Thứ Sáu, 16 tháng 11, 2018

Auto news on Youtube Nov 16 2018

the United States has imposed sanctions on 17 Saudi officials for their alleged

role in the killing of journalists jamal khashoggi at the Saudi consulate in

Istanbul the announcement from the US Treasury came just hours after Saudi

prosecutor said they would seek the death penalty for five people charged in

the death of the u.s. fate Washington Post columnist the sanctions individuals

included Saud al Kitani a senior adviser to trance Prince Mohammed bin Salman

before King Salman removed him after the killing this marks the first country

response by the Trump administration to the journalists murder last month that

sparked a diplomatic crisis

For more infomation >> U.S. sanctions 17 Saudis over killing of Khashoggi - Duration: 0:45.

-------------------------------------------

S. Korean, U.S. nuclear envoys to fine-tune new working group in Washington - Duration: 0:39.

South Korea's nuclear envoy Lee Do-hoon... will be visiting the U.S. next Monday through

Wednesday to meet with his counterpart Stephen Biegun to talk about issues on the Korean

Peninsula and denuclearization.

This time they'll be fine-tuning the details of a new working group on the regime announced

after their last meeting in Seoul three weeks ago.

The working group will focus on cooperation in diplomacy, denuclearization efforts, the

implementation of UN sanctions and ways in which the two Koreas can work together within

the sanctions.

According to a senior South Korean official, the working group's first meeting might take

place while Lee is there next week.

For more infomation >> S. Korean, U.S. nuclear envoys to fine-tune new working group in Washington - Duration: 0:39.

-------------------------------------------

U.S. sanctions 17 Saudis over killing of Khashoggi - Duration: 0:43.

the United States has imposed sanctions on 17 Saudi officials for their alleged

role in the killing of journalists jamal khashoggi at the Saudi consulate in

Istanbul the announcement from the US Treasury came just hours after Saudi

prosecutors said they would seek the death penalty of five people charged in

the death of us-based Washington Post columnist the sanctioned individuals

include Saud al Kitani a senior adviser to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman

before King Salman removed him after the killing this marks the first concrete

response by the Trump administration to the journalists murder last month that

sparked a diplomatic crisis

For more infomation >> U.S. sanctions 17 Saudis over killing of Khashoggi - Duration: 0:43.

-------------------------------------------

US scientists prepare for high-tech wars of the future - Duration: 5:18.

For more infomation >> US scientists prepare for high-tech wars of the future - Duration: 5:18.

-------------------------------------------

First Arrests Made as Migrant Caravan Begins Illegally Crossing US Border - Duration: 2:27.

For more infomation >> First Arrests Made as Migrant Caravan Begins Illegally Crossing US Border - Duration: 2:27.

-------------------------------------------

The United States Postal Service - Keep it. It's yours! - Duration: 0:42.

For more infomation >> The United States Postal Service - Keep it. It's yours! - Duration: 0:42.

-------------------------------------------

Has Wikileaks' Julian Assange been secretly charged in the US? - Duration: 1:41.

He's been holed up in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London for five years.

Fighting arrest and extradition, the founder of WikiLeaks, Julian Assange,

may have just gotten a glimpse of what the US has planned for him.

In this document, about a completely unrelated case, Assange's name appears.

It says "no other procedure is likely to keep confidential the fact that Assange has been charged."

But why is the 47 year old's name in a completely unrelated court request?

Well, WikiLeaks has an idea. On Twitter, they hypothesized it was a cut-and-paste error.

The accident was confirmed by prosecutors.

They frequently pull blocks of text from other briefs.

It's still unknown if Assange has been secretly charged,

or if the brief the text was pulled from is just a draft if ever the U.S. manages to arrest him.

Since 2010, Julian Assange has been in the hot seat with governments.

First for releasing on WikiLeaks a trove of classified US military files about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan

and then the organization, much to the glee of Donald Trump,

published emails belonging to Hillary Clinton and the Democrats, during the 2016 presidential campaign.

And the organization is currently under investigation by Robert Mueller,

who is looking into Russian interference in the election.

The prosecutor's mistake is a reminder that Assange has been under investigation for years,

and that prosecutors may be escalating efforts to get him extradited and publicly charged in the United States.

For more infomation >> Has Wikileaks' Julian Assange been secretly charged in the US? - Duration: 1:41.

-------------------------------------------

U.S. Senate Candidate Cindy Hyde-Smith Under Fire For Voter Suppression Comment During Campaign Stop - Duration: 0:51.

