Society's Child
A petition is asking Trader Joe's to remove "racist packaging" from its ethnic food products following moves by other brands from Aunt Jemima, Uncle Ben's and Eskimo Pie to the Washington NFL franchise.
The Change.org petition was started two weeks ago and had more than 925 signatures as of Saturday afternoon. It says the grocer "labels some of its ethnic foods with modifications of 'Joe' that belies a narrative of exoticism that perpetuates harmful stereotypes," noting how Trader Ming's is used to brand the chain's Chinese foods and Trader José's for Mexican foods.
But the chain, considered one of America's favorite grocery stores, says it already has begun work to phase out the names and while its approach to product naming "may have been rooted in a lighthearted attempt at inclusiveness, we recognize that it may now have the opposite effect."
Cannon-Grant's work on the Black Lives Matter cause has seen her honored by Boston Mayor Marty Walsh, Massachusetts Rep. Joe Kennedy, and even former presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren. She's been lauded as a "hero among us" by the Boston Celtics. She writes for the Boston Globe, and is currently working to re-elect Rep. Ayanna Pressley and District Attorney Rachael Rollins, both progressive Democrats.
A recent outburst of hers, however, would be unprintable on the Globe's pages.
In a video that surfaced late on Friday, Cannon-Grant accused Pressley's opponent - Republican Rayla Campbell - of selling out her race by marrying a white man.
FOX 35 News found this out after asking Orange County Health Officer Dr. Raul Pino whether two coronavirus victims who were in their 20s had any underlying conditions. One of his answers surprised us.
"The first one didn't have any. He died in a motorcycle accident," Pino said.
Dr. Pino was asked if the man's data was removed.
"I don't think so. I have to double-check," Pino said. "We were arguing, discussing, or trying to argue with the state. Not because of the numbers -- it's 100...it doesn't make any difference if it's 99 -- but the fact that the individual didn't die from COVID-19...died in the crash. But you could actually argue that it could have been the COVID-19 that caused him to crash. I don't know the conclusion of that one."
There are still two people in their 20s on Orange County's data list for coronavirus deaths.
Comment: He's probably not the only one... There have been similar reports throughout the whole pandemic. There's something of a scandal in the UK right now for just this reason:

The monument at the St. Volodymyr Ukrainian Cemetery in Oakville ; Ukrainian nationalists march in Lvov on the SS 1st Galician Division anniversary.
The object in question, which was erected for Ukrainian nationalists who fought for the Nazis as part of the infamous 1st Galician Division of the SS during World War II, had been defaced in late June.
Located at the Saint Volodymyr Ukrainian Cemetery in Oakville, Ontario, the cenotaph reportedly had the words "Nazi war monument" painted on it some weeks ago - pretty accurately describing the essence of this particular memorial.
Comment: Canada was a favorite place to stash cooperative Nazis and Nazi sympathizers from Ukraine after the war. Their legacy continues to poison the world today.
- Canada's got a Nazi problem
- Canadian PM wants to send lethal arms to neo-Nazis in Ukraine
- Documentary evidence confirms Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland's grandfather was a Nazi
- Victim or aggressor: Chrystia Freeland's family record for Nazi war profiteering and murder of the Cracow Jews
- Truth & Irony: Consortium News vs Chrystia Freeland and her Nazi grandfather's scheme for Ukraine
- The Ukrainian Nazi Connection
According to The Crimson, the Coalition for a Diverse Harvard noted "overseer" has "historically referred to men hired by plantation owners to violently control slaves."
The Board of Overseers is Harvard's "second-highest governing body." The coalition, which advocates "diversity, equity, and inclusion" at the school, has sought the name change for three years.
Coalition board member Jane Sujen Bock said many Board of Overseer candidates "had not previously considered the ramifications of the title's link to slavery." The five candidates supported by the coalition support a name change.
As you might expect, Bock cited the current "anti-racist" atmosphere in the country as leading to a "greater push" for a new name.
Social-media users on July 16 called for nationwide demonstrations at 7:00 p.m. local time against a court decision to uphold death sentences against three men who participated in protests last year.
Videos shared on social media purportedly showed protesters in Behbahan, in the southwestern province of Khuzestan, and in Shiraz, the capital of southwestern Fars Province, shouting slogans against the death sentences handed to Amir Hossein Moradi, Saeed Tamjidi, and Mohammad Rajabi.
The Reuters news agency quoted witnesses as saying security forces fired tear gas to disperse the demonstrators in Behbahan.
Meanwhile, an increased presence of security forces was reported in the streets of the capital, Tehran, and several other cities.
On July 14, Iran's judiciary said the Supreme Court had upheld the death sentences against Moradi, 25, Tamjidi, 27, and Rajabi, 25, for criminal actions during protests in November sparked by a hike in gasoline prices.
The decision sparked a surge of online protests against the sentences, with the hashtag #Don't_Execute in Persian trending globally on Twitter, being used more than 7 million times.
Comment: One of the accused's lawyers says the executions have been suspended, pending a retrial:
Babak Paknia said in a Twitter post on July 19 that the Iranian judiciary had ordered a retrial for the three.
The lawyer's announcement comes after a massive social-media campaign calling for Iran to halt state executions. The online protest has been joined by many Iranians -- including ordinary citizens as well as intellectuals, former politicians, and prominent artists.
Amnesty International recorded 251 executions in Iran during 2019, making Iran second to China for state executions.
"We always want to pay attention to the negative, but the narrative that's been out there now is saying all NASCAR fans are racist and whatnot, and that's totally not true," Wallace said late Thursday in an interview on the Desus & Mero talk show on Showtime. He added that he has socialized and drank beer with fans from Alabama to Michigan and was always made to feel welcome.

Tyrese Haspil is walked by NYPD detectives to a waiting car outside the 7th precinct.
Tyrese Haspil, 21, was charged with second-degree murder over the grisly slaying inside Saleh's $2.2 million East Houston Street apartment, NYPD Chief of Detectives Rodney Harrison said during a brief afternoon news conference.
Haspil worked as Saleh's "executive assistant" and handled the international entrepreneur's "finances and personal matters. It is also believed that he owed the victim a significant amount of money."
Al-Barghouti is an ex-prisoner who was arrested by the IOF in December 2015 while he was on his way to take part in an academic conference in the UAE through al-Karama crossing with Jordan.
Al-Barghouti was interrogated and kept in detention for weeks over his participation in demonstrations condemning the Israeli military assault on the Gaza Strip in 2014.
The Palestinian scientist was re-arrested in 2016 over anti-Israel Facebook posts and released after two months of detention following a solidarity campaign by many international academics.

The statue of Alexander Baranov in Sitka and an 1818 portrait of Baranov by Mikhail Tikhonov.
Baranov worked for the Russian American Company, which was the vehicle for the Russian government's effort to expand into the Americas. For almost three decades he was the de facto governor of Russian colonies on the continent. Sitka - called Novoarkhangelsk by its Russian founders - served as his capital.
On Tuesday, Sitka's city council decided it no longer wanted a statue of Baranov to greet visitors to the city. The bronze sitting effigy was given to the city in 1989 to commemorate the man's impact on its history and the rapid commercial development it experienced under his governance. The council took a different view of Baranov's role, however.












Comment: The absurdity of it all observed: