Tag Archives: Obama

In Wake Of Sony Cyber Attack, President Obama Approves New Sanctions On North Korea

President Obama announced the new sanctions on Friday, January 2, 2015.

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In Wake Of Sony Cyber Attack, President Obama Approves New Sanctions On North Korea

Natalie Heimel and Edward Mallue Jr. wedding

Natalie Heimel and Edward Mallue Jr. were married Sunday after having to switch their wedding venue because of President Barack Obama’s golf game. Bloomberg reported that Natalie Heimel and Edward Mallue Jr. were due to be married at the Kaneohe Klipper Golf Course on Sunday when they were informed just one day out that they would have to relocate because their commander in chief wanted to play a round. The couple had actually invited Obama to attend their nuptials, knowing he would be in town

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Natalie Heimel and Edward Mallue Jr. wedding

So Petty: North Korea Calls President Obama A “Monkey” After Internet Shuts Down

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North Korea is holding the U.S. responsible for its Internet being shut down and has resorted to calling President Barack Obama a “monkey” on the…

So Petty: North Korea Calls President Obama A “Monkey” After Internet Shuts Down

Bad Gal Rih-Rih Posts Bangin’ Bikini Christmas Pics From Her Holiday In Barbados [Photos]

Yes, please. Rihanna Bares Her Body In A Bikini In Instagram Christmas Photos Rihanna gave us all a lil’ gift for Christmas as she unwrapped her tattooed frame and captured the moment for Instagram. The social media Santa Claus also included a few with her ball-and-chain BFF, Melissa Forde. Not sure who had those pics on their list, but we digress. Flip the page to see what the ladies were twerkin’ with. Images via Instagram Continue reading

Did You Know: President Obama Believes America Is Less Racially Divided Than Before He Took Office

Do you agree? President Obama Says The U.S. Is Less Racially Divided We’ve been of the mind that racism has been more virulent since President Obama took office but he disagrees. According to NY Post reports : President Obama says the United States is less racially divided despite the tensions raging from deadly police shootings and emotional protests. Compared to six years ago when he made history as the first black president, Obama says American race relations are on the upswing. “I actually think that it’s probably in its day-to-day interactions less racially divided,” Obama told National Public Radio. Americans, however, seem to disagree. A Bloomberg Politics survey out this month found a majority of Americans – 53 percent – feel interactions between white and black communities have deteriorated since Obama took office. The choke-hold death of Eric Garner on Staten Island and fatal shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo. sparked nationwide outrage when the white officers in both cases were not criminally charged. Obama has sought to channel the frustration into a national campaign for better police relations. Americans have been divided by race over the outcome. The majority of white Americans agreed with the decision not to charge Ferguson Officer Darren Wilson in Brown’s death, while nearly all blacks disagreed. A slight majority of whites, however, disagreed with a grand jury’s decision not to charge Office Daniel Pantaleo in New York, according to Bloomberg’s survey. Do you think he’s right? WENN Continue reading

Race Matters: N. Korea Says President Obama Is A “Monkey In A Tropical Forest”, Blames U.S. For Internet Crash

SMH N. Korea Refers To Obama As “Monkey”, Blames U.S. For Online Outage Via NYPost North Korea compared President Barack Obama to a monkey, and blamed the U.S. on Saturday for shutting down its Internet amid the hacking row over the comedy “The Interview.” North Korea has denied involvement in a crippling cyberattack on Sony Pictures but has expressed fury over the comedy depicting an assassination of its leader Kim Jong Un. Sony Pictures initially called off the release citing threats of terror attacks against U.S. movie theaters. Obama criticized Sony’s decision, and the movie has opened this week. On Saturday, the North’s powerful National Defense Commission, the country’s top governing body led by Kim, said that Obama was behind the release of “The Interview.” It described the movie as illegal, dishonest and reactionary. “Obama always goes reckless in words and deeds like a monkey in a tropical forest,” an unidentified spokesman at the commission’s Policy Department said in a statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency. It wasn’t the first time North Korea has used crude insults against Obama and other top U.S. and South Korean officials. Earlier this year, the North called U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry a wolf with a “hideous” lantern jaw and South Korean President Park Geun-hye a prostitute. In May, the North’s news agency published a dispatch saying Obama has the “shape of a monkey.” No surprise. No respect. Image via AP

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Race Matters: N. Korea Says President Obama Is A “Monkey In A Tropical Forest”, Blames U.S. For Internet Crash

StyleBlazer’s 50 States Of Style: See Who We Chose As The Most Stylish In America!

