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As a Jewish woman, this anti-Semitic photo is a reminder of the pervasive threat of hate in 2020

In the midst of racial equality protests following the murder of George Floyd, a recent photo of college students with drawn-on swastikas on their shoulders surfaced—bringing me to tears.

It’s hard to imagine Ryann Milligan, a Penn State student, who has been identified in a change.org petition, stands with her friends smiling proud, showing off their swastikas and anti-Semitism. All over the country, people are angry and hurting. These egregious acts tear us further apart.


The photo reminds me of the first time I saw a swastika tattoo. It was 2007, and I had just turned 21 years old, entering into my junior year at Temple University. I was moving into a new apartment in Philadelphia, bright-eyed and hopeful to be a journalist and graduate soon. My roommate at the time was dating a sweet guy, someone I had met through social circles and lived down the hall from me on campus the year before. He invited his friend, someone I had never met, to help us move all the heavy furniture. It was a sweltering day in Center City, temperatures nearing 100 degrees, pearlescent sweat mustaches dotted our upper lips and perspired our faces. The friend I never met before, peeled off his shirt, leaving his white chest exposed. There it was—the hooked cross swastika tattoo of oppression and symbol of hatred— right in front of me.

I stood there, alone with him, looking at this large swastika near his right shoulder. It was an immediate gut punch. I wondered if he knew I was Jewish? If he found out, would he harm me? Does he hate black people too? I thought about all the times I read about people like him. All the racism, prejudice, xenophobia and white supremacy that’s continued to grow across the globe. I remembered my recent trip to Israel and the six million Jews who died in the Holocaust. What about my great grandmother—she was 13 years old when she escaped Nazi Germany on a boat after her entire family was slaughtered in a concentration camp. I thought about all the Jews who have been discriminated against for centuries.

I was silent for a few minutes, but those minutes felt like hours. A phone went off. I ignored it. I stared at him a little longer. “You going to answer it?” he asked me. I gripped the cell phone to my chest. “You know I’m Jewish,” I blurted out. He looked perplexed. I pointed to the swastika. “Oh, that,” he said. “I got dared to get that one night. I was really drunk. It doesn’t mean anything to me.” I don’t know what offended and enraged me more—that he dismissed it or that he didn’t understand why it was a big deal.

He clearly knew very little about the history of Nazism. I felt like it was my responsibility to strengthen his understanding of what it meant. Knowledge was my way of responding to the hate and anti-Semitism. I told him how horrible it made me feel. I explained how Jewish people and black people take that symbol as a sucker punch in the face. To my surprise, he listened and then apologized. He told me he would get it covered up immediately. I hope he did.

Things like this continue to happen in our country. Let’s not forget, less than three years ago, hundreds of white supremacists and neo-Nazis marched the streets of Charlottesville, Va., in the “Unite the Right” rally, protesting the removal of a statue of Confederate general Robert E. Lee. They brandished weapons and lit tiki torches, performing Nazi salutes and chanting “Jews will not replace us.”

The rally turned violent when white supremacist James Field Jr. steered his Dodge Challenger into a peaceful crowed of counterprotesters, killing Heather Heyer and injuring many others. There was also the off-the-rails press conference with President Trump and his infamous quote: “You had some very fine people on both sides.” It’s difficult for things to actually change when the leader of our country doesn’t fully condemn racism.

Seeing that picture of those young women really brought me back to that day in 2007. That was twelve years ago, but what has really changed? According to the NY Times, the Anti-Defamation League statistics reveal that anti-Semitism has more than doubled in the United States in 2018 over 2015. The question begs why would these young college girls do this? What were they thinking? It could be that they don’t know better. Maybe they were raised like this. Maybe it was supposed to be a joke. Who knows.

The University responded to the image in a tweet stating, “We are disgusted by the behavior portrayed, which does not reflect our values. It is deeply troubling that as a society, we today are still facing racism.” They also mentioned that they will continue to speak out against hateful speech, but they don’t have the power to expel students over it, even if it is reprehensible. “But the University does have the power to condemn racism and address those who violate our values.” However, the Change.org petition is asking for Milligan’s removal at the college, which has garnered over 120,000 signatures so far.

In a time when our country is in turmoil, strife and demanding change, this can be a learning experience. When the women wash away the black ink swastikas on their skin, I hope they think about the visceral impact it’s caused others. I can promise you that pain won’t wash away as fast. Maybe they’ll think about their actions—let’s hope it’s tattooed inside their brain. At least, this time, the ink wasn’t permanent.