For more infomation >> U.S. Senate Candidate Cindy Hyde-Smith Under Fire For Voter Suppression Comment During Campaign Stop - Duration: 0:51.

-------------------------------------------

The United States Postal Service - Keep It. It's yours! - Duration: 0:42.

Heard how the government wants

to sell off the U.S. Postal Service?

A corporate post office could mean

you don't get your mail every day.

Maybe every third day.

Even for medicine.

And packages.

You could pay more, too.

In rural areas, a lot more.

The end of delivering everywhere

- to 157 million addresses at the same price.

Tell your member of Congress "no way."

The people's Postal Service --

Keep it. It's yours.

For more infomation >> The United States Postal Service - Keep It. It's yours! - Duration: 0:42.

-------------------------------------------

Shades of U.S.: Vanessa Valdes, Bernhard Blythe, Rayner and Amber - Duration: 25:48.

♪ [THEME MUSIC] ♪

>> WELCOME TO SHADES OF US, THE

SHOW THAT FEATURES A PERSON'S

JOURNEY WHEN IT COMES TO RACE

AND SELF-IDENTITY.

WE WILL FEATURE AN INTERRACIAL

MEDIA PRODUCER COUPLE WHO ARE

ABOUT TO BECOME PARENTS, A

GERMAN, JAMAICAN INTERIOR

DESIGNER AND A PUERTO RICAN AFRO

LATINA PROFESSOR AND AUTHOR.

MORE THAN 50 YEARS AFTER THE

LOVING VERSUS VIRGINIA

SUPREME COURT RULING

LEGALIZING INTERRACIAL MARRIAGE

ONE OUT OF SIX COUPLES MARRY

OUTSIDE THEIR RACE AND ONE OUT

OF SEVEN CHILDREN IDENTIFY AS

MULTIETHNIC OR MULTIRACIAL,

INCLUDING MY OWN DAUGHTER WHO IS

HALF FILIPINO AND HALF

CAUCASIAN.

AMERICA BRINGS TOGETHER PEOPLE

FROM DIFFERENT CULTURES AND

RACES INCLUDING MY COLLEAGUE,

RAYNER RAMIREZ AND HIS WIFE

AMBER PAYNE, WHOSE JOURNEYS WE

EXPLORE FIRST.

>> I SEE A MOTHER TO BE.

I SEE MYSELF AS A BLACK WOMAN,

MULTIRACIAL, BIRACIAL WOMAN.

>> SEE SOMEONE WHO IS LOCKED

OUT IN LIFE.

A LOT OF FORTUNATE EVENTS GOT ME

TO THIS POINT IN LIFE.

I CAME HERE AS AN IMMIGRANT.

>> MY NAME IS AMBER PAYNE.

>> I'M RAYNER RAMIREZ.

WE MET ON A BIG PROJECT IN 2008.

NBC NEWS HAS A TRADITION OF

DOING AN INSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE

STORY FOR EVERY PRESIDENTIAL

CANDIDATE AND WE WERE ASSIGNED

TO COVER --

>> THE FIRST LADY.

WE DID NOT GET TOGETHER AT THAT

TIME.

WE GOT TOGETHER A FEW YEARS

LATER.

>> DURING THE SECOND --

>> ADMINISTRATION.

I'M A PRODUCT OF AN

INTERRACIAL MARRIAGE.

I'VE DATED INTERRACIALLY, GREW

UP IN AN INTERRACIAL HOUSEHOLD.

IT WAS NOT ANYTHING OUT OF THE

ORDINARY.

>> AS WE GOT TO KNOW EACH

OTHER WE REALIZED WE HAD SIMILAR

BACKGROUNDS AND BACK STORIES.

I'M AN IMMIGRANT FROM THE

PHILIPPINES AND I COULD RELATE

WITH HER MOM, AN IMMIGRANT

FROM JAMAICA.

>> RAINER TOOK ME OUT ON OUR

FIRST DATE TO A FILIPINO

RESTAURANT.

>> AND SHE WAS LIKE THIS

VINEGAR IS AWESOME.

>> THAT IS WHERE HE SHARED

HIS CULTURE WITH ME.

WE REALLY BONDED OVER OUR

FAMILIES AND FAMILY STORIES.

>> PART OF THE ATTRACTION

IS THE FOOD.

>> YEAH.

I'M A NEWS PRODUCER.

I WORKED FOR 10 YEARS AT NBC

NIGHTLY NEWS PRODUCING THE

EVENING NEWS EVERY DAY.

