Tag Archives: south-africa

Obama Delivers A Word On ‘Strange And Uncertain Times’ While Honoring Nelson Mandela’s Legacy

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Source: MARCO LONGARI / Getty While the current commander-in-chief panhandles for Russia, former President Barack Obama travelled to South Africa to commemorate the 100th birthday of  Nelson Mandela , one of his greatest inspirations. Obama travelled to Africa on Sunday where he first stopped in Kenya, the birthplace of his father. It is his first visit to Africa since leaving office in 2017. He delivered the speech on Tuesday a day before the official commemoration at the 16th annual Nelson Mandela Annual Lecture. During his speech, he warned against “strongman politics,” emphasized need for global diplomacy,  and delivered a message of hope directed at the youth. He began his speech recalling Mandela and his legacy. Obama derived many of his beliefs from Mandela–a man who changed the course of history as the first Black president of South Africa. Their lives, uniquely parallel, were not lost on the committee who asked Obama to speak at the conference. Prior to Obama’s speech Mandela’s wife, Graça Machel , told the crowd of more than 15,000 people that Obama is one of the “finest global leaders of the 21st century” and a “youthful symbol of transformative leadership.” Former Pres. Barack Obama: “Through his sacrifice and unwavering leadership, and perhaps most of all through his moral example, Mandela and the movement he led would come to signify something larger…the universal aspirations of dispossessed people all around the world.” pic.twitter.com/lq5vk3yyDV — ABC News (@ABC) July 17, 2018 Obama pulled from other impactful leaders before him mentioning Ghandi , Martin Luther King Jr ., and Abraham Lincoln –three men who used the art of oration to move the masses. Former President Obama: “I believe in Nelson Mandela’s vision. I believe in a vision shared by Gandhi and King and Abraham Lincoln. I believe in a vision… built on the premise that all people are created equal and they’re endowed by our creator with certain inalienable rights.” pic.twitter.com/m8lnutnkCH — CNN (@CNN) July 17, 2018 After Trump’s stunning joint press conference with Vladimir Putin on Monday where he refused to acknowledge a known fact–that Russian officials conspired and interceded in the 2016 election, critics and supporters on both sides of the aisle blasted the Trump with calls of treason and incompetence. Obama took a moment to acknowledge Trump’s repeated faux pas and Trump’s commitment to undoing his legacy. Former Pres. Obama: “Look around: strongman politics are ascendant…whereby elections and some pretense of democracy are maintained, the form of it, but those in power seek to undermine every institution or norm that gives democracy meaning.” https://t.co/ClI1zYlCd0 pic.twitter.com/eznFGB2kZD — ABC News (@ABC) July 17, 2018 And in true fashion, Obama also delivered a message of perseverance to the youth–the next generation of global leaders. Former Pres. Barack Obama to young leaders, “those hope carriers”: “Keep believing. Keep marching. Keep building. Keep raising your voice. Every generation has the opportunity to remake the world.” https://t.co/spcXtv2mpR pic.twitter.com/kLiLta2XlA — ABC News (@ABC) July 17, 2018 Obama ended his speech with a tone of unity and togetherness. He used a Mandela quote he previously summoned during the Charlottesville attacks in August. Former Pres. Obama concludes remarks in South Africa: “Madiba reminds us that no one is born hating another person because of the color of his skin.” “People must learn to hate. And if they can learn to hate, they can be taught to love.” https://t.co/spcXtv2mpR pic.twitter.com/krwf9jB16x — ABC News (@ABC) July 17, 2018 DON’T MISS: Trump Administration Reverses Obama-Era Guidelines On Race In College Admission Process These Are The 2020 Hopefuls Who Met With Barack Obama [ione_media_gallery src=”https://hellobeautiful.com” id=”3007343″ overlay=”true”]

Obama Delivers A Word On ‘Strange And Uncertain Times’ While Honoring Nelson Mandela’s Legacy

Obama Delivers A Word On ‘Strange And Uncertain Times’ While Honoring Nelson Mandela’s Legacy

Read the original:

Source: MARCO LONGARI / Getty While the current commander-in-chief panhandles for Russia, former President Barack Obama travelled to South Africa to commemorate the 100th birthday of  Nelson Mandela , one of his greatest inspirations. Obama travelled to Africa on Sunday where he first stopped in Kenya, the birthplace of his father. It is his first visit to Africa since leaving office in 2017. He delivered the speech on Tuesday a day before the official commemoration at the 16th annual Nelson Mandela Annual Lecture. During his speech, he warned against “strongman politics,” emphasized need for global diplomacy,  and delivered a message of hope directed at the youth. He began his speech recalling Mandela and his legacy. Obama derived many of his beliefs from Mandela–a man who changed the course of history as the first Black president of South Africa. Their lives, uniquely parallel, were not lost on the committee who asked Obama to speak at the conference. Prior to Obama’s speech Mandela’s wife, Graça Machel , told the crowd of more than 15,000 people that Obama is one of the “finest global leaders of the 21st century” and a “youthful symbol of transformative leadership.” Former Pres. Barack Obama: “Through his sacrifice and unwavering leadership, and perhaps most of all through his moral example, Mandela and the movement he led would come to signify something larger…the universal aspirations of dispossessed people all around the world.” pic.twitter.com/lq5vk3yyDV — ABC News (@ABC) July 17, 2018 Obama pulled from other impactful leaders before him mentioning Ghandi , Martin Luther King Jr ., and Abraham Lincoln –three men who used the art of oration to move the masses. Former President Obama: “I believe in Nelson Mandela’s vision. I believe in a vision shared by Gandhi and King and Abraham Lincoln. I believe in a vision… built on the premise that all people are created equal and they’re endowed by our creator with certain inalienable rights.” pic.twitter.com/m8lnutnkCH — CNN (@CNN) July 17, 2018 After Trump’s stunning joint press conference with Vladimir Putin on Monday where he refused to acknowledge a known fact–that Russian officials conspired and interceded in the 2016 election, critics and supporters on both sides of the aisle blasted the Trump with calls of treason and incompetence. Obama took a moment to acknowledge Trump’s repeated faux pas and Trump’s commitment to undoing his legacy. Former Pres. Obama: “Look around: strongman politics are ascendant…whereby elections and some pretense of democracy are maintained, the form of it, but those in power seek to undermine every institution or norm that gives democracy meaning.” https://t.co/ClI1zYlCd0 pic.twitter.com/eznFGB2kZD — ABC News (@ABC) July 17, 2018 And in true fashion, Obama also delivered a message of perseverance to the youth–the next generation of global leaders. Former Pres. Barack Obama to young leaders, “those hope carriers”: “Keep believing. Keep marching. Keep building. Keep raising your voice. Every generation has the opportunity to remake the world.” https://t.co/spcXtv2mpR pic.twitter.com/kLiLta2XlA — ABC News (@ABC) July 17, 2018 Obama ended his speech with a tone of unity and togetherness. He used a Mandela quote he previously summoned during the Charlottesville attacks in August. Former Pres. Obama concludes remarks in South Africa: “Madiba reminds us that no one is born hating another person because of the color of his skin.” “People must learn to hate. And if they can learn to hate, they can be taught to love.” https://t.co/spcXtv2mpR pic.twitter.com/krwf9jB16x — ABC News (@ABC) July 17, 2018 DON’T MISS: Trump Administration Reverses Obama-Era Guidelines On Race In College Admission Process These Are The 2020 Hopefuls Who Met With Barack Obama [ione_media_gallery src=”https://hellobeautiful.com” id=”3007343″ overlay=”true”]

Obama Delivers A Word On ‘Strange And Uncertain Times’ While Honoring Nelson Mandela’s Legacy

Back To Africa? Charlize Theron Considering Chunking Deuces To Trump’s ‘Merika To Keep Her Black Seeds Safe

