having a plan and spreading positivity because tomorrow wasn’t promised.      

“The reality is, we just don’t know when our last day will be,” he continued. “And so it’s just important for us to be more smart about how we set our lives up and the way that we sow positivity and peace in the world and the community around us.”

Jackson police have not indicated if Hobbs knew her shooter. An investigation is ongoing.

Tom Hanks Pens Op-Ed On Tulsa Massacre And White Fragility For New York Times


Unlike his son, Chet– Tom Hanks appears to stay in his lane and spit facts at the same.

On Friday, the Forrest Gump actor penned a poignant essay for The New York Times about the absence of Black history in schools, the importance of learning about the Tulsa Massacre, and he admitted that his own education only referenced historical Black figures like Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman and Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. 

The self-described “lay historian” didn’t mince words when expounding on his educational experience. Hanks revealed that it was only last year that he learned about the racist, domestic terrorist attack on Black residents in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in 1921.

“History was mostly written by white people about white people like me, while the history of Black people — including the horrors of Tulsa — was too often left out,”  he wrote. “Until relatively recently, the entertainment industry, which helps shape what is history and what is forgotten, did the same. That includes projects of mine.” 

“I knew about the attack on Fort Sumter, Custer’s last stand and Pearl Harbor but did not know of the Tulsa massacre until last year, thanks to an article in The New York Times,” Hanks continued.

The Big actor also expressed how white America’s fragility played a large part in addressing this nation’s painfully racist past and present. And that fragility seemed to trump facts.

“The truth about Tulsa, and the repeated violence by some white Americans against Black Americans, was systematically ignored, perhaps because it was regarded as too honest, too painful a lesson for our young white ears.”

“So, our predominantly white schools didn’t teach it, our mass appeal works of historical fiction didn’t enlighten us, and my chosen industry didn’t take on the subject in films and shows until recently,” Hanks added. “It seems white educators and school administrators (if they even knew of the Tulsa massacre, for some surely did not) omitted the volatile subject for the sake of the status quo, placing white feelings over Black experience — literally Black lives in this case.”

Although Hanks spit hot fire from his pen, apparently, the truth doesn’t hit right unless it comes from white folks. 

Some Twitter users were quick to mention that minor detail. 

 

While it’s delightful that Hanks kept it real in his essay about America’s problem with its brutal history, Black people in academia, at the barbershop, home and everywhere else have been spilling this tea since forever. 

All white people have to do is listen. 

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