AFTER THAT I TRANSITIONED TO

LAUNCH NBC BLK, A VERTICAL

FOCUSED ON TELLING STORIES BY,

FOR, AND ABOUT THE BLACK

COMMUNITY.

NOW I'M THE EXECUTIVE PRODUCER

OF VIDEO FOR TEEN VOGUE AND THEM

WHICH IS LGBTQ PLUS FOCUSED

VERTICAL.

I FOCUSED ON IDENTITY AND RACE

IN THE LAST FIVE TO SEVEN YEARS,

EVEN WHEN I WAS A PRODUCER AT

NBC NIGHTLY NEWS I WAS OFTEN ONE

OF THE ONLY

BLACK PRODUCERS IN THE OFFICE.

I FOUND I WOULD GET THOSE

ASSIGNMENTS THAT WERE ON RACE.

>> I'M A DOCUMENTARY

FILMMAKER.

I ALWAYS FELT I HAD TO

REPRESENT.

THE NEWS MEDIA IS NOT THAT

DIVERSE.

IT'S GETTING BETTER NOW.

WHEN I STARTED I TOOK IT ON AS A

MISSION TO REPRESENT.

LONG BEFORE HIP-HOP AND THE

SOUNDS OF SALSA A BEAT ROSE

OUT OF THESE STREETS.

WE ARE HERE IN SAN ANTONIO AT

THE AMERICAN FARM BUREAU

CONVENTION TO GET ANSWERS ABOUT

CHILD LABOR IN AMERICA.

>> WHEN YOU WALK LIKE THAT --

>> FOR ASIAN AMERICAN LIFE,

I'M RAYNER RAMIREZ.

>> I WANTED TO LOOK AROUND

THE NEWSROOM AND SEE MORE PEOPLE

LIKE MYSELF MAKING DECISIONS AT

A HIGHER LEVEL.

NOW THAT I'M AN NP,

I AM PROUD TO

HOPEFULLY BE SOMEONE THAT YOUNG

PEOPLE WHO LOOK LIKE ME CAN LOOK

UP TO.

I AM PERCEIVED A CERTAIN WAY AND

I REALIZE PEOPLE ARE NOT SEEING

ME AS A HALF WHITE PERSON.

I'M SEEN AS A MULTIRACIAL BLACK

WOMAN.

I THINK I'VE LEARNED A LOT BY

COVERING NEWS EVENTS IN MY

CAREER ABOUT HOW TO UNDERSTAND

THAT AND REALLY KNOW WHERE I

CAME FROM.

ONE OF THE MOST IMPACTFUL

STORIES WAS MEETING PEGGY LOVING

WHOSE PARENTS WERE PART OF THE

LOVING VERSUS VIRGINIA SUPREME

COURT CASE WHERE

ANTI-MISCEGENATION LAWS WERE

STRUCK DOWN IN 1967.

I GOT TO MEET AND INTERVIEW

PEGGY LOVING, JUST TO HEAR HER

EXPRESS HERSELF ABOUT HOW IF IT

WAS NOT FOR HER PARENTS SO MANY

RELATIONSHIPS WOULD NOT HAVE

BEEN POSSIBLE.

MY PARENTS WERE MARRIED IN

VIRGINIA IN THE LATE 1970s.

IT WAS AN IMPORTANT STORY FOR ME

TO BE CONNECTED TO.

THERE ARE A LOT OF PEOPLE WHO

DO LOOK LIKE ME, WHO DO HAVE

PARENTS WHO FACED THE KIND OF

DISCRIMINATION.

>> WITH A GROWING NUMBER OF

INTERRACIAL RELATIONSHIPS AND

BIRACIAL FOLKS WE ARE STILL

LIVING IN DENIAL OF RACE.

WE DON'T WANT TO HAVE A

CONVERSATION ABOUT OUR OWN

BIASES AND I THINK THAT IS A

PROBLEM FOR US AS A COUNTRY.

>> WHEN I WAS BORN, FOR A

JAMAICAN WOMAN AND THIS WHITE

MAN WHO GOT TOGETHER AND THEY

ARE NOW HAVING A CHILD, EYEBROWS

RAISED ABOUT A MIX RAISED BABY

COMING INTO THIS WORLD, IN

VIRGINIA.

THERE WERE SOME MEMBERS OF MY

FATHER'S FAMILY WHO REALLY WERE

NOT IN SUPPORT OF THAT.

THERE WAS A BIAS IN SOME MEMBERS

OF THE EXTENDED FAMILY AT LEAST

ON WHETHER MY PARENTS SHOULD

HAVE CHILDREN.

