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Friday, December 20, 2019

Andrew Yang Talks About Lack of Diversity Among “Overwhelmingly White” Field of Candidates on Debate Stage

Andrew Yang

For the first time this year, there was not a single black candidate on the stage at Thursday’s Democratic presidential debate. In fact, Andrew Yang, the only nonwhite participant was the first to address the issue of lack of diversity among the assemblage of seven contenders at the event which was held at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles.

When asked about the lack of racial representation and the message sent to voters of color that the field remains “overwhelmingly white,” the Asian American entrepreneur responded that it was “both an honor and disappointment to be the lone candidate of color on the stage tonight. I miss Kamala, I miss Cory — though I think Cory will be back.”

Yang was referring to that fact that US Sen. Kamala Harris of California, who met the criteria to participate in Thursday’s debate, bowed out of the presidential race two weeks ago. And US Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, who continues to run for the Democratic nomination, has been railing against the Democratic National Committee’s debate qualifications that excluded him from joining the other candidates on the stage. Booker has expanded his rebuke of the DNC’s process in recent weeks, citing that “there are more billionaires in the race than black people.”

Yang, former Vice President Joe Biden, Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, Sen. Bernie Sanders, South Bend, Indiana Mayor Pete Buttigieg, Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota and billionaire businessman-philanthropist Tom Steyer were participants in a debate that offered far more fireworks than the five previous sessions.

All candidates, however, are mindful of the importance of gaining support from black Democrats as the contest enters primary season in less than two months since none can capture the party’s nomination without that voting bloc. Throughout the campaign, Biden continues to hold a vise-like grip on the black Democratic vote.

Race and Diversity On Menu of Debate Topics

Although Booker and former Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick, the only other black presidential contender in the race, were absent from the discourse on issues that included impeached President Trump’s policies, immigration, climate change and health care reform – among others – race and inclusion were still on the menu of topics.

In continuing to discuss the lack of diversity, Yang added that although he “grew up the son of immigrants, and I had many racial epithets used against me as a kid,” African Americans and Latinos have “something much more powerful working against them than words. They have numbers.” He then cited that the average net worth of a black household is only 10% and that a black woman was 320% more likely to die from complications in childbirth. He further told the audience that “these are the numbers that define race in our country.”

He then invoked slain civil rights leader Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. in sharing a solution tied to his universal basic income platform: “The question is, ‘Why am I the lone candidate of color on this stage?’ Fewer than 5 percent of Americans donate to political campaigns. You know what you need to donate to political campaigns? Disposable income. The way we fix it, the way we fix this, is we take Martin Luther King’s message of a guaranteed minimum income: a freedom dividend of $1,000 a month for all Americans. I guarantee if we had a freedom dividend of $1,000 a month, I would not be the only candidate of color on this stage tonight.”

When asked question a question about race, Sanders focused on climate control. “People of color, in fact, are going to be the people suffering most if we do not deal with climate change,” he said before being more expansive in his answer. “By the way, we have an obligation up here, if there are not any of our African-American brothers and sisters up here, to speak about an economy in which African-Americans are exploited, where black women die at three times higher rates than white women, where we have a criminal justice system which is racist and broken, disproportionately made up of African-Americans and Latinos and Native Americans who are in jail. So we need an economy that focuses on the needs of oppressed, exploited people, and that is the African-American community.”

Asserting that “we are not going to be able to succeed in the world if we do not invite everyone to be part of our economy,” Klobuchar commented on the need to ensure African Americans gain unfettered access to the ballot box. “What would I do? As one of the leaders on voting in the U.S. Senate, one, stop the purging. As Stacey Abrams said, you do not stop having your right to assemble if you don’t go to a meeting for a year. Because you don’t go to a church or synagogue or mosque for three months, you don’t lose your right to worship. You shouldn’t lose your right to vote.”

She added: “I would pass, as president, my bill to register every kid in this country when they turn 18 to vote. That would make all of these discriminatory actions in these states go away. And I would stop the gerrymandering, in addition to the agenda of economic opportunity, because as Martin Luther King said, “What good is it to integrate a lunch counter if you can’t afford a hamburger?”

Steyer, who has maintained that he sent a letter to the DNC advocating for change of the debate criteria after Harris’ departure, took direct aim at Trump, declaring that racism is at the heart of Trump’s politics” and using immigration to “inflame his base I think it’s important to note that this president is not against immigration, he’s against immigration by non-white people.”

In a post-debate interview with PBS, Steyer said that it was not only important to have inclusive representation on the debate stage but maintained that it is  vital for the Dems to have a “diverse ticket under all circumstances.”

 

 



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Orlando Jones calls American Gods showrunner a ‘culture vulture’

Actor Orlando Jones is naming names and giving details following his apparent firing as the character Mr. Nancy from the Starz series American Gods.

Jones, 51, told SiriusXM host Clay Cane of The Cane and Clay Show that the series’ showrunner Charles Eglee is someone who pretends to care about Black America.

READ MORE: Orlando Jones says he was fired from ‘American Gods’ for a petty, superficial reason

“Culture vulture white guy is running around with a Black Panther T-shirt on talking like you Black, acting like you Black, thinking you blacker than Black people,” Jones told Cane. “You’re playing that whole game, which is the only reason you would run your ass around and say something as crazy as, ‘Mr. Nancy’s bad for Black America,’ and clearly, there’s nobody around to correct you.”

Jones’ comments are the latest in a dust-up that the public became aware of last week when Jones released a video claiming that he will not be returning for season three of American Gods because of concerns about what sort of message his Mr. Nancy character is sending to Black America. The character is based on the African God Anansi, and Jones portrayed him as someone who gets things done– a dynamic, Jones has said, that some saw as problematic.

When it comes to Eglee, Jones had plenty of raw perspectives to share on the Clay Cane show and called the showrunner a “wigga.” Jones characterized his former colleague as a 60-plus-year-old White man who appears to want to be in sync with Black people.

“He wears Stay Woke hats and Black Panther T-shirts and sunglasses,” Jones said. “Dresses like old school Run DMC type of deal. Look at the pictures. He’s White, but it’s one of those White guys who talks like a Black guy.”

Jones added, “I don’t have any problems with somebody who’s a fan of the culture, but that doesn’t make you Black.”

READ MORE: 50 Cent slams Comcast CEO for ‘f*cking up’ & ‘Power’ by dropping Star

Eglee has not spoken publicly about the controversy but parent company Fremantle told Deadline, “The storylines of American Gods have continually shifted and evolved to reflect the complex mythology of the source material. Mr. Jones’ option was not picked up because Mr. Nancy, among other characters, is not featured in the portion of the book we are focusing on within Season 3.”