Splash News Charlize Theron Says There Are Parts Of America That She Would Not Bring Her Black Children Chelsea Handler interviewed Charlize Theron for ELLE Magazine about her newest role as Marlo in the new Diablo Cody and Jason Reitman film Tully and she talked a lot about her kids and how racism in America has made her consider moving. CH: You’re raising two children of color. Obviously, coming from South Africa, you know a lot about racial inequality, but what are your thoughts on Black Lives Matter and our current climate? CT: Being raised during the apartheid era in South Africa made me so hyperaware of equality and human rights. Of course, I have two black kids, but that was always something I was passionate about. I don’t even know how to talk about the last year under our new administration. But racism is much more alive and well than people thought. We can’t deny it anymore. We have to be vocal. There are places in this country where, if I got a job, I wouldn’t take it. I wouldn’t travel with my kids to some parts of America, and that’s really problematic. There are a lot of times when I look at my kids and I’m like, If this continues, I might have to [leave America]. Because the last thing I want is for my children to feel unsafe. CH: It’s a tough conversation to have. CT: We’re not there yet, but trust me, we talk. I want them to know who they are, and I want them to be so fu***ng proud of who they are. Building confidence for them right now is an oath I made to myself when I brought them home. They need to know where they come from and be proud of that. But they’re going to have to know that it’s a different climate for them than it is for me, and how unfair that is. If I can do something about that, of course I’m going to. It definitely sounds like Charlize is a good protective parent riiiiiight? Have you considered moving because of American racism?

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Back To Africa? Charlize Theron Considering Chunking Deuces To Trump’s ‘Merika To Keep Her Black Seeds Safe

Barbie On Bardi Crime: Funniest (And PETTIEST) Reactions To The Spicy Nicki-Cardi Saga

Cardi didn’t kiss the Nicki’s ring just like Nicki didn’t kiss Kim’s? pic.twitter.com/XupdZBINp0 — Kazeem Famuyide (@RealLifeKaz) April 12, 2018 Hilariously Petty Reactions To Nicki Vs. Cardi, Vol. 1 There’s so many moving parts to this deliciously messy Nicki-Cardi saga –it’s all one big spicy sloppy joe sammich–and we probably don’t know what we think we know BUT it’s safe to confirm that the tweets and memes are the absolute BEST thing on the internet right now. Quavo when Nicki sent him that text about the Motorsport drama. pic.twitter.com/oREaIU4kS3 — Coontessa (@LowKei_) April 12, 2018 Peep the funniest (and PETTIEST) reactions to the spicy Nicki-Cardi saga on the flip.

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Barbie On Bardi Crime: Funniest (And PETTIEST) Reactions To The Spicy Nicki-Cardi Saga

Vicki Momberg Is First South African White Woman Sentenced For Verbal Racial Abuse Caught On Camera [Video]

(GETTY) Hardy-Har-Har! Vicki Momberg was caught on camera going ape-sh*t on a cop in his own homeland of South Africa after she was picked up for thieving. Welp, Vicki’s ass was just sentenced to 2-years in the bing. LOL Also, turn the page for the full rant video… Continue reading

Vicki Momberg Is First South African White Woman Sentenced For Verbal Racial Abuse Caught On Camera [Video]

(GETTY) Hardy-Har-Har! Vicki Momberg was caught on camera going ape-sh*t on a cop in his own homeland of South Africa after she was picked up for thieving. Welp, Vicki’s ass was just sentenced to 2-years in the bing. LOL Also, turn the page for the full rant video… Continue reading

Is This Cool Or Is Pops A Fool? Man Under Fire For Bungee Jumping With Toddler [Video]

The lil guy seems cool with it.

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Is This Cool Or Is Pops A Fool? Man Under Fire For Bungee Jumping With Toddler [Video]

Wait, Whet?! Elon Musk’s 72-Year-Old Father Says Having A Child With His Stepdaughter Was “God’s Plan”

