Monday, April 27, 2026

A Zoom Wedding With a Salute to Sweden

Caitlin Ashley DiLena’s exposure to anything Swedish was once limited to trips to Ikea, the Swedish Chef muppet character, and the Swedish princess cake segment on “The Great British Baking Show.”

This was before she matched with Nicklas Alexander Ansman Giertz on Tinder in May 2018, and then met him a couple of weeks later at Lovelace, a gin bar in Manhattan’s Financial District, close to where he lived and she worked.

“We kept talking and talking,” said Mr. Ansman Giertz, 30, the technical lead in New York for Bontouch, a Stockholm-based digital software design agency that partners with various brands.

He had just gotten back from a two-week visit with his family in the Stockholm archipelago. (He is a paternal great-great-grandson of Lars Magnus Ericsson, the founder of Ericsson, the Swedish networking and telecommunications company). She had just spent a rainy weekend at a bachelorette party along the Jersey Shore.

“We were both fed up with dating,” said Ms. DiLena, 32, a senior marketing director at Condé Nast, the publishing company in New York.“Instantly there was just something different.”

As they walked along the East River they had their first kiss, and later while he waited with her for her bus, she went on about how thrilled she was that it stopped close to her apartment uptown.

“She seemed more excited about the bus than the date,” said Mr. Ansman Giertz, with a laugh.

They spent the Fourth of July together watching the Macy’s fireworks display along the East River, she showed him around Boston one weekend in August (she graduated from Boston University) and in November, with his business class voucher about to expire, they went to Tokyo.

“It felt pretty clear,’” said Mr. Ansman Giertz, who started moving into her apartment before the trip, “she was not someone ordinary.”

As they got serious, she learned Swedish on Duolingo and at N.Y.U.

In 2019 she celebrated Midsummer, the summer solstice holiday, with him, his family and friends in Sweden, where they danced, ate several kinds of pickled herring and potatoes, drank schnapps and belted out drinking songs.

He proposed on Dec. 1 2019, after he dragged a Christmas tree home through the snow, and nestled a maroon leather ring box on one of its branches. After he asked her to take a closer look at the tree, she found it, and he got down on one knee.

They had planned a wedding for this December at India House, an events space in the Financial District, but after travel restrictions for non-U.S. citizens were imposed after the coronavirus outbreak, they talked about getting married sooner for a sense of security.

As soon as Project Cupid got underway May 7 in New York, they were among the first couples to get an appointment online for a virtual marriage license from the Manhattan Marriage Bureau for the following Monday.

“We’re really excited we could do this,” said Ms. DiLena, “ We needed that extra security to travel to Sweden and back. Before it was never a factor of the relationship.”

They were married May 21, the anniversary of their first meeting, at the home of the bride’s parents in Franklin Square, N.Y. Mirelle Eid, a Universal Life minister, officiated from Manhattan via Zoom. Also tuning in were the bride’s grandmother from Queens and the groom’s family in Sweden. As a salute to Sweden, Ms. DiLena made a wedding cake with a layer of lingonberry jam.

“It’s sort of symbolic,” she said, “and it’s really, really good.”

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Protestors attempt to remove confederate monument in Birmingham, mayor asks that they let him “finish the job”

Protestors gathered in Birmingham went to work to remove a statue erected in a public park with ties to the confederacy.

According to AL.com, the group gathered at Linn Park following a rally in memory of George Floyd, a 46-year-old black man who died on Memorial Day shortly after his arrest by officers from the Minneapolis Police Department. However, a speech at the rally from comedian Jermaine “FunnyMaine” Johnson led many to the park after Johnson encouraged them to meet him there.

“We’ve got a lot cities around the country. They’re tearing down Target. They’re tearing down city hall. We can’t do that. We gotta protect our city,” Johnson told the crowd before saying that protestors couldn’t destroy historic civil rights locations like the 16th Street Baptist Church. “But what I’m not telling you to do is walk to Linn Park. I’m not telling to walk to Linn Park after this rally. I’m not telling you to tear something down in Linn Park. I’m not telling you that I’m going to be over there after this rally.”

Linn Park contains several statues, including one of Charles Linn, the park’s namesake and a founder of Birmingham who fought for the Confederate States during the Civil War, and the Confederate Soldiers & Sailors Monument, built in the shape of an obelisk.

