Women (15)

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March 7 (Reuters) - Five women who said they were denied abortions despite grave risk to their lives or fetuses sued Texas on Monday, in the first apparent case of pregnant women suing over curbs imposed after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June.

The lawsuit asks a state court in Austin, the state's capital, for a ruling clarifying that a doctor cannot be prosecuted for providing an abortion if, in the doctor's good faith judgment, the abortion is necessary to treat an emergency that threatens a pregnant patient's life or health.

Texas, like most of the 13 states with abortion bans, allows exceptions when a physician finds that there is a medical emergency. But the lawsuit, backed by the abortion rights group Center for Reproductive Rights, says that the law is unclear, leading doctors to refuse to perform abortions even when the exception should apply for fear of losing their licenses and facing up to 99 years in prison.

Texas banned abortion shortly after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned its landmark 1973 ruling in Roe v. Wade, which had guaranteed abortion rights nationwide.

Four of the women in Monday's lawsuit had to travel out of state to obtain abortions in order to avoid serious medical complications. A fifth was hospitalized in Texas with a premature rupture of membranes, which meant that her fetus could not be saved, but was not given an abortion until she developed a severe infection that required her to stay in an intensive care unit, according to the complaint.

#texas #abortion #abortionlawsuit #texasabortionlawsuit #abortionban #roevwade #supremecourt #clarencethomas #texassuedoverabortionban #fetus #pregnancy #righttochoose #gregabbott #governorabbott #texasgovernor #abortionclinic #lifeordeath #emergencysurgery #lifeatrisk #babies #premature

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DETROIT (AP) — China Cochran met Kamala Harris at a campaign event in Detroit last year and was swept away by her ambition, charisma and leadership. She hoped the California senator would advance in politics.

So when Joe Biden named Harris on Tuesday as his running mate — making her the first Black woman on a major party’s presidential ticket — Cochran wasn’t just struck by the history. It represented a full-circle moment for Black women, who for generations have fought for their voices to be heard and political aspirations recognized.

“It tells Black girls that they can be president,” said Cochran, who recently ran for state representative in Michigan. “If you look back at Shirley Chisholm, she ran so that Kamala could lead at this moment. I think it’s important for us to look at that and see other young women of color realize that they can go after their dreams and really make change in our world.”

Harris’ selection is historic in many senses. It also marks the first time a person of Asian descent is on the presidential ticket. Born to a Jamaican father and Indian mother, she often speaks of her deep bond with her late mother, whom she has called her single biggest influence.

Harris’ boundary-breaking potential serves as an affirmation of the growing power of voters of color, according to nearly a dozen interviews with political strategists, potential voters and activists.

“Joe Biden understood this historic moment required a tough, smart and respected public servant,” said Donna Brazile, who managed Al Gore’s campaign in 2000 and served as Democratic National Committee chair in 2016.

Black women in particular helped rescue Biden’s campaign earlier this year by delivering a resounding victory in the South Carolina primary, powering him to the Democratic nomination. As he prepares for the general election, Biden is trying to recreate the multi-racial and cross-generational coalition that twice sent Barack Obama to the White House.

That will hinge on Black voters in battleground states like Michigan to turn out in force in November.

“We’ve seen from an electoral process what happens if we don’t vote, that can mean the difference between winning and losing a state,” said Karen Finney, a senior Democratic strategist and spokesperson for Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign. “We’re in this moral inflection point of this country and Vice President Biden is someone who’s talked about healing the soul of our country and certainly one of the ways to do that is to uplift the voices of Black women.”

Strategists said that Harris will help that effort.

“It sends a strong signal about not only the current state of our party but what the future of our party looks like,” said Antjuan Seawright, a veteran political strategist in South Carolina. “And what better way to reward a group of people who have been the political glue in this party than to put an African American woman on the ticket.”

Ravi Perry, Howard University’s political science chair, said Harris’ elevation also represents the first time that a graduate of a historically Black college or university will be represented on the ticket. Harris graduated from the Washington-based university and is a member of the storied Black sorority Alpha Kappa Alpha.

While Harris’ selection has largely been applauded among the Democratic Party and voters, some have raised concerns. She joins the ticket at a time of immense racial tensions and crises in the nation. The coronavirus pandemic has disproportionately affected Black Americans and other people of color. Protests against systemic racism and brutality are top of mind for potential voters.