Diego Donamaria/Getty Images for SXSW Errol Musk, 72, Has A 10-Month Old With His Stepdaughter Errol Musk, the father of tech billionaire Elon Musk, says it was “God’s plan’’ for him to father the child he had with his stepdaughter…yep, you read that right: stepdaughter. The 72-year-old recently told The Sunday Times of London  that his latest addition, 10-month-old Elliot, is an “exquisite child.” He also explains that he didn’t think of Elliot’s mom, Jana Bezuidenhout–who is 42 years younger than him–as his stepdaughter. According to the new father and longtime AARP member,  she was raised away from the family. Errol lives in South Africa, and married Jana’s mother, Heide, when his now baby mama was only 4-years-old. He explains that years later, after they split, “One thing led to another — you can call it God’s plan or nature’s plan.” When she told him she was pregnant, Errol assumed her ex was the father and insisted on a DNA test. It proved correctly that Errol is indeed the father. He said he helps support his 30-year-old stepdaughter and their son and sees them regularly, but he does not live with them. Elon spoke on his father to told Rolling Stone magazine last year saying, “My dad will have a carefully thought-out plan of evil” and flat out calling him a “terrible human being.”

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Wait, Whet?! Elon Musk’s 72-Year-Old Father Says Having A Child With His Stepdaughter Was “God’s Plan”

Colonizers Comeuppance: National Geographic Owns Up To Their Racist Piss Poor Past POV

KAREN BLEIER/AFP/Getty Images National Geographic Discusses Racist Past Coverage The new issue of National Geographic is dedicated to race — which is complicated by the fact that the magazine has a racist history. So, National Geographic’s EIC Susan Goldberg decided to fess up and face the publication’s problematic past head on: I’m the tenth editor of National Geographic since its founding in 1888. I’m the first woman and the first Jewish person—a member of two groups that also once faced discrimination here. It hurts to share the appalling stories from the magazine’s past. But when we decided to devote our April magazine to the topic of race, we thought we should examine our own history before turning our reportorial gaze to others. It’s not exactly an apology, but Goldberg goes on to detail how the magazine enlisted University of Virginia professor John Edwin Mason to dive into their archives and uncover exactly how racist they were: What Mason found in short was that until the 1970s National Geographic all but ignored people of color who lived in the United States, rarely acknowledging them beyond laborers or domestic workers. Meanwhile it pictured “natives” elsewhere as exotics, famously and frequently unclothed, happy hunters, noble savages—every type of cliché. Unlike magazines such as Life, Mason said, National Geographic did little to push its readers beyond the stereotypes ingrained in white American culture. We’ve seen those old issues of National Geographic but for a refresher, the article touches on how the magazine sent a writer and photographer to the coronation of Haile Selassie in Ethiopia in 1930, a time when the publication NEVER would have covered such an event in the United States or even allowed an African American person National Geographic membership. There’s also stuff like this: In 1941 National Geographic used a slavery-era slur to describe California cotton workers waiting to load a ship in California: “Pickaninny, banjos, and bales are like those you might see at New Orleans.” And this: In a full-issue article on Australia that ran in 1916, Aboriginal Australians were called “savages” who “rank lowest in intelligence of all human beings.” Goldberg also notes a 1962 story about South Africa completely fails to mention the massacre of 69 black South Africans by police in Sharpeville just two years before, not even bothering to consult black South Africans at all. Goldberg concludes by looking forward: In two years, for the first time in U.S. history, less than half the children in the nation will be white. So let’s talk about what’s working when it comes to race, and what isn’t. Let’s examine why we continue to segregate along racial lines and how we can build inclusive communities. Let’s confront today’s shameful use of racism as a political strategy and prove we are better than this… We hope you will join us in this exploration of race, beginning this month and continuing throughout the year. Sometimes these stories, like parts of our own history, are not easy to read. But as Michele Norris writes in this issue, “It’s hard for an individual—or a country—to evolve past discomfort if the source of the anxiety is only discussed in hushed tones.” Do you think that she said ENOUGH though? It’s one thing to say she’s not comfortable with the magazine’s past, but should she and the magazine’s publishers be MORE APOLOGETIC? What do you think? Hit the flip for a glimpse of what the Race issue will touch on.