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Please, take your knee off my neck.

Many days, I find myself mesmerized by my daughter’s brilliant eyes and vibrant confidence. She’s enchanting, warm, and outspoken. I feel privileged to know her and love her. However, there are also many days I look at her, and far too often, think, “I am thankful that she does not look like me.”


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My daughter is biracial.

Even at three, we’ve already had many interesting conversations about race. Caroline sees herself as brown — dark brown. When we color our family, she picks the richest shade of mahogany and gleefully squiggles lines and circles to represent who she is. If you were to ask her who she looks like, she’ll adamantly vocalize that she looks exactly like mommy, and is utterly confused by anyone who would say otherwise. It warms my heart that she views my skin as beautiful. And I agree. However, I constantly worry about the day when she realizes society feels otherwise.

Each day, I wake up fully aware of my brown skin. Every day.

I intentionally style my hair, walk, and speak, knowing how others might perceive me as a black woman while in the grocery store, at work, or in the gym. I am entirely aware of my race, as I’ve spent my entire life as an outsider. The token person of color in a world that is mostly white.

  • I remember being shown out of a craft store in elementary school as the shopkeeper screamed, “I don’t want nigger children in my store.”
  • In high school, I reported that I was raped. The white man, whose sperm was found inside me, denied touching me. The detectives told me he was innocent and called me a liar. At that moment, I recall feeling powerless and worrying, “What’s the point of crying for help? Because, as a black woman, society will always value his words over mine.”
  • In college, I remember having to console friends after a swastika was carved into a classmate’s dorm room door at Miami University.
  • As a young adult, I’ve heard too many times to count, “You’re really pretty… for a black girl. But I can’t date black women.”
  • As an adult, I worry about the day when I may be stopped, in my mostly white neighborhood, not because I did anything wrong, but simply because I look like I do not belong.

Now, before you draw your eyes away from this message:

  • If you have turned on your TV and only see a mob instead of protesters — this message is for you.
  • If you have shrugged your shoulders at President Trump’s tweets as “not that bad,” — this message is for you.
  • If you’ve replied to reading “Black Lives Matters” with “Well, White Lives Matters too,” — this message is for you.
  • If in those quiet moments in your home, you’ve thought, “But I’m not a racist. I don’t see color.” — this is for you.
  • If you have watched the video of Amy Cooper in Central Park and thought, “I could never be her,” — this is for you.

To my white friends, family members, and neighbors — this article is for you.


miro.medium.com

November 9th, 2016, I woke up with swollen eyes that were still stinging from hours of crying. The type of cry where your entire body aches and you simply feel worn — even hours after finally managing to catch your breath. I was sitting in our newly painted nursery, staring at the light yellow walls, and reflecting on the news of the day — Donald Trump Wins the 2016 Election.

I’m not writing this as a political statement — but as a plea to be heard. As it would merely be irresponsible of me to not mention the pivotal catalyst for my more vocal advocacy over the last several years.

I write this as someone who has defined her political views as conservative. I’ve worked for Republican leaders and have spent the majority of my adult life voting for and supporting candidates who believe in free enterprise and less government intervention in the lives of everyday Americans. Which, frankly, is all the more reason why I’m sharing these thoughts.

The 2016 election was devastating. It was devastating because I genuinely believed that it was impossible for someone who flooded the airwaves with so much hate could then become the leader of the country I love. A person who continues to falsely claim five young black men known as the “Central Park Five” are guilty of sexually assaulting a jogger in 1989, who is okay with continuously sexually assaulting women, and who belittles immigrants from “shithole” countries.

Like me, President Trump descended from immigrants. However, his continuous statements about immigrants from mostly black and brown countries are repugnant. It’s hard not to be offended when the President of the United States says that my parents didn’t deserve the opportunity to achieve the American Dream, like his, simply because of their country of birth.

Nevertheless, as I reflected on this new era, that we as Americans were about to venture into, I blamed myself.

The struggles of victims of violent crimes, immigrants, women, and people of color are real, and our voices need to be heard. However, I sat there crying and thinking, I did not do a good enough job sharing my experience as a human. I cried, thinking perhaps if I had more conversations that were open about my life and my experiences, maybe others would have a heightened sense of empathy and awareness for people like me.

As irrational as it sounds, I blamed myself.


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With Caroline in my arms and only a few days old, I promised her I would not remain silent. I would be fearless in the face of adversity, and I would leverage every tool I had to be a better and more vocal advocate for myself and others. I promised her I would do everything I could to change the world. I promised this to my firstborn child, hoping that her experience as a black child would be better than mine.