The post Orlando Jones calls American Gods showrunner a ‘culture vulture’ appeared first on theGrio.



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Rock Band Yellowcard Pursues $15 Million Lawsuit Against Deceased Rapper Juice WRLD

Juice Wrld

Yellowcard, a punk rock band out of Florida, confirmed that they will continue to pursue a $15 million lawsuit against Juice Wrld despite his unexpected death last week.

Born Jarad Anthony Higgins, the 21-year-old rapper died on the morning of Dec. 8 after suffering a seizure at Midway International Airport in Chicago. In a legal notice filed one day after Juice Wrld’s death, a legal representative for Yellowcard said they still plan to proceed with a copyright infringement lawsuit over the rapper’s hit “Lucid Dreams.” According to the suit, “Lucid Dreams” borrowed the melody from the band’s 2006 song “Holly Wood Died” in a manner that is easily recognizable and even virtually identical in some places of the song, said Yellowcard’s lawyer Richard Busch, who also represented the Marvin Gaye estate in the “Blurred Lines” case, reports Rolling Stone. The notice, which was filed Dec. 9 and obtained by XXL on Tuesday, extends a deadline for defendants to respond to the lawsuits from Dec. 9 until Feb. 4, 2020.

Busch’s law firm, King & Ballow, issued the following statement to Billboard regarding the lawsuit.

“First of all, we were as shocked and saddened by Juice WRLD’s death as everyone else. It is a tragic loss to his family, his fans, and to the music world at large, and we understand why people may be confused about the decision to continue with this lawsuit.  My clients are certainly torn about proceeding, and understand the optics involved. But it is important to remember that this lawsuit was filed before this tragic event, and was filed because all of the defendants (and there are 2 other writers and several music publishers and record labels), profited off of what we believe was clear copying and infringement of Yellowcard’s work,” it reads.

 

“So while they are absolutely aware of how this may be perceived, and truly have incredible mixed emotions, the question is whether it is fair that all of those many parties profited, and will continue to profit, off of what my client’s believe strongly was their work,” it continues.

The lawsuit will attempt to prove the late rapper knew of the Yellowcard song, which was released when he was 7-years-old.

According to reports, FBI agents were confiscating drugs and guns from Juice Wrld’s private jet when the rapper had a seizure. The Police search turned up 41 bags of suspected marijuana and six prescription bottles of suspected liquid codeine. Following his death, his mom said her son suffered from drug addiction.

 

 



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Gadget Lab Podcast: Our Favorite Stuff From 2019, Plus Our 2020 Predictions

The Gadget Lab crew highlights the stories, the products, and the trends that defined 2019. Plus, we look at what's coming next.

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Feds Call Helicopter That Crashed in NYC River a ‘Death Trap’

An NTSB investigation faults the companies behind the sightseeing flight for a slew of safety failures, which resulted in five deaths.

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When Robots Can Decide Whether You Live or Die

Military experts worry about how to control a new generation of autonomous lethal weapons.

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Dwyane Wade speaks out about coming to grips with having a gay son

Power couple Dwyane Wade and his wife, actress Gabrielle Union, have been making powerful public statements in support of Wade’s gay son, Zion Malachi Airamis, 12.

Wade, in fact, said Wednesday on the Matt Barnes and Stephen Jackson Showtime podcast All the Smoke that it was his son who taught him, the parent, about acceptance and maturity. Zion is Wade’s son from a previous relationship.

READ MORE: Dwyane Wade checks Internet haters for talking about his son

“You want to talk about strength and courage,” the 37-year-old former Miami Heat guard asked the hosts. “My 12-year-old son has way more than I have.”

Wade added, “You can learn something from your kids.”

Wade, Union and the rest of their blended family have received backlash on social media since the release of a Thanksgiving family photo that showed Zion wearing a crop top and long painted nails.

Wade responded on Twitter, “Stupidity is apart of this world we live in — so I get it. But here’s the thing — I’ve been chosen to lead my family not y’all. So we will continue to be us and support each other with pride, love & a smile!”

 On the podcast, Wade said that he noticed early on that his son was on a different “vibe” than his older brother, Zaire Blessing Dwyane, now 17. This forced him to have a crucial conversation with himself, he explained.

“I had to look myself in the mirror and say, ‘What if your son comes home and tells you he’s gay? What are you going to do? How are you going to be? How are you going to act?’ It ain’t about him. He knows who he is. It’s about you. Who are you?”

READ MORE: Dwyane Wade, Gabrielle Union support LGBTQ youth with limited edition T-shirt and donation

Wade said the dynamic has pushed him into becoming the best father that he can be.

“I watched my son, from day one, become into who she now eventually come into,” he said. “And for me … nothing changes in my love. Nothing changes in my responsibilities. So all I had to do now is get smarter, educate myself more. And that’s my job.”

The post Dwyane Wade speaks out about coming to grips with having a gay son appeared first on theGrio.



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‘Boomerspeak’ Is Now Available for Your Parodying Pleasure

The verbal stylings of the boomer generation—dot dot dots, repeated commas, mid-sentence caps—crystallized into a distinct genre this year.

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*Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker* Was Built to Win. So It Had to Fail

J. J. Abrams' final chapter in the Skywalker Saga suffers under the weight of too many expectations. 

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The Year Humanity Declared War on Microplastics

The pollutants are absolutely everywhere—blowing in the wind and swirling in the ocean. Here's how we can clean up our act.

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Premier League's iconic player of the decade: Who is yours?

As the 2010s come to an end, we want you to pick the Premier League's most iconic player of the decade from this shortlist of 15.

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South African pro surfer Ntando Msibi on escaping homelessness

Ntando Msibi left home at 11 but escaped homelessness to become a professional athlete.

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Africa's week in pictures: 13 - 19 December 2019

A selection of the week's best photos from across the continent and beyond.

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Thursday, December 19, 2019


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Elizabeth Warren blasts Comcast for threatening civil rights in Byron Allen lawsuit

Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), is weighing in on the legal battle between media mogul Byron Allen and Comcast, calling out the cable giant for threatening civil rights.

On Thursday, Sen. Warren tweeted out an article about Allen’s racial discrimination case against Comcast, saying Comcast’s challenge to the Civil Rights Act of 1866 was “deeply disturbing.”

“This is deeply concerning,” tweeted Sen. Warren. “If Comcast wins in their case before the Supreme Court, a key civil rights protection could be rolled back—making it nearly impossible for those facing racial discrimination to be able to hold companies accountable.”