That monument was erected in 1905 by the United Daughters of the Confederacy, and has been the result of controversy between the city and the Alabama Attorney General’s office. The statue of Linn was built in 2013 by a local organization to honor the work of one of Linn’s descendants.


Branko Medenica’s Charles Linn statue stands in Linn Park in Birmingham, Alabama on July 4, 2018.
Raymond Boyd/Getty

Photos shared to Twitter by WBRC reporter Brittany Dionne showed the brass cast of Charles Linn on the ground with portions of the statue covered in graffiti.

A video, shared by Jonathan Hardison, another WBRC reporter, captured the moment that the statute fell, via a rope tied around it. When it toppled, many in the group began to cheer.

According to AL.com, protestors used rocks and other items to chip away at the base of the obelisk statue. They also used a pickup to try and rip it down with a rope. However, the rope broke.

Reports from local media indicated a police presence at the park while protestors attempted to bring down the statue, but did not interfere with their efforts. However, Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin did later encourage protestors to leave, telling them to give him 24 hours to remove the statue from the park.

“I understand the frustration and the anger that you have. Allow me to finish the job for you,” Woodfin told the crowd, AL.com reported, he also warned the protestors that if they remained in the park and continued to try and bring the statue down that police would come in and begin making arrests.

Newsweek reached out to the mayor’s office for additional comment regarding plans to remove the statue, but did not hear back by publication time.

The obelisk has been involved in a legal battle between the City of Birmingham and Alabama’s attorney general. In 2017, the city and then-Mayor William Bell were subjected to a lawsuit from the AG’s office for covering the statue with tarps and plywood in violation of Alabama’s Memorial Preservation Act. However, the city stated that they were not out of step with the state law as the monument had not been altered in any way.

The Memorial Preservation Act prohibits the removal or changing of any monument that has been erected for more than 40 years without the approval of the state.

Two years of legal battles ensued, with the Alabama Supreme Court overturning a district court ruling in November 2019 that said the city was being denied free speech via the law. In January of this year the city was ordered to keep the monument up and to pay a $25,000 fine for violating the state statute.

This is at least the second statue to be defaced in the South this weekend. On Saturday, a confederate statue at the University of Mississippi was spray-painted with the words ‘spiritual genocide’ as well as red handprints. Like the Linn Park statue, that monument has been the subject of controversy and the university awaiting a ruling on if it can be moved to another location.

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Trump dismissing advice to tone down rhetoric, address the nation

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has dismissed advice from his allies urging him to tone down his rhetoric and held back so far on a formal address to the nation as cities across the country faced another night of fiery protests.

As the roar of police helicopters and chanting crowds reverberated through the White House grounds for a third night, Trump once again opted against seeking to make prime time remarks from the Oval Office, as other presidents have done in times of domestic crisis.

Instead, he spent the day on Twitter, doubling down on a strategy of calling for stronger police tactics that critics have said is only worsening the situation.

Trump’s advisers have been divided over what role the president should take in responding to the most widespread unrest the country has seen in decades. Some say Trump should focus his message on George Floyd, who died at the hands of Minneapolis police, and urge calm. Others say the top priority is stopping the violence and looting that have taken place in some areas, arguing the best path to that end is strong police tactics, not presidential speeches.

Senior adviser and presidential son-in-law Jared Kushner is not in favor of a high-profile presidential speech at this time, according to a person close to the White House.

Some Trump allies agree. “It doesn’t matter how brilliant an Oval Office address President Trump gives, that isn’t going to make a difference to people financially and the real issue is the economy,” said Jason Miller, a former campaign communications adviser. With a formal address, “he would only be set up for failure. It’s so easy to say he didn’t strike the perfect chord, or left out this detail. There are only various levels of failure that could result.”

But a second camp in Trump’s inner circle has been calling on him to tone down his strong-arm law and order rhetoric, including Sen. Tim Scott, R-Fla., who said he spoke to the president on Saturday and called his tweets “not constructive.”

“I told him what I’m going to tell you, which is, Mr. President, it helps us when you focus on the death, the unjustified, in my opinion, the criminal death of George Floyd,” Scott said Sunday in a Fox News interview. “Those tweets are very helpful, it is helpful when you say what you said yesterday, which is that it’s important for us to recognize the benefits of non-violent protests.”

There is broad agreement among Trump’s allies and closest aides that his current, largely incendiary messaging on protesters could backfire politically and also potentially further fuel the turmoil, these people said.