MY MOM TOLD ME THE STORY OF A

BIG FAMILY PICNIC THAT WAS

HAPPENING AT THE FAMILY FARM AND

I WAS SIX MONTHS OLD.

NO ONE HAD MET ME YET AND MY

PARENTS KIND OF CAME DOWN THIS

HILL TO THE FARM AND EXTENDED

FAMILY IS ENJOYING A PIG ROAST

BARBECUE AND EVERYONE TURNS AND

SEES MY PARENTS COMING DOWN WITH

THIS BABY THAT NO ONE HAS REALLY

MET YET.

MY DAD'S FATHER CAME FROM THE

RANKS OF THE FAMILY AND WAS THE

ONE TO WALK UP THE HILL AND TAKE

ME INTO HIS ARMS AND HOLD ME.

BY THAT GESTURE, IT MEANT A LOT

TO MY MOM THAT HE CAME OUT AND

DID THAT.

THANKFULLY, I GREW UP BEING

COMPLETELY EMBRACED BY THE

FAMILY.

THERE WAS SOME TENSION AT THE

BEGINNING.

>> THAT GESTURE SYMBOLIZED

EVERYTHING FOR HER.

I THINK THAT IS WHAT PEOPLE NEED

TO DO.

THEY NEED TO BREAK RANKS AMONG

THE FAMILY, THEIR PEERS, AND

OPEN UP.

>> I THINK WE ARE IN A

DIFFERENT TIME NOW.

A LITTLE BIT.

>> HOPEFULLY.

I THINK SO.

WE LIVE IN NEW YORK SO WE DON'T

EXPERIENCE ANY KIND OF BIAS

TOWARDS OUR INTERRACIAL

RELATIONSHIP.

>> THAT WE ARE AWARE OF.

WHY DO WE HAVE THIS PROBLEM

TALKING ABOUT RACE?

WHAT IS RACISM?

I DON'T WANT TO SAY HOW DO WE

FIX IT.

THAT IS LIKE AN IDEALISTIC --

BUT HOW DO WE EXPLAIN IT TO

YOUNGER GENERATIONS?

HOW DO WE MAKE SURE THEY HAVE

THAT CONTEXT OF WHAT HAPPENED IN

OUR COUNTRY THAT PUT US IN THIS

PLACE?

>> YOU ARE ABOUT TO MEET AN

INTERIOR DESIGNER WHO USES HIS

CRAFT TO EXPRESS IDENTITY FOR

OTHERS.

HERE'S BERNHARD BLYTHE.

>> I SOMETIMES CATCH

MYSELF IN A MIRROR, A REFLECTIVE

SURFACE AND I ALMOST DON'T

RECOGNIZE MYSELF.

NOT THAT I DON'T RECOGNIZE

MYSELF I SAY THAT'S WHAT I LOOK

LIKE.

AND I DON'T KNOW WHY THAT IS BUT

THAT HAPPENS TO ME SOMETIMES.

I AM BERNHARD BLYTHE, AN

INTERIOR DESIGNER IN NEW YORK

CITY.

I'VE BEEN IN NEW YORK MY WHOLE

LIFE.

I GREW UP IN NEWARK, NEW JERSEY

BUT I'VE ALWAYS CONSIDERED

MYSELF A NEW YORKER.

I'VE HAD MY DESIGN BUSINESS FOR

ABOUT 18 YEARS NOW.

A LONG TIME COMING.

I AM THE YOUNGEST OF FOUR TO AN

INTERRACIAL COUPLE.

MY FATHER IS FROM JAMAICA.

MY MOTHER IS FROM GERMANY.

HE EMIGRATED TO THE UNITED

STATES TO GO TO COLLEGE.

JOINED THE ARMY, SHIPPED OVER TO

GERMANY IN THE LATE 1950s AND

MET MY MOTHER, MARRIED HER, WE

MOVED TO NEW JERSEY BECAUSE HE

WAS FINISHING HIS DEGREE SO THAT

IS WHERE I GREW UP.

I'VE BEEN IN NEW YORK EVER

SINCE 1987.

BACK THEN, I WOULD CONSIDER

MYSELF BLACK,

I WOULD SAY AFRICAN-AMERICAN.

AS A KID IT WAS NOT NECESSARILY

A POLITICAL STATEMENT, MORE

BECAUSE I HAD AN AFRO AND WE

LIVED IN THE BLACK NEIGHBORHOOD

AND MY RELATIVES WERE ALL BLACK

ONLY MY JAMAICAN RELATIVES ARE

IN THE UNITED STATES SO ALL MY

FRIENDS WERE BLACK, THAT JUST

SEEMED NORMAL.

