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Black Conspiracy Theory 101: Did Robert F. Kennedy Predict A Black Man Would Be President In 40 Years?

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 On May 27, 1968, Kennedy gave a radio interview to “Voice Of America,” the largest U.S. international broadcaster, when he was the Attorney General in his brother’s, President y’s, administration. During his interview, as he pointed out all of the imperfections in America’s fabric regarding equal rights for Blacks, did he in fact make a bold proclamation[1] that he envisioned an African American occupying the same Oval Office that his brother once did?

Kennedy (aka Bobby or R.F.K.) was a powerful ally to the Black community, because he helped to invoke change in his reign as Attorney General during the Civil Rights era. In the fall of 1962, Kennedy sent thousands of federal troops to Oxford, Miss., to enforce a U.S. Supreme Court

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Last Updated on Wednesday, 12 June 2013 11:02

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Grace Colbert: Cheerios Ad Daughter Not Affected By Racism, Says Commercial ‘Fun To Make’ [VIDEO]

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Grace Colbert, the adorable 6-year-old actress who stars as the daughter in the recent — and unexpectedly controversial — Cheerio’s ad, sat down with her real parents, Janet and Christopher Colbert, for an interview with Thomas Roberts on MSNBC on Tuesday.

The confident little girl has not been negatively affected by the virulent racism that catapulted the 30-second spot to viral status. In fact, according to her mother, she thought everyone was focused on her “great smile.”

“America needs to see that this is just a way of life,” Grace’s dad Christopher said in the interview. “I wasn’t upset or anything. I was pretty much really excited about having this type of reaction so we can see where we still stand in America. But look out, America, because this is just reality.”

See full interview below:

 

 

As previously reported by NewsOne, the 30-second spot features an adorable bi-racial girl asking her mother if Cheerios is good for the heart. When her mother, who is White, confirms that the cereal is heart healthy, the little girl runs off with a delighted grin. In the next scene, we see her father, who is Black, awaken from a nap with Cheerios poured on his shirt over his heart.

 

Last Updated on Wednesday, 12 June 2013 11:16

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Ghetto Prom Dresses, and the biggest loser is ...

The graduating class of 2013 has been prepping for this moment since the start of high school. Outfits have been carefully selected, hair styled to perfection, limos rented and the family has gathered to make this one day, this one special night, one to remember. No, it's not graduation--it's prom. As special as this night is, there are the special few who have managed to make prom night a night of absolute ghetto-ness before they even stepped out the house. Click through the gallery for the 2013 Ratchet Prom Dress Award winners.



 


 



Last Updated on Wednesday, 12 June 2013 06:31

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President On Immigration: ‘Moment Is Now, Congress Needs To Act’

Obama Immigration Reform

Even though President Barack Obama (pictured at podium) said last week he wants to see immigration reform legislation passed by Congress by the end of summer[1], several amendments to the current Senate bill by Republicans risk deepening the division along party lines. Tuesday morning, the President showed support for commonsense reform legislation, aiming to address the hot-button immigration issue and encourage Senators to pass the bill.

SEE ALSO: Commerce Department Announce $6.3 Million Minority Business Grant Competition[2]

Representatives from law enforcement, business leaders, labor organizers, leaders of the interfaith community, and Republican- and- Democratic-elected officials who all want to see a fair bill passed joined President Obama onstage.

“This week, the Senate will consider a common-sense, bipartisan bill that is the best chance we’ve had in years to fix our broken immigration system,” said the President, speaking from the East Room of the White House. “To truly deal wi

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Last Updated on Wednesday, 12 June 2013 11:34

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Santa Monica shooting survivor: 'Thank God, I'm alive'

                                                                                                        By all accounts, suspected Santa Monica shooter John Zawahri was ready to inflict maximum harm.

He had multiple firearms and about 1,300 rounds of ammunition. Also, apparently, he had the capacity to kill.

Police say he killed his father and brother, along with three others, during a Friday afternoon rampage in Santa Monica, California.

But by some strokes of good luck, or because of quick thinking, Zawahri was not able to kill more.

"As soon as I looked him straight in the eye, I saw what he was going to do," said Deborah Fine.

She told CNN she saw the gunman pull over another woman and hold a rifle to her head.