The president’s advisers warned Trump this weekend that while the election is still five months away, there is a risk that some of his rhetoric could alienate key voters such as moderates and suburban women.

Those same counselors told the president his tweets on Thursday — which included the phrase “when the looting starts, the shooting starts” — were particularly inflammatory and “ill-advised.”

Trump has at times softened his rhetoric over the past few days to express some empathy with protesters, saying Friday during an event with business executives on coronavirus that “I understand the hurt. I understand the pain. People have really been through a lot.”

In remarks following a visit to view the SpaceX rocket launch in Florida Saturday, Trump said the death of Floyd had “filled Americans all over the country with horror, anger, and grief.”

The protests have become increasingly real for Trump and White House staffers over the last 72 hours. On Friday, the president was taken by Secret Service to the underground bunker used for former Vice President Dick Cheney during the Sept. 11 attacks, where he stayed less than an hour out of an abundance of caution, according to a senior administration official.

White House staffers were told over the weekend not to come to the White House complex unless absolutely necessary, though no directive had yet been given for Monday, said a White House aide.

Still, Trump has carried on an appearance of business as usual. With cities still smoldering, Trump returned to Florida Saturday afternoon to watch the country’s first commercially manned rocket launch, an event the White House planned to use to tout American innovation and the economy. When asked by reporters if he considered calling off the trip, Trump said he felt he had an obligation to be there.

After protests turned violent in Minneapolis on Thursday night, Trump did not sway from his planned Friday remarks outlining actions his administration was taking against China. The Rose Garden event, his first public comments of the day, included no mention of the protests, and the president surprised staff by choosing not to take questions from reporters at the end of his prepared remarks. It wasn’t until a second event later in the afternoon that he noted the events of the preceding night.

Nor did he let the massive scale of the protests sweeping across the country change the messaging he has used during past demonstrations. He again blamed Democrats for unrest, and dismissed the protestors as “professionally managed,” describing them as “a lot of radical-left bad people.” His solution, rather than urging calm, has been to push for a stronger police crackdown and a bigger National Guard presence.

Trump has had a pattern during past crises of being slow to divert from his agenda and planned talking points. The weekend before he declared the coronavirus pandemic a national emergency, he was golfing and holding fundraisers at his Mar-a-Lago resort downplaying the severity of the virus. During the controversy around his comments on the deadly protests in Charlottesville, Trump spent the weekend at his Bedminster golf course, holding a meeting on tax cuts at the White House and traveling to Trump Tower in New York for a meeting on infrastructure as the controversy ballooned.

But while Trump has been heavily criticized over his response, the demonstrations provide him the type of culture war distraction he had been seeking to take the focus away from his administration’s response the coronavirus, which killed more than 100,000 people this week and has resulted in one in four Americans filing for unemployment, said one outside adviser.

Prior to the escalation of the demonstrations, Trump had been having little success trying to shift the national conversation away from the coronavirus pandemic to other divisive issues popular with conservatives, such as voter fraud, alleged social media bias and China. Now, says that adviser, he can appear as the strong-arm law-and-order candidate protecting the country from lawlessness.

His campaign is watching closely and already looking for ways to turn the demonstrations against apparent Democratic nominee Joe Biden by questioning whether the former vice president supports Trump’s move to designate antifa, a group of far-left activists, a terrorist organization.

“President Trump has been fighting culture wars since he announced his candidacy in 2015,” said Garrett Ventry, a former Republican Senate aide. “The president believes that it is a win when he engages in these fights, it ignites his base.”

But as one outside adviser stressed, the national turmoil this weekend also highlights the “divisive nature” of the president’s politics at a time when “he and his re-election campaign could really use some ‘uniter in chief’ and ‘healer in chief’ type headlines.”

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Australia’s first 1000Mbps consumer NBN plan is here – and it’s just AU$149 a month

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Internet service provider Aussie Broadband has just launched access the NBN’s latest and fastest consumer NBN speed tier, a 1Gbps service offering unlimited downloads at speeds of up to 1000Mbps, and selling for a surprisingly affordable AU$149 a month.

With a download speed of 1Gbps, this brand new 1000/50 tier is set to be four times faster than what was previously available to consumers, with top speeds formerly maxing out at 250Mbps.