I WAS A BLACK KID WITH A WHITE

MOTHER.

I WAS NAMED AFTER MY FATHER'S

GRANDFATHER WHOSE NAME IS

BERNHARD.

AFTER MY BIRTH, MY MOTHER WAS

FILLING OUT MY BIRTH

CERTIFICATE AND SHE DID NOT

REALIZE THE BRITISH

DON'T HAVE AN "H" IN IT

AND SHE SPELLED IT THE GERMAN

WAY.

WHICH CONFOUNDS SOME PEOPLE.

I DROPPED IT FOR TWO YEARS

AROUND FIRST OR SECOND GRADE.

I WROTE MY NAME WITHOUT THE H.

BY THIRD GRADE I REALIZED THAT

IS PART OF WHO I AM AND THAT IS

MY NAME AND PEOPLE ARE GOING TO

HAVE TO ADJUST.

MY OLDEST TWO SIBLINGS HAVE

CONSIDERED THEMSELVES MIXED

RACE.

THEY DID NOT CONSIDER THEMSELVES

WHITE OR BLACK.

MY SISTER CHRISTINA AND I WERE

THE CLOSEST IN AGE.

WE PROBABLY HAVE MORE FEATURES

LIKE MY FATHER.

WE BOTH HAVE AFRO'S, KINKY HAIR,

FACIALLY WE LOOK MORE LIKE MY

FATHER.

THE NEIGHBORHOOD MY PARENTS

MOVED INTO WAS VERY RACIALLY

MIXED NEIGHBORHOOD AND OVER THE

COURSE OF MY CHILDHOOD IT BECAME

BASICALLY ALL BLACK.

MY FIRST GRADE CLASS WAS

PROBABLY PREDOMINANTLY WHITE

WITH ABOUT ONE THIRD

AFRICAN-AMERICAN, THIRD BLACK.

BY THE TIME I GOT TO 8TH GRADE,

GRADUATING FROM THAT SCHOOL,

THERE WERE THREE WHITE KIDS IN

THE WHOLE SCHOOL.

YOU GET AN UNDERSTANDING OF WHAT

THE NEIGHBORHOOD WAS UNDERGOING

AND PART OF THAT IS BECAUSE

NEWARK HAD THE RIOTS.

MY OLDEST TWO SIBLINGS GREW UP

VERY MUCH WITH FRIENDS OF ALL

COLORS AND I THINK BECAUSE THEIR

HAIR IS STRAIGHTER AND THEIR

FEATURES AND SOME RESPECTS LESS

BASED ON MY FATHER AND MORE

BASED ON MY MOTHER, THE WAY THAT

MOSTLY PLAYED OUT WAS APPLYING

TO COLLEGES.

THEY ARE APPLYING AS OTHER AND

I'M APPLYING IS

AFRICAN-AMERICAN.

IT WASN'T UNTIL I WENT TO

COLLEGE WHEN I MET OTHER PEOPLE

OF MIXED RACE PARENTAGE.

IN THE BLACK COMMUNITY IT IS

NOT USUALLY QUESTIONED, THEY

JUST ASSUME I'M MIXED.

PARTICULARLY WHEN MY HAIR WAS

LONGER AND NOT KEPT SHORT.

I AM LOSING IT NOW BUT IT WAS

NOT UNTIL I GOT TO COLLEGE WHERE

ALL OF A SUDDEN EVERYBODY WHO

WAS NOT BLACK WOULD ASK ME WHAT

ARE YOU.

SO RATHER THAN SAYING THAT I AM

MIXED BLACK WHITE OR MIXED RACE

I WOULD SAY I'M JAMAICAN AND

GERMAN AND I SAY THAT PARTIALLY

BECAUSE I'M ALSO, AS MUCH AS I

IDENTIFY AS AN AFRICAN-AMERICAN,

I ALSO IDENTIFY AS THE

CHILD OF IMMIGRANTS.

I DO INTERIOR DESIGN.

I RENOVATE INTERIORS.

MY STUDIES WAS IN ARCHITECTURE.

THE BIGGER INDUSTRY FOR ME IN

NEW YORK WAS NOT BUILDING NEW

BUILDINGS FROM THE GROUND UP,

BUT GOING INTO EXISTING

BUILDINGS AND ADAPTING THEM FOR

MODERN LIFE.