READ MORE: Elizabeth Warren releases plan to fight white nationalist violence

Allen, CEO of Entertainment Studios and The Weather Channel, alleges that Comcast refused to do business with him because he is Black.  According to $20 billion dollar the lawsuit, Comcast claimed Allen’s TV network offerings didn’t meet their standards, but subsequently made deals with less successful white-owned networks.

Comcast’s legal strategy in fighting Allen’s claims included appealing to the Supreme Court, challenging the interpretation of the Civil Rights Act of 1866, Section 1981, to require anyone suing for racial discrimination to prove race was the only motivating factor for discrimination.  The Department of Justice has issued an amicus brief in support of Comcast. Legal experts say the change to the Section 1981, the nation’s original civil rights law, will create devastating ripple effects.

Sen. Warren joins Sen. Cory Booker, Sen. Kamala Harris, and a growing list of business, civil rights and entertainment leaders, such as Diddy, Killer Mike and Dr. Bernice King, who have called out Comcast for the maneuver.

Sen. Warren is no stranger to calling out big corporations.  Earlier this year she called upon large tech giants like Amazon and Facebook to break up and submit to regulation, saying they were too powerful.

READ MORE: Diddy blasts Comcast over Byron Allen lawsuit: ‘Comcast is choosing to be on the wrong side of history.’

**Editor’s note: theGrio is owned by Entertainment Studios.**


The post Elizabeth Warren blasts Comcast for threatening civil rights in Byron Allen lawsuit appeared first on theGrio.



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ULTIMATE 2019 GIFT GUIDE FROM BLACK-OWNED BUSINESSES: Tech, Recreation, Toys, and Games

ULTIMATE 2019 GIFT GUIDE FROM BLACK-OWNED BUSINESSES

ULTIMATE 2019 GIFT GUIDE FROM BLACK-OWNED BUSINESSES: Tech, Recreation, Toys, and Games



 

We’re Not Really Friends

ULTIMATE 2019 GIFT GUIDE FROM BLACK-OWNED BUSINESSES

The We’re Not Strangers Core Game + Inner Circle Expansion Pack Bundle (Image: We’re Not Strangers)

The We’re Not Really Strangers card game expansion pack features 25 curated questions developed by Jada, Willow and Gammy to help deepen relationships with those closest to you.


The Fresh Dolls

ULTIMATE 2019 GIFT GUIDE FROM BLACK-OWNED BUSINESSES

The Fresh Dolls (Image: Thefreshdolls.com)

Dr Lisa, founder of The World of EPI Dolls line, for children of all ages and ethnicities, to empower them to feel uplifted, important and beautiful as they are.


Latinx Card Revoked

ULTIMATE 2019 GIFT GUIDE FROM BLACK-OWNED BUSINESSES

Lantinx Card Revoked (Image: Cardsfforallpeople.com)

Latinx Card Revoked is a hilarious, laugh-out-loud trivia game about Latino culture written by Afro Latina comedian Glorelys Mora and Tori Pool. Whether you identify as Latino, Latina or Latinx – if you can’t answer these questions, you might just need your card revoked.


Rhyme Antics

ULTIMATE 2019 GIFT GUIDE FROM BLACK-OWNED BUSINESSES

(Image: Rhymeantics.com)

 

Rhyme Antics is a “Hilarious rhyming vocabulary Game” inspired by hip hop. Think Catch Phrase meets Karaoke while you freestyle in proper English only. The challenge is to test your vocabulary skills.


Cards For All People

ULTIMATE 2019 GIFT GUIDE FROM BLACK-OWNED BUSINESSES

(Image: cardsforallpeople/Instagram)

 

Cards For All People is at trivia gaming company that celebrates diversity and inclusion. By infusing humor with trivia the company creates opportunities to highlight cultural micro-communities and the issues they care about while keeping it entertaining. Games include Black Card Revoked (which is now a TV show!) and Girls Night Out.


MekaMon Robots

ULTIMATE 2019 GIFT GUIDE FROM BLACK-OWNED BUSINESSES

(Image: Reach Robotics)

 

Co-created by a young British-Nigerian engineer, MekaMons are four-legged robots that players can control via a smartphone using a companion app for augmented reality gameplay. Multiple players can battle their bots against each other. MekaMon is available in the Apple Store and the manufacturer’s website.

 


Black Excellence Playing Cards

ULTIMATE 2019 GIFT GUIDE FROM BLACK-OWNED BUSINESSES

(Image: mycarddecks.com)

 

This standard deck of playing cards depicts black excellence and beauty.

 


Blebrity 

ULTIMATE 2019 GIFT GUIDE FROM BLACK-OWNED BUSINESSES

Actor and activist Jesse Williams launched the Blebrity app, the blackest trivia app game you’ve ever played.


Tip Off

ULTIMATE 2019 GIFT GUIDE FROM BLACK-OWNED BUSINESSES

(Image: TipOff Game)

TipOff is a fun, app-based word guessing game not only promises good times and a way of connecting with family and friends—it also raises money for scholarships to historically black colleges.


TriviaMob

ULTIMATE 2019 GIFT GUIDE FROM BLACK-OWNED BUSINESSES

TriviaMob, a live game show app, allows players to face off in two separate “mobs,” where they answer questions about art, science, entertainment, and more to win prizes. 


Fishing Caddy 

ULTIMATE 2019 GIFT GUIDE FROM BLACK-OWNED BUSINESSES

 

The Fishing Caddy allows fishing enthusiasts to pack up their myriad of gear into one convenient portable caddy. It includes fishing rod holders, tacklebox, a compartment to keep fish live and fresh plus more great features.


Toys Like Me

ULTIMATE 2019 GIFT GUIDE FROM BLACK-OWNED BUSINESSES

 

Toys Like Me creates African American backpack dolls, emoji dolls, and even black mermaid dolls.


Ikuzi Dolls

ULTIMATE 2019 GIFT GUIDE FROM BLACK-OWNED BUSINESSES

 Ikuzi Dolls is a line of dolls that are sensitive to diversity and the many different and beautiful ways little girl of color can look.

 


Please note: Black Enterprise makes a small commission when you purchase one of these products via the embedded Amazon links. 



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Did Ethiopia plant four billion trees this year?

The Ethiopian government set a target of planting four billion trees in three months this year. Did they succeed?

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Researchers produce first laser ultrasound images of humans

For most people, getting an ultrasound is a relatively easy procedure: As a technician gently presses a probe against a patient’s skin, sound waves generated by the probe travel through the skin, bouncing off muscle, fat, and other soft tissues before reflecting back to the probe, which detects and translates the waves into an image of what lies beneath.