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Coronavirus updates LIVE: COVID-19 restrictions eased in NSW as Victorian authorities scramble to contain Keilor Downs cluster; Australian death toll at 103

If you suspect you or a family member has coronavirus you should call (not visit) your GP or ring the national Coronavirus Health Information Hotline on 1800 020 080.

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Anushka Sharma’s filmography as an actor is laudable, but it’s her stint as a producer that sets her apart- Entertainment News, Firstpost

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When Anushka Sharma debuted as producer with NH10 (2015), she was very candid about the fact that it was a film people told her to avoid.

As an actress, she was coming off a string of commercial successes including blockbusters like Jab Tak Hai Jaan (2012) and PK (2014), and NH10 came as a bit of a shocker to the industry. It’s not every day that a 25-year-old actress, at the top of her game, decides to stake her reputation and throw her weight behind a film that deals with a heavy subject like honour killing.

Anushka Sharma in the film NH10. Image via Facebook

Five years have elapsed since that film hit theatres and Anushka’s Clean Slate Filmz is only getting bigger and bolder. Her latest project as producer, Amazon Prime’s nine-episode series Pataal Lok dropped in mid-May to rave reviews. Many have hailed it to be the best show to have ever come out of India. It paints an unapologetic portrait of the society we live in and shines a spotlight over how discriminatory we are as Indians with anyone who’s seen as different by the majority – Muslims, Dalits, North-Easterners, the LGBTQ community – it’s all there and dealt with. With zero filters.

It takes serious guts to back a show this political and more so during a time when even organising a peaceful protest can land you in prison. We live in times when anything that questions the majoritarian outlook gets labelled as anti-national and in some cases, seditious. It’s been no different with Paatal Lok. From hordes of nationalists calling for a ban of the show to politicians filing cases of sedition against Anushka, it’s obvious the show has pushed some buttons. And, we couldn’t be prouder of her.

In a recent interview to journalist Rajeev Masand, Anushka shared her reasons for wanting to tell this story. She spoke about the normalisation of oppression in today’s society where human beings fail humanity at large for selfish reasons of power and personal gain. It’s the kind of bold statement that gives you a peek into the kind of person she is, politics be damned.

For those who have followed her career closely, none of this is new.

Anushka Sharma in Phillauri.

Her first production, NH10 made a bold statement about the deeply entrenched patriarchy that exists in North India, khap panchayats and honour killings. A violent and disturbing film with a woman in the lead is hardly commercial fare, and the film did receive its fair share of criticism for ruralising an issue that exists in different shades across every stratum of our society. It did, however, bring to light a bunch of social issues and there’s no taking away from that. Ask yourself who else would actually back a project like this. Nobody comes to mind.

Her next two projects might not have dealt with any major political issues but had their fair share of social commentary written in between the lines. Phillauri (2017) was a fantasy-comedy about a ghost living in a tree. When a young man finds that he’s manglik (born under an inauspicious star), his family gets him to marry that very tree before he can get married to his long time girlfriend. Except he then finds that he’s technically married to the ghost in the tree. It’s a humorous take on what most people would call a ridiculous custom in this day and age, but the reality is that this kind of stuff still happens in our country. And isn’t that what good filmmaking is all about – challenging our deeply entrenched notions of the world around us? As the ghost’s back story gets revealed through the film, you get to know that she was a poet but had to write under a pseudonym, because women couldn’t openly do so. Even in what you might think is the most innocuous of comedies, there are hidden layers for those who care to look. And that says a lot about the person backing the content.

Anushka Sharma in a still from Pari. Image from Twitter/@myhardikpandya

Anushka Sharma in a still from Pari. Image from Twitter/@myhardikpandya

Anushka’s next production, Pari (2018) was an equally ambitious project in that it drew from fantasy while telling a tale of horror. The film takes mythological elements (djinns, ifrits) usually associated with fairy tales and throws them into a disturbing tale revolving around a satanic cult. Pari breaks away from the usual tropes seen in Indian horror films by hinging its story around an invisible force – the more imaginative one is, the more one enjoys its deeper layers. And leaving so much to the interpretation of an audience is a bold step for any filmmaker. Anushka also plays the lead role in the film, and drops all pretences of ‘looking good’ for the camera. Covered in blood and grime for most of the film’s running time with dirt under her fingernails, she plays a character none of her peers would be seen getting close to, with or without a bargepole.

It’s in this context that Anushka’s career path has been so different from the other leading ladies of our times. Her filmography as an actor would make anyone envious, but it’s her filmography as a producer that sets her apart.