We are approaching the four-year mark of this promise, and last night I had another one of those cries. I believe my therapist would say this is good, as showing tears and anger is not one of my strengths. Nevertheless, it was another night of hyperventilating and hot tears as I realized we have so much further to go.

The dismissive and indifference highlighted by some of my friends and family members who continue to look the other way when it comes to people of color, victims of violent crimes, and immigrants must stop. I need you to take a moment to understand what it feels like to walk in my shoes, in my daughter’s shoes, and in #GeorgeFloyd‘s shoes.

  • I need you to acknowledge and take the time to understand what is at the core of our anguish and concerns.
  • I need you to realize there are systemic injustices that black and brown people face every day in our country.
  • I need you to understand and acknowledge institutionalized racism exists.

The issues listed above impact us all.

However, how can it be that a photo from 2020 can look like a photo from 1967? How can you then look at the humans marching in America’s streets and dismiss them all as foolish thieves?

Do not let the small number of individuals who are using this moment and demonstrating violence as an easy excuse to dismiss the pain and injustice of an entire community. We are expressing raw anguish because we continue to share our stories, and we are not being heard.

You’ve told black athletes to stay in their lane. You’ve told black comedians to focus on jokes. You’ve mocked black politicians who focus on race as a public health crisis to look elsewhere.

I ask, who is supposed to speak out about our plight, and when will you hear us?

  • Imagine being a young black girl and receiving harsher discipline at school because you’re perceived to be unruly, loud, and unmanageable. #BlackGirlsMatter
  • Imagine what it is like to go on a run and die because you don’t look like you belong. #AhmaudArbery #LivingWhileBlack
  • Imagine what it is like to be violently assaulted and being accused of making it up. #SophiaFifner #MeToo
  • Imagine what it is like to be unfairly convicted of a crime that if you were just a few shades lighter would be a misdemeanor #FerrellScott
  • Imagine what it is like to be black and to die simply because you exist. #BreonnaTaylor

People who look like me are living with this injustice every day, and we are tired. The only difference between me and the protester’s face you see on Fox News is that our anguish is released in different but equally valuable forms.

I have the privilege of access to health care, education, and resources to channel my frustrations through volunteerism, legislation, and countless therapy sessions. However, my plight is no different than the faces of the black and brown people you see on your screen. I am them, and they are me.

We are both living in a world where, whether we take a knee or protest in the streets, our concerns are not being heard — and we can not breathe.

I realize every person’s journey for understanding humanity takes different shapes in forms. Some jump headfirst completely embracing words and phrases like #blacklivesmatters, intersectionality, and implicit bias. However, for others, you may need a more gradual approach.

For those who need a more gradual approach, here are a few suggestions:

  1. Actively listen more than you speak
  2. Admit your bias and check your privilege
  3. Learn with intentionality to understand people who do not share your same experience.

Change cannot happen in a vacuum. I refuse to live another 50 years, waiting for justice. I refuse to silently sit by waiting for you to listen. Therefore, I’ll close with this simple ask.

Please, take your knee off my neck and help me breathe.


This article originally appeared on Medium. You can read it here.

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‘The Mandalorian’ Season 2 Will Have Next Level Action Thanks To ‘Extraction’ Director Sam Hargrave

The first season of The Mandalorian had no shortage of incredible action scenes that easily won over Star Wars fans. (Baby Yoda didn’t hurt either.) But with the upcoming second season expanding Mando’s world even further, showrunner Jon Favreau knew the action had to expand with it, so he secretly brought in Extraction director Sam Hargrave to take things to the next level.

In an interview with Collider, Hargrave revealed that Favreau reached out while he was still working on post-production for Extraction. That movie had yet to deliver Chris Hemsworth’s Tyler Rake to Netflix, but Hargrave was already a known quantity thanks to his work with Marvel. Not only was he as a stunt coordinator for several MCU films, but he was literally a stunt double for Captain America. In short, the guy knows his stuff when it comes to action scenes, and it’s that kind of expertise that Favreau wanted for season two of The Mandalorian.

We worked closely with the stunt team there, with Bryan Watson and the team that had done the first season; they did a really great job. You know, it was just to bring a little extra perspective, add a few things, things I’ve learned while working on superhero movies, little tricks which make the performances easier and using visual effects to enhance certain things. Just bringing a little bit of experience and knowledge to where we could take it to another level and up the ante. The next season is really, really cool. The way the story arcs is really cool. So we tried to have the action represent that and take it to the next level. I think we did that.