Conventional ultrasound doesn’t expose patients to harmful radiation as X-ray and CT scanners do, and it’s generally noninvasive. But it does require contact with a patient’s body, and as such, may be limiting in situations where clinicians might want to image patients who don’t tolerate the probe well, such as babies, burn victims, or other patients with sensitive skin. Furthermore, ultrasound probe contact induces significant image variability, which is a major challenge in modern ultrasound imaging.

Now, MIT engineers have come up with an alternative to conventional ultrasound that doesn’t require contact with the body to see inside a patient. The new laser ultrasound technique leverages an eye- and skin-safe laser system to remotely image the inside of a person. When trained on a patient’s skin, one laser remotely generates sound waves that bounce through the body. A second laser remotely detects the reflected waves, which researchers then translate into an image similar to conventional ultrasound.

In a paper published today by Nature in the journal Light: Science and Applications, the team reports generating the first laser ultrasound images in humans. The researchers scanned the forearms of several volunteers and observed common tissue features such as muscle, fat, and bone, down to about 6 centimeters below the skin. These images, comparable to conventional ultrasound, were produced using remote lasers focused on a volunteer from half a meter away.

“We’re at the beginning of what we could do with laser ultrasound,” says Brian W. Anthony, a principal research scientist in MIT’s Department of Mechanical Engineering and Institute for Medical Engineering and Science (IMES), a senior author on the paper. “Imagine we get to a point where we can do everything ultrasound can do now, but at a distance. This gives you a whole new way of seeing organs inside the body and determining properties of deep tissue, without making contact with the patient.”

Anthony’s co-authors on the paper are lead author and MIT postdoc Xiang (Shawn) Zhang, recent doctoral graduate Jonathan Fincke, along with Charles Wynn, Matthew Johnson, and Robert Haupt of MIT’s Lincoln Laboratory.

Yelling into a canyon — with a flashlight

In recent years, researchers have explored laser-based methods in ultrasound excitation in a field known as photoacoustics. Instead of directly sending sound waves into the body, the idea is to send in light, in the form of a pulsed laser tuned at a particular wavelength, that penetrates the skin and is absorbed by blood vessels.

The blood vessels rapidly expand and relax — instantly heated by a laser pulse then rapidly cooled by the body back to their original size — only to be struck again by another light pulse. The resulting mechanical vibrations generate sound waves that travel back up, where they can be detected by transducers placed on the skin and translated into a photoacoustic image.

While photoacoustics uses lasers to remotely probe internal structures, the technique still requires a detector in direct contact with the body in order to pick up the sound waves. What’s more, light can only travel a short distance into the skin before fading away. As a result, other researchers have used photoacoustics to image blood vessels just beneath the skin, but not much deeper.

Since sound waves travel further into the body than light, Zhang, Anthony, and their colleagues looked for a way to convert a laser beam’s light into sound waves at the surface of the skin, in order to image deeper in the body. 

Based on their research, the team selected 1,550-nanometer lasers, a wavelength which is highly absorbed by water (and is eye- and skin-safe with a large safety margin).  As skin is essentially composed of water, the team reasoned that it should efficiently absorb this light, and heat up and expand in response. As it oscillates back to its normal state, the skin itself should produce sound waves that propagate through the body.

The researchers tested this idea with a laser setup, using one pulsed laser set at 1,550 nanometers to generate sound waves, and a second continuous laser, tuned to the same wavelength, to remotely detect reflected sound waves.  This second laser is a sensitive motion detector that measures vibrations on the skin surface caused by the sound waves bouncing off muscle, fat, and other tissues. Skin surface motion, generated by the reflected sound waves, causes a change in the laser’s frequency, which can be measured. By mechanically scanning the lasers over the body, scientists can acquire data at different locations and generate an image of the region.

“It’s like we’re constantly yelling into the Grand Canyon while walking along the wall and listening at different locations,” Anthony says. “That then gives you enough data to figure out the geometry of all the things inside that the waves bounced against — and the yelling is done with a flashlight.”

In-home imaging

The researchers first used the new setup to image metal objects embedded in a gelatin mold roughly resembling skin’s water content. They imaged the same gelatin using a commercial ultrasound probe and found both images were encouragingly similar. They moved on to image excised animal tissue — in this case, pig skin — where they found laser ultrasound could distinguish subtler features, such as the boundary between muscle, fat, and bone.

Finally, the team carried out the first laser ultrasound experiments in humans, using a protocol that was approved by the MIT Committee on the Use of Humans as Experimental Subjects. After scanning the forearms of several healthy volunteers, the researchers produced the first fully noncontact laser ultrasound images of a human. The fat, muscle, and tissue boundaries are clearly visible and comparable to images generated using commercial, contact-based ultrasound probes.

The researchers plan to improve their technique, and they are looking for ways to boost the system’s performance to resolve fine features in the tissue. They are also looking to hone the detection laser’s capabilities. Further down the road, they hope to miniaturize the laser setup, so that laser ultrasound might one day be deployed as a portable device.

“I can imagine a scenario where you’re able to do this in the home,” Anthony says. “When I get up in the morning, I can get an image of my thyroid or arteries, and can have in-home physiological imaging inside of my body. You could imagine deploying this in the ambient environment to get an understanding of your internal state.” 

This research was supported in part by the MIT Lincoln Laboratory Biomedical Line Program for the United States Air Force and by the U.S. Army Medical Research and Material Command's Military Operational Medicine Research Program.



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Terrible ‘Cats,’ Aging Technology, and More News

Catch up on the most important news from today in two minutes or less.

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Getting justice for rape victims in South Africa

Care centres and specially designed courts are helping rape victims in South Africa

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The U.S.D.A. takes Wakanda off of the free trade agreement partners list

Wakanda is not forever, at least it’s free trade agreement with the United States is not.

The fictional country made popular by Marvel’s blockbuster Black Panther movie was listed as a free trade agreement partner of the United States Department of Agriculture’s Foreign Agricultural Service. Turns out, the Wakanda listing was simply to test the Agricultural Tariff Tracker system and wasn’t intended to stay on it as an actual partner like Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, and Peru, according to NBC News.

READ MORE: Colorado State Univ. defends white students in ‘Wakanda Forever’ blackface photo

“Over the past few weeks, the Foreign Agricultural Service staff who maintain the Tariff Tracker have been using test files to ensure that the system is running properly,” Mike Illenberg, a USDA spokesman, told NBC on Wednesday in an email. “The Wakanda information should have been removed after testing and has now been taken down.”

Francis Tseng, a fellow at the Jain Family Institute, was the first to notice that Wakanda was listed on the Tariff Tracker system as a trade partner of the United States. Tseng was in the process of researching the impact trade deal tariffs have on food distribution and hunger in certain countries when he noticed the fictional country.