A couple of years back in an interview to me, she spoke about doing things her own way. “Time has just passed so quickly, but I’m glad I can say I’ve done things on my own terms, have never let anyone push me around, and have found respect amongst the people I work with. I do what I have to do and then I just leave, I’m not attached to it, I don’t even look at the comments. I try to be detached because there’s no point going mental over it.”

The poster of Paatal Lok, produced by Anushka Sharma’s Clean Slate Filmz.

It’s this detachment from the trappings of being a celebrity that sets Anushka apart. In an industry that’s always taken pride in its façade of ‘perfect poise’ over everything else, Anushka has been questioning the status quo in her typical no-nonsense manner from very early in her career. She was one of the first people to talk about the gender inequality in the industry. During that same conversation with me, she opened up about her early days in the industry. “Male and female contemporaries wouldn’t be treated equally, and everyone would try and normalise it. It still happens, but now there’s pressure because everyone talks about it. I was probably one of the first people to talk about it. Today, it’s reached a point where I don’t want to speak about it anymore but would rather make things happen.”

While the image she projects through social media channels is an apolitical, measured and careful one, every now and then one gets a glimpse of the person inside but only when she talks about her work. And that’s the kind of person Anushka seems to be – she’d rather let her work talk for itself.

Updated Date: Jun 01, 2020 08:22:03 IST


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George Floyd: Minnesota Attorney General Ellison to lead case

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz said Sunday that the State Attorney General Keith Ellison would take the lead in any prosecutions related to the death of George Floyd, a Black man who died on Monday after a white officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes as he pleaded that he could not breathe. 

Walz’s decision to appoint Ellison, who is Black, take the lead comes after requests from activists and protesters, some City Council members and a civil rights group, who said putting the attorney general on the case would send a strong message that justice will be vigorously pursued. Walz said Ellison has the experience needed to lead the prosecution.

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Earlier Sunday, Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman, who had been leading the case, said that he had asked Ellison to help him in the case, and Ellison agreed they would be full partners.

“There have been recent developments in the facts of the case where the help and expertise of the Attorney General would be valuable,” Freeman said. He did not elaborate.

But by Sunday evening, Walz said that “unfortunately, our constituents, especially constituents of colour, have lost faith in the ability of Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman to fairly and impartially investigate and prosecute these cases.”

Derek Chauvin, the 44-year-old white officer who knelt on Floyd, was charged Friday with third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. The three other officers who were involved have not been charged, though Freeman and Ellison have said additional charges are still possible. Chauvin and the three other officers were fired last week.

On Sunday, more than 100 people gathered outside Freeman’s demanding the arrests of all four police officers involved in Floyd’s death, and the resignation of Freeman.

Community leaders and organisers have told Al Jazeera that they have been calling for Ellison to handle the case, saying there is a history of mistrust between Freeman’s office and members of the community. Walz said Floyd’s family had also requested Ellison take over, saying, “They were very clear they wanted the system to work for them, they wanted to believe that there was trust.”

Ellison, who was a US congressman before being elected attorney general, has good ties with the community, organisers have told Al Jazeera. He recently helped lead a state working group on police use of deadly force. 


SOURCE:
Al Jazeera and news agencies

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Australia’s drug regulator launches court action against church touting bleach as Covid-19 cure

Australia’s drug regulator has started court proceedings against a “healing church” that promoted a solution containing industrial bleach as a cure for coronavirus, after the church failed to remove advertisements promoting the product from its website.

In May the Therapeutic Goods Administration fined the Australian chapter of the Genesis II Church of Health and Healing more than $150,000 for selling and promoting the solution containing sodium chlorite, a chemical used as a textile bleaching agent and disinfectant. The product is named Miracle Mineral Supplement and Miracle Mineral Solution on the church’s MMS Australia website, which claimed it could prevent and treat a range of diseases including Covid-19. The TGA said the company had breached multiple advertising laws.

At the time, the TGA also informed MMS Australia that it must also immediately remove all advertisements in breach of the Therapeutic Goods Act 1989, and warned that court action might be started if the advertisements were not removed within two days. But MMS Australia did not remove the ads. Instead, it updated the website to say those seeking miracle cures should also “pray to The Lord for healing and guidance”.