And Harris’ record as California attorney general and district attorney in San Francisco could make it difficult for Biden to galvanize support among younger Black and Latino voters.

Lindsey Roland, a 31-year-old Black woman and Michigan real estate agent, said that background gave her pause.

“While I fully appreciate her scope of responsibilities while she was in that role, I still think she was empowered to stand up more for minorities, and I think it was just a really missed opportunity,” she said. “But I absolutely will be voting. We have far too much at stake. And for me, as a mother, I’m frightened and I just feel like another four years with this administration will be catastrophic.”

Some of the nation’s leading activists who have long fought for criminal justice reform see Harris as a potential ally in their push for change. Color of Change President Rashad Robinson said Harris has evolved over time and declared herself a “progressive prosecutor” who backs reform.

“What I appreciate about her is that she’s been willing to listen and willing to evolve, and she’s been willing to put legislation behind that evolution and policy platforms behind that evolution,” Robinson said. “Yes, I think there will be very real things that people will raise, but I think that she has been listening and working to address those things.”

Alicia Garza, the co-founder of the Black Lives Matter movement, said the nation is in a moment where “deep and profound change is needed.”

“For some activists, it is important that a Black woman is represented on this ticket, and for other activists, substance is going to be much more important than symbolism,” Garza said. “The trick of getting people out to vote will be a successful combination of the two. This is an incredible moment of opportunity, it’s a moment that is rife with possibility and I’m still hopeful that this newly announced ticket will rise to meet the moment.”

It’s also not lost on many that the selection comes nearly 100 years after the 19th Amendment was ratified, giving women the right to vote.

But for Black women, the freedom to vote didn’t come until much later, part of a historical pattern of being denied justice offered to others.

And for Nse Ufot, CEO of the New Georgia Project, that’s a call for action and a reminder how much more work needs to be done. Ahead of the election, her organization is working to register more than 1 million Black, Latino and Asian American voters. So, far they’ve registered 425,000 in the state.

“It took an additional 45 years of organizing to secure the rights to vote for Black women and other women of color,” Ufot said. “And so, you know, there is a long history of, sort of, uncredited work. I think the Biden-Harris ticket is going to make it easier for us to have conversations, particularly in places like Georgia’s rural Black Belt about why they need to vote.”

Melanie Campbell, president and CEO of the National Coalition on Black Civic Participation, was overcome with emotion after the announcement.

She wished her late mother could have lived to see the historic moment. She also wished that Black women who came before Harris — civil rights activists Fannie Lou Hamer, Dorothy Height, Ella Baker and many others — could know how their legacy and hard work culminated into this powerful moment.

“I thought about my mother, my grandmother. I thought about my sisters. I thought about in this moment that as a Black woman, we are seen,” Campbell said. “This moment is more than about the VP slot. It affirms Black women and all we did for this country. I’m glad I lived to see it.”

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Video After The Jump

UFC fighter Cynthia Calvillio trains at the American Kickboxing Academy (AKA), as well as lightweight champion Khabib Nurmagomedov.

Calvillio was asked by The Score if it bothered her that Khabib won't train directly with woman because of his Muslim faith and she said it doesn't.

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Video After The Jump

Gemini P drops off an official music video for his single titled "She Wit It."

Directed by Stan Jones

Apple Music: https://apple.co/2BuHNnV
Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2E95QKR
Tidal: https://bit.ly/2Svlwkv
Google Play: https://bit.ly/2TUiF1b

(Follow Gemini P)
Instagram: https://goo.gl/u9AxfD
Facebook: https://goo.gl/y888Ge
Twitter: https://goo.gl/6BWo1o

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Video After The Jump

Trick Daddy says whatever he wants to, whenever he wants to, but it's highly likely he offended a large portion of his female African American fan base Tuesday, October 25, following his Instagram PSA.

The veteran Miami rapper praised the virtues of white and Spanish women and told black women that they are losing ground to them.

"These Spanish and these white hoes, they done started getting finer than a motherfucker,” the 43-year old "Shut Up" rapper says in the video. “Y’all black hoes better tighten up. I’m telling you, tighten up. Y’all doing all that extra shit for nothing. You not achieving nothing, bitch. You get y’all ass done, ya titties done, ya paying $150 to get your makeup done just to go to a local club, bitch. Tighten up, hoe. These Spanish and these white hoes getting very spiffy on y’all. They fuck around and learn how to fry chicken you hoes is useless.”