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Colonizers Comeuppance: National Geographic Owns Up To Their Racist Piss Poor Past POV

Tamika Mallory Responds To Nation Of Islam Controversy: ‘Wherever My People Are Is Where I Must Be’

Editor’s note :  Activist Tamika Mallory has faced backlash in recent weeks for attending  Saviour’s Day,  an annual gathering held by the Nation of Islam in Chicago last month.  In an exclusive op-ed for NewsOne , the Women’s March co-chair addresses the criticism, her connection to the event and her commitment to building an “intersectional movement. Source: Dimitrios Kambouris / Getty I proudly serve as a leader for one of the largest women’s advocacy organizations in the world. For that reason, my recent presence at the Nation of Islam’s Saviour’s Day convocation troubled some of the very people who I have fought for and worked alongside for most of my life. I have heard the pain and concerns of my LGBTQAI siblings, my Jewish friends and Black women (including those who do and those who don’t check off either of those other boxes.) I affirm the validity of those feelings, and as I continue to grow and learn as both an activist and as a woman, I will continue to grapple with the complicated nature of working across ideological lines and the question of how to do so without causing harm to vulnerable people. I didn’t expect my presence at Saviour’s Day to lead anyone to question my beliefs, especially considering that I have been going to this event regularly for over 30 years. I first went with my parents when I was just a little girl, and would begin attending on my own after my son’s father was murdered nearly 17 years ago. In that most difficult period of my life, it was the women of the Nation of Islam who supported me and I have always held them close to my heart for that reason.   I am the same woman who helped to build an intersectional movement that fights for the rights of all people and stands against hatred and discrimination of all forms. I am the same person today that I was before Saviour’s Day, which begs the question – why are my beliefs being questioned now? I was raised in activism and believe that as historically oppressed people, Blacks, Jews, Muslims and all people must stand together to fight racism, anti-Semitism and Islamophobia. I believe that LGBTQAI people are not an abomination or a creation of man, but simply people, and that religion is not to be used as a tool to abuse, divide, harm, bully or intimidate. Where my people are is where I must also be. I go into difficult spaces. I attend meetings with police and legislators—the very folks so much of my protest has been directed towards. I’ve partnered and sat with countless groups, activists, religious leaders and institutions over the past 20 years. I’ve worked in prisons as well as with present and former gang members. It is impossible for me to agree with every statement or share every viewpoint of the many people who I have worked with or will work with in the future. As I do not wish to be held responsible for the words of others when my own history shows that I stand in opposition to them, I also do not think it is fair to question anyone who works with me, who supports my work and who is a member of this movement because of the ways that I may have fallen short here or in any other instance. My fellow Women’s March leaders believe that we can be the bridge to connect different groups in the name of our shared liberation. We don’t just step into difficult spaces, we create new ones. I am guided by the loving principles of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. , though I have fallen short of them at times. And it is with the belief that “non-violence seeks to win friendship and understanding” and “non-violence seeks to defeat injustice, not people” that we organized a march on January 21, 2017, that 5 million people participated in worldwide; and we have been guided by those values the whole way through. It is my intention to walk the tradition of Dr . Dorothy Height , successor to Mary McLeod Bethune as President of the National Council of Negro Women. In 1995, she faced criticism for participating in the Million Man March, which was organized by the Nation of Islam. Financial support was withheld from her organization, and there were attempts to bully and intimidate her. Nevertheless, she stood strong and proudly addressed the massive crowd of Black people who gathered on the National Mall. Her first words? “I am here because you are here.” I also take cues from my mentor, Hazel N. Dukes , President of the New York State Conference of the NAACP, who has brought together Muslims, Blacks and Jewish people and clergy from all denominations. Her office and her home are open to gang members, teen mothers and formerly incarcerated people as well. Coalition work is not easy, and these women have operated from a place of authentic love for all people. My work requires an operational unity that is sometimes extremely painful and uncomfortable, even for me. But I push forward even when I am personally conflicted because our people are more important. – Tamika D. Mallory, Freedom Fighter DON’T MISS: 5 Reasons This Year’s Women’s March Is So Meaningful To Black Women SpeakHER Podcast Episode 1: Black Lives Matter Co-Founder, Patrisse Cullors [ione_media_gallery src=”https://hellobeautiful.com” id=”2975722″ overlay=”true”]

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Tamika Mallory Responds To Nation Of Islam Controversy: ‘Wherever My People Are Is Where I Must Be’