Society's Child
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg met on Tuesday with organizers of the boycott campaign, led by the NAACP and the Anti-Defamation League. They also announced plans to meet with other activist groups and consult with their own civil rights auditor.
The #StopHateForProfit boycott movement has seen more than 900 businesses suspending their advertising on the platform until the company curbs content that they find "toxic and hateful," although many big advertisers didn't join it. Stock investors were not impressed with Facebook's shares rising this week, and even CNN and the New York Times continued to run ads on the platform despite the criticism.
Facebook's talks with boycott organizers come amid "the largest social movement in US history and our nation's best and latest chance to act against the racism that has pervaded our country," Sandberg said. Changes will be made not because of advertiser pressure, but "because it's the right thing to do," she added.
The California Faculty Association has published a list of demands aimed at "redress for systemic anti-Black racism in the CSU," insisting that black faculty, students and staff are "criminalized both on CSU campuses and in our communities." Its orders begin with a directive that "everyone needs to recognize: black lives are precious" and "take serious, tangible and public steps to protect Black lives, Black futures, and Black joy," and spiral off into calls for revisiting racial segregation.
In addition to abolishing tuition for "Black, Native and Indigenous students," the union has demanded the university system join its efforts to overturn a statewide ban on affirmative action, a controversial program that gives preference to minority students in admissions (or minority faculty in hiring). The professors have also demanded the university prioritize and expand its Ethnic Studies curriculum, forcing each student to take at least one Ethnic Studies course lest they participate in the "'spirit murdering' and violent deaths of Black communities."
Sherwin Hall, 27, told RT that he began suffering from pain in the groin area in March, just when the number of coronavirus infections in Britain was surging. The father-of-two quickly went to a hospital in Leeds asking for a scan, but the staff refused.
"They told me 'No, due to Covid-19 we're not giving scans'," Hall recalled, adding that doctors put him on a waiting list, and prescribed anti-inflammatory drugs and painkillers instead.

Governor of the US Georgia State Brian Kemp has declared a state of emergency following an uptick in shootings over the July Fourth weekend that injured 31 people and killed five after weeks of violent crime and property destruction in Atlanta.
Although the order followed a spike in violent crime over the Fourth of July weekend, recent protests calling for police reform and racial justice played a large part in the executive order.
Here's a look at what's in the order:
Where will the troops be?
In DeNiro's eyes, President Trump is a "mean-spirited, soulless, amoral, abusive con-artist son of a bitch." But that didn't stop one of the actor's prime investments from using the Trump administration's loan program for cash, a loan program meant to help keep small business wrecked by the Chinese coronavirus financially afloat.
The Nobu chain of luxury restaurants and hotels took 14 loans from the U.S. small business relief program for as much as $28 million, which went toward properties across the country, from California, to Texas, to New York, according to a report by CNBC. Nobuyuki "Nobu" Matsuhisa — the celebrity chef and owner of the restaurant chain — has a net worth of $200 million. Meanwhile, Robert De Niro — who co-founded it — is worth an estimated $500 million.
Comment: News outlet Media Matters also raked in as much as $2 million in coronavirus relief loans as the left-wing blog slammed the Trump administration's coronavirus response.
Some of the terms called into question by one of the network's latest 'thinkpieces' are acknowledged as having origins rooted in racism like "sold down the river," but others have no connection to it.
For example, "master bedrooms/bathrooms," terms some realtors have retired in light of protests against racism across the world, are phrases that were first used in 1926, decades after slavery was abolished in the US, a fact the piece waves off.
"It's unclear whether the term is rooted in American slavery on plantations, it evokes that history," the CNN story reads.

Greek Orthodox Church in Toronto as priest explains to his people that Communion is forbidden by the city authorities.
The second thing was what we hear earlier in the video clip. "The persecution of the Church continues." And, in liberal Toronto this appears to be exactly the case. The Church shown here is a Greek Orthodox community, but the video appears to be unlisted so there is no information about exactly which parish it is or who the priest is.
What is maddening about this is that the priest did not decide to obey God rather than men and do it anyway. This would have been the right action. What is nevertheless good is that the priest is humble, not arrogant, and simply ascribes this horrific order to the state of the believers themselves, including himself, that "we have so little faith, we do not deserve this miracle." And he would be right in that.
Comment:
- Have you noticed how much delight they are taking in shutting down churches all over the United States?
- Clever church congregation avoids arrest by disguising themselves as rioters (Satire)
- Liquor stores & gun shops open for business, but churches closed. Why are US governors trashing the First Amendment?
- Global persecution of Christians reaches "near-genocidal levels"
- Thank God for western values: The debt of the West to Christianity
In a Friday Instagram Live interview with hair stylist Christin Brown, in which the pair discussed whether Berry would ever wear her hair short again, the Oscar-winner revealed she might do so for one particular role.
"I'm thinking of a character where this woman is transgender," Berry said. "She's a woman that transitioned into a man."
However, the 53-year-old actress neglected to use the correct pronouns when discussing the role, which irked the trans activist community even more.

Fireworks explodes over a protestor with his hands up during a protest in Ferguson, Missouri, May 30, 2020.
Between July 3 and July 5, 13 people were fatally shot in Chicago. The latest violence wasn't out of character in a city that earned the nickname "Chiraq" - likening the bloodshed to that in war-torn Iraq - and where around 80 percent of homicide victims each year are black, according to police data.
Father's Day weekend last month saw 104 shootings and 14 dead.
The city suffered its deadliest day in at least six decades on May 31, when 18 people were killed. Chicago had 1,384 shootings in the first six months of 2020, a 45 percent increase from the same point in 2019, according to police figures.
New York City, Atlanta, Milwaukee and other large US cities also registered a spike in violence in recent weeks. The Big Apple had 30 shootings, including 10 fatalities, on July 5 alone. NYPD responded to a 20-year high of 205 shooting incidents in June, compared with 89 a year earlier.
The carnage is taking place at the same time that activist group Black Lives Matter is leading anti-racism protests across the US, after 46-year-old black man George Floyd was killed in Minneapolis police custody on May 25.
Dr Tom Jefferson is a British epidemiologist working for the Cochrane Collaboration's acute respiratory infections group. He also works at the Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine (CEBM) at Oxford University. In an interview with the Telegraph that is already sending shockwaves through the scientific community, he has promoted an alternative view of the coronavirus' origins. Jefferson believes that the virus lay dormant, possibly for years, before bursting into action late last year.
He points to a growing body of evidence involving traces of coronavirus turning up in sewage samples, from Europe to South America. The amazing thing about these samples is that they appear to pre-date the first instances of Covid-19 in Wuhan, the Chinese city of its purported origin.












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