The Mandalorian Season 2 will premiere in October on Disney+.

(Via Collider)

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DaBaby And Roddy Ricch’s ‘Rockstar’ Rises To The Top Of The Hot 100

Here’s a fun fact: In 2019, the year’s three longest-charting No. 1 songs — Lil Nas X’s “Old Town Road,” Lizzo’s “Truth Hurts,” and Ariana Grande’s “7 Rings” — spent a combined 34 weeks on top of the Hot 100, or about two thirds of the year. This year’s Hot 100 has been much more of a revolving door situation, though. Outside of Roddy Ricch’s “The Box,” which was No. 1 for 11 weeks between January and March, no song has spent more than two straight weeks on top. In fact, there has been a new No. 1 song in each of the past seven weeks. That includes the newly revealed June 13 chart, on which DaBaby and Ricch’s “Rockstar” is the latest chart-dominating single.

This is DaBaby’s first No. 1 single and Ricch’s second following “The Box.” Blame It On Baby, the album that “Rockstar” calls home, was also No. 1, albeit on the Billboard 200 chart.

If a song titled “Rockstar” at No. 1 sounds familiar, it’s because this happened fairly recently: Post Malone’s 21 Savage-featuring single “Rockstar” also topped the Hot 100, beginning in October 2017. The last time a song with a repeat title was No. 1 was Adele’s “Hello,” which topped the chart in November 2015, three decades after Lionel Richie’s “Hello” was No. 1 in May 1984.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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SiR Delivers A Sultry Cover Of The Isley Brothers’ ‘Footsteps In The Dark’ For Black Music Month

Top Dawg Entertainment singer SiR has become one of the standard bearers for modern R&B by combining his forward-facing outlook with a fervent respect for the history of the genre. A prime example is his latest release for RCA Records’ Black Sounds Beautiful — a multimedia campaign celebrating Black Music Month — a smooth cover of the Isley Brothers’ 1978 single “Footsteps In The Dark.”

The cover features live instrumentation and a video directed by Peter Da Silva looking in on SiR’s studio recording process. It’s his third video of the year after “You Can’t Save Me” and “John Redcorn,” both from his 2019 album Saving Summer. SiR also appears in the video for his brother D Smoke’s “Lights On” alongside their fellow Inglewood native Issa Rae, who highlighted SiR in an episode of her HBO show Insecure as the musical guest for her character’s Inglewood Block Party. SiR also delivered an encore performance for Colors, singing “Wires In The Way.”

The Black Sounds Beautiful campaign will run throughout the month of June 2020, featuring concert footage and music videos on YouTube, artists’ commentaries on Instagram, and a Black Music Month 2020 playlist on streaming platforms highlighting RCA artists from throughout the label’s history.

Watch SiR’s ‘Footsteps In The Dark’ cover above.

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Natasha Cloud Announced A New Sneaker Deal With Converse

For years, Converse was the biggest brand in basketball, inking endorsement deals with the biggest names in the NBA. Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, Isiah Thomas, and just about every major star in the league in the early 80s was partnered with the Converse brand.

Now, 30-plus years later, Converse — a subsidiary of Nike now — is making its way back into the hoops scene and announced their latest athlete signing on Monday, as they’ve added Washington Mystics guard Natasha Cloud.

Cloud is coming off the best season of her career, averaging 9.0 points and 5.6 assists per game for the WNBA champion Mystics, upping her performance in the playoffs to the tune of 13.1 points and 6.2 assists per game. Not only is Cloud a rising star on the court, but the 28-year-old has found herself as a leading voice off of it, becoming a prominent figure in the WNBA in speaking out on social issues, most recently penning a piece for The Players Tribune on racial injustice and the importance of everyone to speak out on the issue.

That piece is referenced in Converse’s announcement, as they pledged $25,000 to an organization in Philly fighting for racial justice, and they are clearly bringing her on not just for her on-court abilities but because of her strong positions off the court. As Cloud told The Washington Post recently, her stance is clear, she’s going to speak out and use her platform, aligning herself with brands that are willing to commit to her passions off the floor as much as on it.

“A lot of times, athletes are afraid to use that platform in fear of consequences and not getting sponsors and getting backlash and not necessarily wanting to take on that role model role,” she said. “But at the same time, we do a disservice by not doing those things.”

Cloud joins Kelly Oubre Jr. and Draymond Green as recent signings to the Converse brand and will give them a major voice and presence in the women’s game.