I AM TYPICALLY HIRED TO RENOVATE

AN ENTIRE APARTMENT WHICH OFTEN

TIMES MEANS TEARING DOWN WALLS,

RECONFIGURING THE SPACE,

REDESIGNING, EXPANDING OR

OPENING UP KITCHENS TO THE MAIN

LIVING ROOM.

I LIKE TO BRING THE CLASSIC

EUROPEAN WESTERN-NESS AND INFUSE

IT WITH SOMETHING THAT IS MORE

GLOBAL, MORE REFLECTIVE OF THE

WORLD THAT WE LIVE IN NOW WHICH

I SEE AS A MULTIRACIAL AND

MULTICULTURAL WORLD.

I DON'T HAVE WHAT SOMEONE MIGHT

CALL A SIGNATURE STYLE.

I'VE ALSO NOT EVER BEEN SOMEONE

WHO FELT LIKE I NEEDED TO HIDE

CERTAIN ASPECTS OF MYSELF.

SO AUTHENTICITY FOR ME IS

IMPORTANT BECAUSE WHEN I WAS 18

I CAME OUT TO MY MOTHER BECAUSE

OF SOMETHING THAT WAS GOING ON

IN THE FAMILY.

IT FELT IMPORTANT FOR ME TO TELL

HER THIS THING ABOUT MYSELF.

UNTIL THIS TIME I HADN'T.

I'VE TRIED TO LIVE AS OPENLY AND

AUTHENTICALLY AS I CAN WITH

MYSELF AND A LOT OF THAT IS

QUESTIONING WHO I AM.

THAT'S ONE OF THE REASONS I'M

COMFORTABLE WITH BEING WITH

OTHER PEOPLE.

SO, THE FIRST TIME A CLIENT SAYS

TO ME, THIS IS GOING TO BE A

STUPID QUESTION.

THERE REALLY ARE NO STUPID

QUESTIONS, IF YOU DON'T KNOW

SOMETHING YOU DON'T KNOW IT.

I RARELY LOOK AT LIFE IN TERMS

OF BLACK AND WHITE.

BOTH PROFESSIONALLY SPEAKING, AS

WELL AS IN MY POLITICAL WORK AND

MY PERSONAL LIFE.

AS -- AS I WAS TO HAVE

SEEN AND HAVE WORKED ON A

GRASSROOTS LEVEL TO HAVE OUR

FIRST AFRICAN-AMERICAN

PRESIDENT, IT STARTED TO PEEL

AWAY THE MASK OF WHAT WE AS AN

AMERICAN CULTURE WERE TRYING TO

TELL OURSELVES.

WE ARE ON THIS PATH TOWARD FULL

EQUALITY, END OF RACISM.

THAT IS DEFINITELY NOT THE WORLD

WE LIVE IN.

I FEEL IN MANY RESPECTS OUR

COUNTRY IS STARTING TO FINALLY

ACKNOWLEDGE THINGS LIKE WHITE

PRIVILEGE.

WHO HEARD THAT TERM 20 YEARS

AGO?

THAT WAS NOT WHAT WAS COMING OFF

THE LIPS IN THE 60s OF THE

CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.

WE WERE ADDRESSING EQUALITY

ISSUES AND WE WERE NOT

ADDRESSING NECESSARILY HOW THE

WHITE MAJORITY ASSUMES THEIR

ROLE WITHOUT ANY CONSCIOUSNESS.

I'D LIKE TO THINK THE DESIGN

WORK I DO IS IMPACTING PEOPLE'S,

INDIVIDUALS' LIVES BUT LARGER AS

A SOCIETAL SHIFT I AM NOT OUT

THERE PUSHING MY VISION OVER AS

THE WAY THE WORLD SHOULD BE BUT

I AM ACTING TO BRING ABOUT

EQUALITY TO CREATE A MORE

PROGRESSIVE SOCIETY WITHOUT

PERCEPTIONS.

I UNDERSTAND THAT IS A

COMPLICATED STATEMENT TO MAKE.

>> FEW PEOPLE KNOW ARTURO

SCHOMBURG WAS AN AFRO LATINO

FROM PUERTO RICO.

VANESSA VALDÉS CARRIES THE TORCH

FORWARD HIGHLIGHTING THE WORKS

OF AFRO LATINOS SUCH AS HERSELF.

>> ON THE ISLAND OF PUERTO

RICO THEY LIKE TO SAY THERE'S NO

SUCH THING AS RACISM.

THEY DON'T SEE RACE.

WE ARE ALL PART OF THE BIG

PUERTO RICAN FAMILY AND THEN YOU

NOTICE THERE ARE VARYING SHADES

OF MELANIN.