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Ummm ... thoughts?

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Mann E. Styles

Immature

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VIEW ON YOUTUBE

Mann E Styles get the help from Kansas Cities Phenom & Baltimore's own Tiddy Da Great to paint 3 different pictures on how they see Immature women.... Great song great track!! Another Hung Jury Entertainment masterpiece... Stay tuned for more from Mann E Styles

Get your next project distributed at @Raphenom.

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Dre Buchanan

Walking White women

(dont even ask bro) lmao

LISTEN/DOWNLOAD HERE

www.ivyleaguestudio.com

ivyleagueteam@gmail.com
https://soundcloud.com/ivyleaguestudios

Twitter
@Ivyleagueteam
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12348736459?profile=originalVideo After The Jump

Omarion has to be wondering why certain people seem hell bent on ruining his career.

The singer has been dogged by rumors regarding his sexuality recently. First former B2K member Raz-B and his brother Ricky Romance declared the "Ice Box" singer was homosexual. Then on Saturday (January 8) a press release was sent out announcing Omarion was bisexual.

Omarion says the press release was fake, but here is what it said:
“I pride myself in being an honest, God Fearing, respectful man. I have kept my personal life private and wanted to keep it that way. Unfortunately, other’s are interested in profiting from my anguish; so before they can do that, i will clarify things. I am not at all what certain ex-band members are trying to paint me as, I am however a
respectable, mature, proud, bisexual man.”


Omarion, who was in Japan at the time immediately denied being responsible for the press release, he tweeted his 350,000 twitter followers assuring them the press release was fake.

 

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Soon afterwards, O's PR team sent out an official press release.

"The previously released statement regarding Omarion is false and was generated for negative publicity by an unknown person. Omarion will not contribute to anything negative said or done against him. Omarion respects all of his fans, no matter religion, sexuality, or race."

The rumors got so out of hand, Omarion became a trending topic on Twitter. Frustrated, he called into Hot 97 from Japan to speak with Funkmaster Flex and once and for all clear up the rumors.

"First and foremost let me say I did not release that statement. Whatever people like is their business, but I'm not gay or bisexual, I love women and that's just what it is." Omarion told Flex.

At this point nobody knows who sent out the fake press release, but check out the rest of what Omarion had to say about the situation to Funk Flex below.

 



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Nah, not really...lol

The young singer and the woman who's famous for being famous were doing a photo shoot in the Bahamas.

Kim better watch out though. Justin's rabid teen girl fans sent her death threats in May after the two hung out together at the White House Correspondents Dinner in Washington.


After the dinner, Kim jokingly tweeted "I officially have Bieber Fever!!!"

Bieber's fans didn't find the joke funny at all and shot back a few not so nice tweets of their own.

Check out a few of them:

@KimKardashian Justin Bieber is MINE!!!! Forget he now!! I HATE U!!! Kill ur self, baby!! :)

@kimkardashian does deserve hate, she looks like a B****, she is a b****. @justinbieber that b**** is sexy in ur eyes ?! omg :/

@KimKardashian's a b****, old 30-year-old pedophile who is dating with Justin Bieber. That hate that b****!


Gotta give it to the kid, he does have good taste in women even if he has no shot at getting them. Besides Kim K, he's also rumored to have crushes on Beyonce and Rihanna.