There is no clinical, scientifically accepted evidence showing that the solution can cure or alleviate any disease. The use of the solution “presents serious health risks, and can result in nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea and severe dehydration, which in some cases can result in hospitalisation”, the TGA said.

In April the church’s US leader, Mark Grenon, wrote to Donald Trump just days before the US president claimed that bleach could be a coronavirus cure. Grenon called the product “a wonderful detox that can kill 99% of the pathogens in the body” and added that it “can rid the body of Covid-19”.

The TGA has begun federal court proceedings to obtain an injunction restraining MMS Australia and its director, Charles Barton, from advertising or supplying the goods. It will also seek orders that MMS Australia and Barton pay penalties for alleged contraventions of the act.

The MMS Australia website was updated after the fine to say those seeking the bleach solution and other products urgently could add a $5 express shipping voucher to their online shopping basket to jump to the front of the queue.

The website now requires a login to access information. It also states: “By using this website you agree that you will not make complaint, enquiry or give notice to any alleged regulatory authority in relation to any information relating to this website, including but not limited to any names of items mentioned on this website or to any information relating any of the items on this website or to any information contained on this site whatsoever.” 

The TGA’s application to the court states that MMS Australia should remove the login requirement “within 72 hours”. MMA Australia should “ensure that access to the website is not subject to the provision of a user name, password, telephone number or any other similar sign-in requirement, with the intention that the website shall be readily accessible by, and able to be monitored by the applicant and officers of the Therapeutic Goods Administration”.

In a statement, the TGA said it was particularly concerned about the harmful effects that can be caused by the ingestion of MMS, and published a safety alert to warn consumers about claims made about MMS for the treatment, cure, prevention or alleviation of disease, including Covid-19.

The TGA’s application to the court says MMS advertisements also made “prohibited representations” about what the solution could do for cancer, herpes and HIV.

The secretary of the Department of Health said MMS and the bleach solution were not registered in the Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods and cannot lawfully be sold as therapeutic goods in the country.

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‘We’re Witnessing The Collapse Of The Legitimacy Of Leadership,’ Warns Cornel West

Black activist and prominent social critic Cornel West on Sunday linked the ongoing protests in America to anger over the “vicious legacy of white supremacy” and the “collapse of the legitimacy of leadership.”

“The beautiful thing is we’re seeing citizens who are caring and concerned. They’re hitting the streets,” the Harvard Divinity School professor told Chris Wallace on “Fox News Sunday.”

“The problem is we have a system that’s not responding and seems to be unable to respond,” he added.

While demonstrators across the nation are protesting the death of George Floyd, a Black man who was killed last week during an arrest by white Minneapolis police officers, they’re also erupting against a decaying social order, West indicated.

“What we’re seeing here is the ways in which the vicious legacy of white supremacy manifests in organized hatred, greed and corruption,” West said. “We’re dealing with moral meltdown … We’re witnessing the collapse of the legitimacy of leadership, the political class, the economic class, the professional class. That’s the deeper crisis.”

He acknowledged that there has been progress against racism, especially for the middle class. But West also cited Malcolm X in reminding Wallace that “you don’t stab folk in the back nine inches, pull it out three inches and say you’re making progress.”

Asked about the violence and looting in some of the protests, West emphasized that “most of my fellow citizens, God bless them, that are in the streets are there peaceful, or are there marching.”

He added: “Looting is wrong, but legalized looting is wrong, too … I look at the wickedness in high places first and then keep track of the least of these.”

“If we’re more concerned about the property and spillover than the poverty, decrepit school systems, dilapidated housing, massive unemployment and underemployment,” West warned, “we’re going to be doing this every five, every 10, every 20 years.”

Check out what West had to say in the video above. His interview begins at 19:30.



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Protests Flare Nationwide For Sixth Straight Day, Demanding End To Police Violence

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Protesters took to the streets across America again Sunday, with violence flaring in pockets of largely peaceful demonstrations fueled by the killings of black people at the hands of police. A truck driver — apparently deliberately — drove into demonstrators in Minneapolis nearly a week after George Floyd died there after pleading for air as an officer pressed a knee into his neck.

Protests sprang up from Boston to San Francisco, with people stealing from stores in broad daylight in Philadelphia, cities across California and elsewhere. In Minneapolis, the tanker truck sped into a peaceful crowd of thousands on a closed highway, but no one appeared to have been hit, authorities said.