MY NAME IS VANESSA VALDÉS.

I AM A PROFESSOR AT THE CITY

COLLEGE OF NEW YORK.

MY RESEARCH INTERESTS ARE THE

LITERATURES OF THE AFRICAN

DIASPORA IN THE AMERICAS.

I HAVE AN UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE

IN ENGLISH.

I HAVE A MASTERS IN SPANISH, A

MASTERS IN PORTUGUESE AND A

DOUBLE DOCTORATE IN SPANISH AND

PORTUGUESE.

I LOOK AT THE CULTURAL

PRODUCTIONS OF BLACK PEOPLE

ACROSS THIS HEMISPHERE IN THE

AMERICAS.

I AM AFRO LATINA.

BOTH OF MY PARENTS HAD A WHITE

PUERTO RICAN PARENT AND A BLACK

PUERTO RICAN PARENT.

MY FATHER'S FAMILY CAME TO THE

CITY IN 1938.

HE WAS BORN IN 1939.

HIS PARENTS, HIS GRANDPARENTS.

MY MOTHER CAME IN THE 1950s AS

PART OF OPERATION BOOTSTRAP, THE

INDUSTRIALIZATION OF ISLANDS.

MASS MIGRATION OF PUERTO RICANS

TO NEW YORK,

TO ENCOURAGE ECONOMIC INVESTMENT

SO SHE WAS PART OF THAT.

WE JOKED, MY BROTHERS AND

SISTERS AND I, WE HAVE SOMEONE

BORN IN EL BARRIO AND THEN WE

HAVE MY MOM FROM THE ISLAND.

BEING BLACK AND PUERTO RICAN

TO ME MEANS ALWAYS PAYING

ATTENTION TO THAT WHICH IS NOT

PART OF THE NATIONAL NARRATIVE.

IT MEANS WHEN YOU SEE

CONVERSATIONS ABOUT BLACKNESS IN

THE UNITED STATES I ALWAYS AM

ATTENTIVE TO HOW THEY ARE

DEFINING BLACK BECAUSE MORE

OFTEN THAN NOT IT DOES NOT

INCLUDE SPANISH-SPEAKING PEOPLE

WHICH IS THE REASON WE GET A

CARDI B OR BRUNO MARS OR AMARA

LA NEGRA CONTROVERSY.

THE FOUNDING HAPPENS UNDER THE

SPANISH FLAG AND EVEN THOUGH THE

SPANISH FLAG WAS THE FIRST

EUROPEAN LANGUAGE SPOKEN HERE

THAT IS NOT THE HISTORY WE ARE

TAUGHT.

WE TAUGHT ABOUT THE PURITANS AND

PLYMOUTH ROCK AND JAMESTOWN.

WE ARE TALKING ABOUT IDENTITIES

THAT HAVE EXISTED FOR MILLENNIA.

THE POPULAR CONCEPTUALIZATION IS

WE ARE FROM THE THREE RACES,

EUROPEAN AND INDIGENOUS AND

AFRICAN AND THEN AFRICAN IS

OFTEN LIKE MOVED TO THE SIDE

EXCEPT FOR IF YOU WANT SOME KIND

OF FOLKLORIC CELEBRATION.

THEN YOU WILL SEE WOMEN IN WHITE

SKIRTS DANCING TO SOME

PERCUSSION AND THEN THAT IS

ACCEPTABLE.

BUT THERE'S NO CONVERSATION

ABOUT THE MAINTENANCE OF THOSE

TRADITIONS.

WE ARE COMING INTO A MOMENT

WHERE UNDERSTANDING MORE AND

MORE HOW BLACKNESS AND LATINIDAD

ARE NOT CONTRADICTIONS.

I WAS AN UNDERGRADUATE AT

YALE UNIVERSITY, ENGLISH MAJOR.

I COBBLED TOGETHER MY MAJOR

TO BE SHAKESPEARE, CHAUSER,

MILTON, TONI MORRISON,

RICHARD WRIGHT, RALPH ALLISON.

ONE DAY MY THIRD YEAR THERE WAS

A VISITING PROFESSOR WHO WAS

TEACHING A COURSE CROSS LISTED

IN ENGLISH AND SPANISH CALLED

U.S. LATINO LITERATURE WHICH I

DID NOT KNOW WHAT THAT WAS AND

SO I SAID I WILL TAKE THAT.

THERE WAS ANOTHER COURSE, AFRO

HISPANIC LITERATURE.

THEY CHANGED MY LIFE.

THE FIRST FULL-LENGTH BOOK WE

READ WAS "DOWN THESE MEAN

STREETS."