 

"I thought to myself, 'What are you doing? Why are you pointing this gun at her?' And so I put on my accelerator, I hit the gas, and I got in between the two of them," she said.

 

The bold move quickly turned the gunman's attention to Fine.

"I'll never forget his eyes. They were just so intense and so cold," she said.

"I was somebody in the way, and I was somebody to get out of the way. And that's when he raised his rifle."

Bullets struck Fine three to four times across her body.

She balks at the idea that anybody might call her a hero.

"It really was just an anger that came over me that he wouldn't leave her alone, and she was young," said Fine, a mother of twins.

"I get angry and take on the bully," she said. "I'm glad I did what I did, but thank God, I'm alive."

 

'He let me go'

Laura Sisk was the woman Fine saw get pulled over.

"He just appeared in the middle of the road," Sisk told CNN's AC360 Monday night.

He screamed at her to get out of the car and to pick up a heavy bag of his off the ground and put it in her car.

"I suggested he take my car and go. He didn't like that idea and said that I was going to drive him and made me get in. And then he got in after shooting a little bit more," Sisk said.

During the drive, he gave her directions -- go right, go left, go straight. At an intersection, he opened fire on a bus.

Sisk said she was shaking hysterically. The gunman kept telling her to calm down.

"I just kept saying don't hurt me, I have children, don't hurt me," she said.

"He let me go ... I don't know why. I don't know if it was because I had said I had children and he bonded with me on that, I don't know."

 

Spree leaves five dead

Police say the spate of violence that left this beachfront city reeling on Friday involved as many as six incidents over 13 minutes.

It started at the Zawahri family house on Yorkshire Avenue shortly before noon and ended a mile away in the college library where students were studying for finals.

Officers were dispatched to the house to respond to reports of shots fired. There, they found the 1,000-square-foot home in flames.

Inside, firefighters would later find two bodies in a back room -- those of Zawahri's father, Samir, and his brother Chris.

Both had been shot.

Outside the house, police came across Fine.

She had interrupted the gunman's carjacking, but his rampage was just beginning.

He got into the vehicle and forced Sisk to drive the short distance to Santa Monica College, which Zawahri attended as recently as 2010.

 

During their ride, 911 calls poured in, keeping police on the gunman's path.

As the car headed toward the campus of the community college, where 30,000 students are registered, he opened fire on a passing bus, slightly wounding three people.

He then got out and shot into a red Ford Explorer, carrying 26-year-old Marcela Franco and her father, 68-year-old Carlos Navarro Franco.

Carlos Franco worked as a groundskeeper at the college. They were on campus to get textbooks for Marcela.

Both died.

"'Broken' is not a strong enough word to describe us," said relative Margret Quinonez Perez.

'Miraculous' more people weren't hurt

After shooting into the SUV, the gunman abandoned his hijacked vehicle. In a stroke of good luck for the driver, he left her unhurt.

Dressed in black, the gunman then walked the campus, "shooting as he went along," Santa Monica Police Chief Jacqueline Seabrooks said.

Outside the school library, he saw a woman and "executed her," the police chief said.

Her death was the fifth of the rampage.

Authorities identified her Monday as Margarita Gomez. She was a resident of Santa Monica but not a student at the college.

Finally, the gunman walked into the library.

"He attempted to kill several library patrons who were hiding in a safe room. It's miraculous that those individuals were not physically injured," said Seabrooks.

 

Inside, Priscilla Morales and her friends hid.

"I was so scared and thought literally I was going to die," she said.

By then, the gunman had returned to the main area of the library and was met by three police officers.

"Drop it!" Morales said she heard police say.

Then she heard gunshots and a man's screams.

Officers had shot and killed 23-year-old Zawahri.

The suspected gunman's mother released a short statement Monday night, asking for privacy.

"As may be assumed, I am in mourning for my family and for those who were also affected by this horrific tragedy over the past few days. I cannot express my great sadness for the families who are also suffering at this terrible time," Randa Abdou said in the statement obtained by CNN affiliate KABC.

"I do ask the media please give me time to grieve and to come to grips with the overwhelming sorrow that has befallen all of us."

Last Updated on Tuesday, 11 June 2013 13:25

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