“I definitely did a double-take,” Tseng told NBC News. “I Googled Wakanda to make sure it was actually fiction, and I wasn’t misremembering. I mean, I couldn’t believe it.”

“I was trying to figure out whether this is someone at the USDA making a joke or if it’s a developer who accidentally left it in, but I’m not sure,” he added.

On top of the listing, the system included hundreds of data inputs for Wakanda – with commodity groups ranging from fresh vegetables and unroasted coffee beans to essential oils and livestock, NBC reported.

READ MORE: Could Wakanda’s vibranium be real? The CIA might know something

Wakanda was put into the system as a free-trade country sometime after June 10, according to the Internet Archive. Marvel did not respond to NBC’s request for comment about the mix-up.

Wakanda was made globally popular by the 2018 release of Black Panther although the fictional country first appeared in the Marvel comic “Fantastic Four #52” in July 1966.

The post The U.S.D.A. takes Wakanda off of the free trade agreement partners list appeared first on theGrio.



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The 14 Best Movies of 2019

From 'Avengers: Endgame' to 'Knives Out,' these were the most compelling flicks to hit theaters this year.

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13 Best Google Assistant Speakers (2019): Nest, Sonos, JBL, and More

An Amazon Echo may be tempting, but Google Assistant speakers are a better buy.

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Jonathon Romain: Fine Artist Envisions A Better Tomorrow For His Community

Fine artist Jonathan Romain

BE Modern Man: Jonathon Romain

Fine artist, master framer, art gallery owner, photographer, speaker; 53; Co-Founder/Director of Development, Artists ReEnvisioning Tomorrow, Inc.

Instagram: @jromainart

My wife and I recently purchased a 50-thousand-square-feet school building that we have turned into a community art and cultural center. Our objective is to have a fun, creative, and safe space for our young people. Along with art programs, we will offer a variety of STEM projects in partnership with Illinois State University’s Center for Mathematics, Science and Technology (CeMAST).

We recently won the State Farm Neighborhood Assist Grant. It’s a national competition among 2,000 applicants that ultimately garnered over 4.5 million votes from the community. In addition to that, we were awarded a half-million-dollar capital fund grant and raised another $350,000, all in just north of one year.

I’m happy to say that we just completed our first summer camp that consisted of filmmaking, drama, dance, coding and visual arts.

WHAT ARE YOU MOST PROUD OF IN LIFE?

The thing I’m most proud of is having the opportunity to reach so many young people and share with them my testimony in hopes of making a difference in their lives, as both a fine artist and a leader in my community.

HOW HAVE YOU TURNED STRUGGLE INTO SUCCESS?

Two weeks after graduating from college, I was sentenced to 15 years in prison for selling drugs. I served seven-and-a-half-years of that sentence. Instead of allowing it to define me, I completely turned my life around. As a fine artist, I’ve spent the last two decades trying to build my community through the art that I create and the lives I impact through lectures, workshops and now, a community art center.

WHO WAS YOUR GREATEST MALE ROLE MODEL AND WHAT DID YOU LEARN FROM HIM?

My stepfather was my greatest role model. I learned that you had to work hard every day and you had to educate yourself. He shared with me over and over again that his life would have been so much better had he just went to school.

He was uneducated, but he was a hard worker, and he worked until the day he died.

WHAT’S THE BEST ADVICE YOU’VE EVER RECEIVED?

The best advice I was ever given happened when I was 14-years-old. I was at a party with older cousins while visiting out of town. I was afraid to talk to anyone because I was so young. My cousin recognized my trepidation and said, simply, “After next week, you won’t see these people again, so what difference does it matter what you say?”

He erased all of my fears in that one statement. From that day on, I never feared to go after what I wanted. I stopped caring about what people thought and moved on whatever agenda I had.

HOW ARE YOU PAYING IT FORWARD TO SUPPORT OTHER BLACK MALES?

I have spoken to young black men from colleges to prisons all over the country and would like to think that my words have been just what some of them have needed at that moment.

My wife and I have committed our lives to making a difference in our community as well.

HOW DO YOU DEFINE MANHOOD?

Manhood is accepting full responsibility for your actions, assessing your situation as realistically as possible, and manifesting your destiny with every fiber of your being. Start with what you have, right here, right now, and build from that.

WHAT DO YOU LIKE MOST ABOUT BEING A BLACK MAN?

I love our swagger!


BE Modern Man is an online and social media campaign designed to celebrate black men making valuable contributions in every profession, industry, community, and area of endeavor. Each year, we solicit nominations in order to select men of color for inclusion in the 100 Black Enterprise Modern Men of Distinction. Our goal is to recognize men who epitomize the BEMM credo “Extraordinary is our normal” in their day-to-day lives, presenting authentic examples of the typical black man rarely seen in mainstream media. The BE Modern Men of Distinction are celebrated annually at Black Men XCEL (www.blackenterprise.com/blackmenxcel/). Click this link to submit a nomination for BE Modern Man: https://www.blackenterprise.com/nominate/. Follow BE Modern Man on Twitter: @bemodernman and Instagram: @be_modernman.

 



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Model beats Wall Street analysts in forecasting business financials

Knowing a company’s true sales can help determine its value. Investors, for instance, often employ financial analysts to predict a company’s upcoming earnings using various public data, computational tools, and their own intuition. Now MIT researchers have developed an automated model that significantly outperforms humans in predicting business sales using very limited, “noisy” data.

In finance, there’s growing interest in using imprecise but frequently generated consumer data — called “alternative data” — to help predict a company’s earnings for trading and investment purposes. Alternative data can comprise credit card purchases, location data from smartphones, or even satellite images showing how many cars are parked in a retailer’s lot. Combining alternative data with more traditional but infrequent ground-truth financial data — such as quarterly earnings, press releases, and stock prices — can paint a clearer picture of a company’s financial health on even a daily or weekly basis.

But, so far, it’s been very difficult to get accurate, frequent estimates using alternative data. In a paper published this week in the Proceedings of ACM Sigmetrics Conference, the researchers describe a model for forecasting financials that uses only anonymized weekly credit card transactions and three-month earning reports.

Tasked with predicting quarterly earnings of more than 30 companies, the model outperformed the combined estimates of expert Wall Street analysts on 57 percent of predictions. Notably, the analysts had access to any available private or public data and other machine-learning models, while the researchers’ model used a very small dataset of the two data types.