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Race Matters: Whoopi Goldberg And Rosie O’Donnell’s Heated Debate Over Bigotry “You Don’t Have To Be Black To Know What Racism Is!” [Video]

Rosie might have stepped out of bounds with this one… Whoopi Goldberg Doesn’t Believe Mistaking Obama For Valet Is Racist Via TheRoot As it turns out, The View co-host Whoopi Goldberg doesn’t think it’s racist that President Barack Obama has been mistaken for a waiter and a valet, or that his wife, Michelle, has been solicited for help by a Target customer. It’s not racism that causes these assumptions but ignorance, she insists: “You guys need to know what real racism is. … Racism is when someone comes up and says [expletive] and die. That’s racist.” The actor and talk show host detailed how her mother used to get followed around in stores, but still didn’t view that as an act of racism. “The issue is, you better look at each other as an individual,” she said. Orange Is the New Black actress Laverne Cox, who was a guest on the show, reminded Goldberg about the implicit biases that people have and the system that America was built on to help create and sustain these biases. “I’ve been black for 60 years,” Goldberg insisted. “For me, stupidity, dumb folks who just say dumb stuff because they’re not looking or paying attention to the person they’re talking to, which is why people could walk up to Obama and not look up at him and see that it’s the president. “I just see it as stupid,” Goldberg added. When fellow co-host Rosie O’Donnell attempted to step up and point out how these things were, in fact, racist, Goldberg was quick to cut her off. “You are a white lady telling me what is racist to you,” she said. Where do you stand on this issue? Image via WENN/YouTube Continue reading

President Obama Flubbed James Franco’s Name And Now We Have Wonderful Memes

President Obama called James Franco by the wrong name, sparking some hilarious memes.

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President Obama Flubbed James Franco’s Name And Now We Have Wonderful Memes

John Legend Calls For Change In The Wake Of Ferguson And Eric Garner Rulings

Time to stand up… John Legend Challenges The People To Fight For Change Just after releasing his inspirational duet with Common from the Selma sundtrack, John Legend is speaking out on the fight for change and placing a call to action for everyone to stand and demand policy change. Via Billboard : When Common and I wrote the song “Glory” for the stunning new film Selma, we drew inspiration from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and his contemporaries who strived and sacrificed to achieve racial equality in the face of seemingly hopeless odds. As I watched the final version of Selma, I did so with the backdrop of the streets of many of our major cities filled with protesters, crying out for justice after yet another unarmed black person’s life was taken by the police with impunity. After the events of the past few weeks, in Ferguson, Mo.; Staten Island; Phoenix; and Cleveland, things feel eerily the same. While it is important to recognize and acknowledge racial progress through the years, it is also clear that we are far from King’s dream of equality and justice for all. Slavery ended 150 years ago. The most egregious elements of Jim Crow were deemed illegal 50 years ago. But the problems of structural racism are old and ongoing. We still have a huge wealth gap rooted in decades of job, wage and housing discrimination. Voting restrictions that disproportionately affect the poor, minorities and youth are in place and growing. A persistent gap between black and white student achievement points to an education system that fails to provide a ladder of opportunity for everyone. African-American communities are being crushed by a criminal justice system that over-polices us, over-arrests us, over-incarcerates us and disproportionately takes the lives of our unarmed youth because of the simple fact that our skin, our blackness, conjures the myth of a hyper-violent negro. I did an album with The Roots in 2010 called Wake Up! We wanted to use music to encourage young people who were politicized by the election of President Barack Obama to continue mobilizing. We covered songs from the 1960s and ’70s by artists like Nina Simone and Curtis Mayfield as inspiration and a blueprint. They marched. They wrote songs. They met with political leaders. They provided financial support. They risked arrest. Today, I am part of a generation of artists who benefit from unprecedented access to our fans. Tools like Twitter and Facebook act as a megaphone, allowing us to speak directly and powerfully to millions of people. Yet our actions, or lack thereof, speak louder: 140 characters cannot excuse us of our obligation to stand up, sit in or march forward. Obama recently told the young activists gathered in the Oval Office to “think big, but go gradual.” His words reminded me of President Lyndon B. Johnson’s reluctance to tackle voting rights, as depicted in Selma. Despite Johnson’s qualms, civil rights activists refused to wait for a more convenient political time. They took to the streets and used grass-roots organization and the moral force of their argument to create better conditions so the legislation could pass. We can’t wait for gradual and incremental change. Our government is a democracy, by the people and for the people. It is time for the people to wake up, stand up and demand change. Nice. What do you think of what he had to say??

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John Legend Calls For Change In The Wake Of Ferguson And Eric Garner Rulings