The Minnesota State Patrol tweeted that the driver was apparently trying to provoke protesters and was arrested. Protesters swarmed the truck and jumped on the hood, even as it kept moving. Police then came in force to clear the highway in the city where violence erupted after the death last week of Floyd, who was black. The protests quickly spread to dozens of cities large and small, and have lasted for days. 

The officer who pressed his knee onto Floyd’s neck for several minutes has been charged with murder, but protesters demand the other three officers at the scene be prosecuted. All four were fired.

“We’re not done,” said Darnella Wade, organizer for Black Lives Matter in neighboring St. Paul, where thousands gathered peacefully in front of the state Capitol. “They sent us the military, and we only asked them for arrests.”

Minnesota’s governor brought in thousands of National Guard soldiers to help quell violence that had damaged or destroyed hundreds of buildings in Minneapolis over days of protests. The immense deployment appeared to have worked Saturday night, when there was comparatively little destruction.

On Sunday, in a display of force, long lines of state patrolmen and National Guard soldiers were lined up in front of the Capitol, facing the demonstrators, with perhaps a dozen military-style armored vehicles behind them.

For a second day, the protests reached to the White House, where chants could be heard from around 1,000 demonstrators just across the street in Lafayette Park as they faced police in riot gear behind barricades. The scene was defiant but peaceful, though police used flash bangs to stop another group from reaching the park.

As the protests grew, President Donald Trump retweeted conservative commentator Buck Sexton who called for “overwhelming force.”

Outside the White House, Gabrielle Labrosse-Ellis, 30, from Maryland, held a sign that said, “Humanize black lives.”

“This is unacceptable. This is the last straw,” she said. “It has to be.”

Labrosse-Ellis said she planned to leave before dark because she feared a repeat of the violence that occurred Saturday night.

Across America, demonstrators called again for an end to police violence and many joined police in pleading for an end to the looting Many also joined police in pleading for a stop to fires, vandalism and theft, saying it weakened calls for justice and reform.

“They keep killing our people,” said Mahira Louis, 15, who marched with her mother and several hundred others through downtown Boston. “I’m so sick and tired of it.”

Disgust over generations of racism in a country founded by slaveholders combined with a string of recent racially charged killings to stoke the anger. Adding to that was angst from months of lockdowns brought on by the coronavirus pandemic, which has disproportionately hurt communities of color, not only in terms of infections but in job losses and economic stress.

The droves of people congregating for demonstrations threatened to trigger new outbreaks, a fact overshadowed by the boiling tensions.

“Maybe this country will get the memo that we are sick of police murdering unarmed black men,” said Lex Scott, founder of Black Lives Matter Utah. “Maybe the next time a white police officer decides to pull the trigger, he will picture cities burning.”

The scale of the protests, sweeping from coast to coast and unfolding on a single night, rivaled the historic demonstrations of the civil rights and Vietnam War eras.

Curfews were imposed in major cities around the U.S., including Atlanta, Chicago, Denver, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Seattle. About 5,000 National Guard soldiers and airmen were activated in 15 states and Washington, D.C.

But still trouble flared.

There was looting on both ends of California, with video in San Jose showing several people in hoods and masks fleeing a Macy’s department store with large bags, while people in Long Beach carried away armloads of clothing and other goods from the smashed windows of stores at a shopping mall after curfew. As police moved in to try to restore order, some protesters ran in to confront the thieves and condemn them for undercutting the message of the demonstration.

In tweets Sunday, Trump blamed anarchists and the media for fueling the violence. Attorney General William Barr pointed a finger at “far left extremist” groups. Police chiefs and politicians accused outsiders of coming in and causing the problems.

At the Minneapolis intersection where Floyd was killed, people gathered with brooms and flowers, saying it was important to protect what they called a “sacred space.” The intersection was blocked with the traffic cones while a ring of flowers was laid out.

Among those descending on Minneapolis was Michael Brown Sr., the father of Michael Brown, whose killing by a police officer in Ferguson, Missouri, set off unrest in 2014.

“I understand what this family is feeling. I understand what this community is feeling,” he said.

In Indianapolis, two people were reported dead in bursts of downtown violence, adding to deaths reported in Detroit and Minneapolis in recent days.

Buildings around the U.S. were defaced with spray-painted messages, from the facade of St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York to the historic Hay-Adams hotel near the White House. Some of Floyd’s gasped last words — “I can’t breathe” — were repeated, alongside anti-police messages.



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