“Alternative data are these weird, proxy signals to help track the underlying financials of a company,” says first author Michael Fleder, a postdoc in the Laboratory for Information and Decision Systems (LIDS). “We asked, ‘Can you combine these noisy signals with quarterly numbers to estimate the true financials of a company at high frequencies?’ Turns out the answer is yes.”

The model could give an edge to investors, traders, or companies looking to frequently compare their sales with competitors. Beyond finance, the model could help social and political scientists, for example, to study aggregated, anonymous data on public behavior. “It’ll be useful for anyone who wants to figure out what people are doing,” Fleder says.

Joining Fleder on the paper is EECS Professor Devavrat Shah, who is the director of MIT’s Statistics and Data Science Center, a member of the Laboratory for Information and Decision Systems, a principal investigator for the MIT Institute for Foundations of Data Science, and an adjunct professor at the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research.  

Tackling the “small data” problem

For better or worse, a lot of consumer data is up for sale. Retailers, for instance, can buy credit card transactions or location data to see how many people are shopping at a competitor. Advertisers can use the data to see how their advertisements are impacting sales. But getting those answers still primarily relies on humans. No machine-learning model has been able to adequately crunch the numbers.

Counterintuitively, the problem is actually lack of data. Each financial input, such as a quarterly report or weekly credit card total, is only one number. Quarterly reports over two years total only eight data points. Credit card data for, say, every week over the same period is only roughly another 100 “noisy” data points, meaning they contain potentially uninterpretable information.

“We have a ‘small data’ problem,” Fleder says. “You only get a tiny slice of what people are spending and you have to extrapolate and infer what’s really going on from that fraction of data.”

For their work, the researchers obtained consumer credit card transactions — at typically weekly and biweekly intervals — and quarterly reports for 34 retailers from 2015 to 2018 from a hedge fund. Across all companies, they gathered 306 quarters-worth of data in total.

Computing daily sales is fairly simple in concept. The model assumes a company’s daily sales remain similar, only slightly decreasing or increasing from one day to the next. Mathematically, that means sales values for consecutive days are multiplied by some constant value plus some statistical noise value — which captures some of the inherent randomness in a company’s sales. Tomorrow’s sales, for instance, equal today’s sales multiplied by, say, 0.998 or 1.01, plus the estimated number for noise.

If given accurate model parameters for the daily constant and noise level, a standard inference algorithm can calculate that equation to output an accurate forecast of daily sales. But the trick is calculating those parameters.

Untangling the numbers

That’s where quarterly reports and probability techniques come in handy. In a simple world, a quarterly report could be divided by, say, 90 days to calculate the daily sales (implying sales are roughly constant day-to-day). In reality, sales vary from day to day. Also, including alternative data to help understand how sales vary over a quarter complicates matters: Apart from being noisy, purchased credit card data always consist of some indeterminate fraction of the total sales. All that makes it very difficult to know how exactly the credit card totals factor into the overall sales estimate.

“That requires a bit of untangling the numbers,” Fleder says. “If we observe 1 percent of a company’s weekly sales through credit card transactions, how do we know it’s 1 percent? And, if the credit card data is noisy, how do you know how noisy it is? We don’t have access to the ground truth for daily or weekly sales totals. But the quarterly aggregates help us reason about those totals.”

To do so, the researchers use a variation of the standard inference algorithm, called Kalman filtering or Belief Propagation, which has been used in various technologies from space shuttles to smartphone GPS. Kalman filtering uses data measurements observed over time, containing noise inaccuracies, to generate a probability distribution for unknown variables over a designated timeframe. In the researchers’ work, that means estimating the possible sales of a single day.

To train the model, the technique first breaks down quarterly sales into a set number of measured days, say 90 — allowing sales to vary day-to-day. Then, it matches the observed, noisy credit card data to unknown daily sales. Using the quarterly numbers and some extrapolation, it estimates the fraction of total sales the credit card data likely represents. Then, it calculates each day’s fraction of observed sales, noise level, and an error estimate for how well it made its predictions.

The inference algorithm plugs all those values into the formula to predict daily sales totals. Then, it can sum those totals to get weekly, monthly, or quarterly numbers. Across all 34 companies, the model beat a consensus benchmark — which combines estimates of Wall Street analysts — on 57.2 percent of 306 quarterly predictions.

Next, the researchers are designing the model to analyze a combination of credit card transactions and other alternative data, such as location information. “This isn’t all we can do. This is just a natural starting point,” Fleder says.



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A new way to remove contaminants from nuclear wastewater

Nuclear power continues to expand globally, propelled, in part, by the fact that it produces few greenhouse gas emissions while providing steady power output. But along with that expansion comes an increased need for dealing with the large volumes of water used for cooling these plants, which becomes contaminated with radioactive isotopes that require special long-term disposal.

Now, a method developed at MIT provides a way of substantially reducing the volume of contaminated water that needs to be disposed of, instead concentrating the contaminants and allowing the rest of the water to be recycled through the plant’s cooling system. The proposed system is described in the journal Environmental Science and Technology, in a paper by graduate student Mohammad Alkhadra, professor of chemical engineering Martin Bazant, and three others.

The method makes use of a process called shock electrodialysis, which uses an electric field to generate a deionization shockwave in the water. The shockwave pushes the electrically charged particles, or ions, to one side of a tube filled with charged porous material, so that concentrated stream of contaminants can be separated out from the rest of the water. The group discovered that two radionuclide contaminants — isotopes of cobalt and cesium — can be selectively removed from water that also contains boric acid and lithium. After the water stream is cleansed of its cobalt and cesium contaminants, it can be reused in the reactor.

The shock electrodialysis process was initially developed by Bazant and his co-workers as a general method of removing salt from water, as demonstrated in their first scalable prototype four years ago. Now, the team has focused on this more specific application, which could help improve the economics and environmental impact of working nuclear power plants. In ongoing research, they are also continuing to develop a system for removing other contaminants, including lead, from drinking water.

Not only is the new system inexpensive and scalable to large sizes, but in principle it also can deal with a wide range of contaminants, Bazant says. “It’s a single device that can perform a whole range of separations for any specific application,” he says.

In their earlier desalination work, the researchers used measurements of the water’s electrical conductivity to determine how much salt was removed. In the years since then, the team has developed other methods for detecting and quantifying the details of what’s in the concentrated radioactive waste and the cleaned water.

“We carefully measure the composition of all the stuff going in and out,” says Bazant, who is the E.G. Roos Professor of Chemical Engineering as well as a professor of mathematics. “This really opened up a new direction for our research.” They began to focus on separation processes that would be useful for health reasons or that would result in concentrating material that has high value, either for reuse or to offset disposal costs.