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New York Daily News Reports It's another first for this First Lady. Michelle Obama made her debut Wednesday on Forbes magazine's annual list of the world's 100 most powerful women, taking the 40th spot. "Not only is she a First Lady, she's the first African-American First Lady and that accords her a certain amount of power," said Heidi Brown, a ForbesWoman staffer who helped compile the list. When ranking the women, Brown said they take into consideration how much attention a candidate gathers - and Michele Obama is a media magnet. "She's done a lot to get her message out," Brown said. "She's been effective at reaching out not only to the media, but to regular people as well." Two years ago, then-First Lady Laura Bush was 60th on the Forbes list. Joining Michelle Obama on the Forbes list for the first time are other members of the still new Obama administration like Homeland Security honcho Janet Napolitano (51), SEC chief Mary Schapiro (55) and Health and Human Services head Kathleen Sebelius (56). Newly sworn-in Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor also debuted on list, in 54th place. Her fellow justice and New Yorker, Ruth Bader Ginsberg, was 48th. Sotomayor and Ginsberg may be the pride of New York, but Forbes deemed Indra Nooyi the city's most powerful woman. The chief executive officer of PepsiCo was ranked third - the same spot she occupied last year. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was 36th - down from the 28th spot she occupied on the list last year when she was a presidential candidate. Brown said another woman to watch for is Sallie Krawcheck (87), who after being forced out of Citigroup bounced back as Chief Executive for Global Wealth Management for Bank of America. Another high-powered New York executive, Mary Erdoes of J.P. Morgan, was ranked 100. This year's list does not include New York based media molls such as "Today" show host Meredith Viera, "CBS Evening News" anchor Katie Couric or "Good Morning America" co-host Diane Sawyer. Forbes included them on a separate list of media movers and shakers last month. "They wield a different a different kind of influence," Brown said. For the fourth straight year, German Chancellor Angela Merkel took the top spot, edging out Sheila Bair, the head of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and last year's runner-up. The cover girl this year was Internet queen Carol Bartz of Yahoo!, who was No. 12 on the list.
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Times Online Reports Eleven years after the British boxing authorities lost the argument against licensing women because they “bruised easily” and were made “unstable” by premenstrual tension, the fairer sex is on the brink of another victory in the equality fight. Olympic chiefs meeting in Berlin on Thursday are expected to admit women’s boxing to the summer Games with a debut at London 2012. It would be a landmark moment not only for the International Olympic Committee (IOC), a male-dominated members’ club renowned for oldfashioned attitudes, but for the development of an increasingly popular sport among women and girls not naturally drawn to organised physical activity. Advocates say that inclusion in the Olympics, where boxing is an amateur sport, is long overdue. It is the sole male-only summer discipline, after the pole vault and 3,000-metre steeplechase featured women at the 2000 and 2008 Games respectively. Rebecca Gibson, the England women’s boxing development manager, said: “Women should be allowed to have a go at whatever they want. Being an Olympic sport would give women the same aspiration as men.” The case for women’s boxing is driven by the sport’s international federation as well as Jacques Rogge, the IOC president and a former boxing doctor. A previous effort in 2005 failed after the IOC feared a lack of qualified talent would result in dangerous mismatches. Since then, the number of countries with women at the elite level has risen to 125. In England the number of registered female boxers has jumped from 50 in 2005 to 642. There are about 670 in Britain. Among them is Hannah Behanny, 22, from London, a double European bronze medallist and 2012 hopeful. She started boxercise aged 17 after being sent to a reform centre for violent behaviour. In a storyline to mirror the film Million Dollar Baby, she finally convinced a sceptical local coach to drop his male-only policy to train her. “The guys in my gym treat me as an equal but there are still some people stuck in the old school who think it shouldn’t happen,” she said. “It’s ignorance. It’s the men that get bashed up and bloodied. Women’s boxing is more strategic. I’ve never seen a girl get knocked out.” The Olympics would bring profile and funding to women’s boxing, which is high on the national fitness agenda. The Government is backing a return of non-contact boxing training to schools. Women’s boxing first appeared in London in the 1720s and was a demonstration sport at the 1904 Olympics before being banned.The professional ranks in the UK admitted women in 1998 after losing a sex discrimination case brought by Jane Couch, who argued it was no more dangerous for women than men despite a medical expert for the British Boxing Board of Control claiming that they were “too frail”. Ms Couch retired last December, aged 40, with five world titles and is now a promoter. The British Medical Association still campaigns for a ban on all boxing, male or female, on the ground that it can cause chronic brain damage, which accumulates over a career. All amateur boxers, male or female, have to wear head and groin guards. Women have the option of wearing breast pads. Gerry Willmott, a policeman who coaches women in Haringey, said: “Most people who see women’s boxing for the first time are surprised by the technical quality. “Women don’t have preconceived ideas, so are more prepared to learn the basics. They don’t get in the ring thinking they are Ali or Mayweather.” The admission of women’s boxing to the Olympics would give heart to the female ski jumpers still barred from the winter Games. It might also encourage male synchronised swimmers, who were approved by world swimming’s governing body in 2000 but have yet to compete in an Olympics, to eschew stereotypes to make 2012 the first truly gender-neutral Games.
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