The method they developed works for sea water desalination, but it is a relatively energy-intensive process for that application. The energy cost is dramatically lower when the method is used for ion-selective separations from dilute streams such as nuclear plant cooling water. For this application, which also requires expensive disposal, the method makes economic sense, he says. It also hits both of the team’s targets: dealing with high-value materials and helping to safeguard health. The scale of the application is also significant — a single large nuclear plant can circulate about 10 million cubic meters of water per year through its cooling system, Alkhadra says.

For their tests of the system, the researchers used simulated nuclear wastewater based on a recipe provided by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, which sponsored the research and is a major builder of nuclear plants. In the team’s tests, after a three-stage separation process, they were able to remove 99.5 percent of the cobalt radionuclides in the water while retaining about 43 percent of the water in cleaned-up form so that it could be reused. As much as two-thirds of the water can be reused if the cleanup level is cut back to 98.3 percent of the contaminants removed, the team found.

While the overall method has many potential applications, the nuclear wastewater separation, is “one of the first problems we think we can solve [with this method] that no other solution exists for,” Bazant says. No other practical, continuous, economic method has been found for separating out the radioactive isotopes of cobalt and cesium, the two major contaminants of nuclear wastewater, he adds.

While the method could be used for routine cleanup, it could also make a big difference in dealing with more extreme cases, such as the millions of gallons of contaminated water at the damaged Fukushima Daichi power plant in Japan, where the accumulation of that contaminated water has threatened to overpower the containment systems designed to prevent it from leaking out into the adjacent Pacific. While the new system has so far only been tested at much smaller scales, Bazant says that such large-scale decontamination systems based on this method might be possible “within a few years.”

The research team also included MIT postdocs Kameron Conforti and Tao Gao and graduate student Huanhuan Tian.



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Teenager might have staged kidnapping because she didn’t want to move

The 16-year-old Bronx girl who was reportedly kidnapped late Monday night could have staged the kidnapping after her mother discussed moving the family back to her native Honduras, police sources said.

Karol Sanchez knew at least one of the four men who allegedly “kidnapped” her, according to CNN. No further details or motive were provided.

READ MORE: Teen, who prompted citywide Amber Alert, confesses she staged her own kidnapping

Karol and her 36-year-old mother were walking near 745 Eagle Avenue, which is about a mile east of Yankee Stadium in The Bronx when two men reportedly jumped out of a beige-colored sedan and snatched the teenager and dragged her into the car. The mother was pushed to the ground trying to save her daughter, New York Police initially said. The incident happened about 11:30 p.m. Monday night as the mom and her daughter headed to a train station on Jackson Avenue.

The incident was captured on video and by Tuesday morning, police had issued an Amber Alert warning that “the child was taken under circumstances that lead police to believe that they are in imminent danger of serious harm and/or death.”

Even New York Mayor Bill de Blasio got involved, taking to Twitter to plead with the public for help in finding Karol, and promising to solve this case.

“To Karol Sanchez’s family and loved ones, know that the NYPD will not rest until she’s found — and her kidnappers are brought to justice,” he tweeted.

 On Thursday, two police sources tell CNN that it appears to be all a hoax. Sanchez’s mother had recently talked about moving her family back to Honduras and police are now investigating whether this could have prompted the staged kidnapping.

READ MORE: Suspect arrested in kidnapping of UFC fighter’s stepdaughter

On Tuesday afternoon, Sanchez was found safe. Law enforcement sources told CNN Sanchez walked to an address where her family was and police were called and picked her up for questioning.

The post Teenager might have staged kidnapping because she didn’t want to move appeared first on theGrio.



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10 Gifts for People Who Just Need Some Sleep

Great sleep masks, white noise, and other bedtime aids for the finicky sleeper in your life.

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Seriously, Stop Trying to Teach Toddlers How to Code

There are other, more important lessons to impart to your preschooler.

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R. Kelly pleads not guilty to federal racketeering charges in New York

Through his attorney, R. Kelly pleaded not guilty to federal racketeering charges in New York. Kelly’s attorney entered the plea from a Chicago courtroom on Wednesday, alongside the singer.

READ MORE: R. Kelly charged with bribing official for fake ID to marry Aaliyah when she was 15

The Justice Department added the bribery charge against Kelly after authorities found that Kelly obtained a false identification document for a woman, back on Aug. 30, 1994. The New York Times, citing a source knowledgeable on the matter, reported the unidentified woman was singer Aaliyah Haughton, who Kelly reportedly married when she was 15 years old. According to The Times, Kelly reportedly bribed an Illinois government official to obtain a fake ID for Aaliyah so he could marry her. The fake marriage license listed her age as 18.

Their marriage was annulled in 1995 after Aaliyah’s family became aware of it, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.

Kelly and his attorney, Steve Greenberg, appeared remotely in the Chicago courtroom and told the judge from the Eastern District of New York that he understood the charges against him.

The New York indictment alleges that Kelly bribed and transported women and girls across state lines to take part in illegal sexual activity. Kelly pleaded not guilty in August to racketeering, kidnapping, forced labor and sexual exploitation of a child charges in Brooklyn.

After yesterday’s court proceedings, another one of Kelly’s attorneys, Douglas Anton, said the singer was maintaining well behind bars and is even writing some “uplifting” song lyrics while in jail.

Kelly, 52, faces federal and state child sexual abuse charges in several jurisdictions.

In other R. Kelly news, next month, Lifetime will air its sequel to the Surviving R. Kelly docuseries. According to DeadlineSurviving R. Kelly Part II: The Reckoning, is the next series on the singer that will feature interviews with additional survivors, as well as psychologists, lawyers, and other experts.

The sequel is executive produced by dream hampton, who created “Surviving R. Kelly”; Joel Karsberg and Jesse Daniels of Kreativ Inc.; Tamra SimmonsMaria Pepin; and Brie Miranda Bryant executive producers for the network. Sudi Khosropur is the co-executive producer.

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Make Money In The Stock Market: Military Vet Tony Elion Jr. Shares How He Did It

Make Money In The Stock Market

Make money in the stock market.

It sounds so simple. Yet, realizing this wealth-creation goal intimidates many people, in part due to the perception that you need to be a Warren-Buffet-level financial genius and/or already wealthy to make this particular American dream come true. And, too often, books aimed at teaching ordinary people about investing in the stock market are similarly intimidating, especially for beginners who are quickly overwhelmed by investing jargon. Even books for investing novices seem to assume a basic level of knowledge that fails to meet enough people where they are—namely, still living from paycheck to paycheck. As a result, making money in the stock market is easy to say, but seems, to many, nearly impossible to actually do.

Therein lies the value of Sailor to Student: How I Made A Quarter of A Million Dollars In The Stock Market, And You Can Too by Tony Elion Jr. This book, in simple, everyday language, meets people where they are—not in the penthouses of sophisticated, high-income investors showcased in bank and investment company commercials, but in the basement apartments of regular people struggling with credit card debt, rising costs of living and stagnant wages. Elion shares, step by step (and in less than 100 pages), how he earned more than $300,000 in the stock market in 13 months, not as some kind of investing savant, but a military veteran and graduate student with no background, formal training, or licensure in finance.

The best part about Sailor to Student is that Elion focuses most of the book on the single most important key to successful investing—establishing a healthy financial lifestyle before you actually buy your first stock. This is the perfect first book on investing in the stock market for the person who has never purchased stocks before but is willing to make short-term sacrifices to build long-term wealth.

If that’s you, here are some of the tips and “mindset hacks” to get started with investing in the stock market shared by Elion in Sailor to Student:

TRACK YOUR MONEY

To make money in the stock market you must already have money to invest. Most people believe they don’t. However, Elion says that money you could be investing in the stock market is likely being spent on something else.

“The first thing you have to do is track your money,” Elion says. “Do a quick look at your bank statements and your pay stubs. Find out what is the biggest bill you have and where you can eliminate expenses. Figure out where your income tax refund was spent. Figure out if you have disposable income (money to use on whatever you like), and what you have been buying with it. The quicker you track your money, the quicker you will know what is either draining or increasing your finances.

“More than likely, this means you will have to create a budget (if you don’t already have one), and you’ll need to actually start watching the budget to see where your money is going,” Elion continues. “If you can tell where your money is going, then you can see what needs to continue to be spent and what can be saved or invested.”

MAKE ELIMINATING DEBT YOUR FIRST INVESTMENT

“I never tell people to invest money when they have car notes, credit card bills, furniture bills, etc. Your priority should be to get free of that debt, and only then should you look toward investing,” says Elion. “Getting out of debt is not impossible. It’s hard as hell, but it’s not impossible.”

Elion also includes paying for insurance (including health, life, home, and auto), and earmarking monthly contributions to retirement, a savings account (“at least a couple grand”) and an emergency fund equal to about six months salary. “You don’t have to have the savings and emergency fund fully stocked overnight,” he explains. “Save a bit here and there, grow them over time.”

The goal is to prepare yourself to invest in the stock market without putting yourself at unnecessary financial risk. “Using the strategy that I laid out,” says Elion, “if your investment goes bad, you will not suffer as much. Yes, money might be lost from the investment, but you will still be covered in your daily life and your retirement until the stocks regain value, or in a worst-case scenario, you have to write them off as a loss.”

COMMIT TO THE FUNDAMENTALS OF WEALTH CREATION

To make money in the stock market requires rejecting the “get rich quick” mentality and embracing two critically important fundamentals of wealth creation: delayed gratification and discipline.

“The reason why the foundations of delayed gratification and discipline are so important is that you have to have your personal finances in proper order, so that you have money to invest,” Elion insists. “If you are sinking in debt, then you won’t have money to invest. If you are living check-to-check, then you won’t have money to invest. You have to sacrifice in the beginning, so that you can have disposable income to invest in the end. If you already have disposable income, but you are using it to get your hair and nails done, go to the club, take vacations, etc., then you have to be willing to stop that, to delay the gratification of those personal luxuries, and use that money for investing.”

“You have to be willing to be uncomfortable a little so that you have extra money for climbing out of debt and eventually for investing,” says Elion. “Once you have invested that money and start to watch it grow, then you can take the money from the investments and buy that new phone or new car or go on that vacation. You have to delay that happiness until you can enjoy it debt-free and worry-free.”

NEVER INVEST MONEY YOU CAN’T AFFORD TO LOSE

It is not possible to make money in the stock market without losing money in the stock market; it’s how the stock market works. The consistently positive returns historically delivered by the stock markets happen over time, as in years, not weeks or months—or before your next mortgage payment is due.

Related: 10 Top Personal Finance Books by Black Authors 

“I always tell people: Do not buy stocks with money you need!” Elion stresses. “You should be investing in stocks after you have your finances in order and not as a way to make a quick buck. If you want to try your luck at making a quick buck with your paycheck, then you should try the Powerball or a casino. Stocks should be approached as long-term investments, especially when you are first starting out and learning about the market.”



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Share Now Is the Latest Car-Share Service to Fold

The Daimler- and BMW-owned service says it will leave North America as part of an ongoing shakeout in the industry.

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President Donald Trump is impeached by the House of Representatives

President Donald Trump was impeached yesterday by the House of Representatives for abusing his power and obstructing Congress.

Becoming only the third president in history to be impeached, Trump was charged with high crimes and misdemeanors for attempting to get the Ukraine president to investigate his Democratic political rivals. No House Republicans supported either of the two articles of impeachment and nearly all House Democrats supported the measures, with just a few opting to vote with Republicans, according to CNN.

READ MORE: Trump likens House impeachment inquiry to ‘a lynching’

The impeachment vote caps off three months of investigation after a whistleblower alleged the president had pressured Ukraine to investigate Democrats and threatened to withhold U.S. security assistance if they did not.

House Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff, of California, who spearheaded Trump’s impeachment investigation, said yesterday that Trump “was willing to sacrifice our national security by withholding support for a critical strategic partner at war in order to improve his reelection prospects.”

“But for the courage of someone willing to blow the whistle, he would have gotten away with it,” Schiff said, according to CNN. “Instead, he got caught. He tried to cheat, and he got caught.”

The House voted 230-197 in favor of finding Trump abused his power and voted 229-198 in favor of charging him with obstruction of Congress. In the votes, Democrat Reps. Jeff Van Drew of New Jersey and Collin Peterson of Minnesota voted with Republicans. Rep. Jared Golden of Maine only voted for one impeachment article. Also, Rep. Justin Amash of Michigan, a Republican who switched to independent, voted to impeach Trump on both counts.

Democratic Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii, a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, voted present for both articles.

Only three presidents, including Trump, have ever been impeached in the United States. President Andrew Johnson was impeached in 1868 and President Bill Clinton was impeached in 1998. President Richard Nixon resigned in 1974 before the House could impeach him. Johnson and Clinton were both acquitted by the Senate, which is anticipated in the case against Trump.

READ MORE: A look at what impeachment really means and why Black people need to care

Now the impeachment process is expected to move to the Republican-controlled Senate in January. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell told Republican senators on Tuesday that he would be announcing a date for the impeachment trial to start by week’s end, according to CNN.

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