PIRI THOMAS WAS TALKING ABOUT

GROWING UP IN SPANISH HARLEM.

HAVING A FATHER THAT WAS DARK

SKINNED AND A MOTHER WHO WAS

LIGHT-SKINNED.

THE FIRST TIME THAT I SAW MY

FAMILY IN LITERATURE AND

QUESTIONS OF COLOR AND QUESTIONS

OF IDENTITY AND QUESTIONS

OF WHERE IS HOME.

THE FIRST TIME I HAD TO QUESTION

WHO I WAS.

THAT WAS THE FIRST CLASS I SAW

EXPLICIT CONVERSATIONS ABOUT

BLACKNESS IN LATIN AMERICA AND

READING THE POETRY OF

TATO LAVIERA SHATTERED ME.

HE HAS A POEM CALLED,

NUYORICAN.

WHERE HE SAYS IN SPANISH,

WE PRESERVE OUR CUSTOMS

BETTER THAN YOU DO.

HE IS TALKING TO ISLANDERS

SAYING WE DID NOT ASK TO COME

HERE.

ECONOMIC CONDITIONS FORCED US

HERE.

YOU CAN'T TELL US WE'RE LESS

THAN YOU.

I WENT TO THE PROFESSOR AND SAID

I WANT TO KNOW MORE.

THE WAY WE LEARN ABOUT PUERTO

RICAN HISTORY IN NEW YORK CITY

IS OPERATION BOOTSTRAP --

WE DON'T LEARN ABOUT 1890s,

OR CUBAN AND PUERTO RICAN

EXILES WHO WERE

FIGHTING FOR INDEPENDENCE.

ARTURO SCHOMBURG IS KNOWN

PRIMARILY FOR THIS CENTER AS A

HARLEM RENAISSANCE ARCHIVIST.

THE MOST FAMOUS AFRO PUERTO

RICAN LOTS OF PEOPLE DID NOT

KNOW ABOUT.

IT WAS IMPORTANT TO ME THAT HE

BE AT THE CENTER OF OUR

NARRATIVE.

MY BOOK IS CALLED "DIASPORIC

BLACKNESS."

EVERY SPACE ARTURO SCHOMBURG

INHABITED, AS A FREE MASON,

AS A COLLECTOR, AS AN ARCHIVIST,

AS THE PRESIDENT OF THE

FIRST BLACK INTELLECTUAL SOCIETY

IN THIS COUNTRY, THE AMERICAN

NEGRO ACADEMY, HE WAS ALWAYS

TALKING ABOUT SPANISH-SPEAKING

AREAS.

AT THIS TIME, THE PUSH TO BE

"AMERICAN" WAS ASSIMILATION IN

THIS COUNTRY AND THE

ASSIMILATION NARRATIVE IN THIS

COUNTRY WHICH IS YOU LEAVE YOUR

ETHNIC IDENTITY BEHIND.

THIS IS NOT TO SAY HE DID SO.

IN FACT, HIS LIFE'S WORK

TESTIFIED TO THE FACT THAT HE

DID NOT DO THIS.

THE REASON FOR ARTURO

SCHOMBURG'S COLLECTION, HE

THOUGHT THAT BRINGING TOGETHER

ALL OF THESE DATA ATTESTING TO

BLACK EXCELLENCE, HE HAD VARIOUS

COPIES OF PHYLLIS WHEATLEY

POEMS, COLLECTING DOCUMENTS AND

PAMPHLETS AND PHOTOGRAPHS,

EVERYTHING THAT TALKED ABOUT,

THAT DEMONSTRATED NOT ONLY BLACK

FOLKS' HUMANITY BUT ALSO THAT

THEY HAVE ALWAYS EXCELLED.

AND THE IDEA BEHIND THAT, IF WE

SHOW THEM THAT WE ARE HUMAN AND

WE EXCELLED, THEY WOULD

RECOGNIZE OUR HUMANITY AND THEY

WOULD TREAT US EQUALLY.

AND WE'RE NOT THERE YET, STILL.

>> THAT IS OUR SHOW FOR NOW.

IF YOU WANT TO LEARN MORE ABOUT

THE PEOPLE FEATURED, LOG ONTO

OUR WEBSITE AT TV.CUNY.EDU.

WE WILL SEE YOU NEXT TIME ON

"SHADES OF US."

♪ [THEME MUSIC] ♪

For more infomation >> Shades of U.S.: Vanessa Valdes, Bernhard Blythe, Rayner and Amber - Duration: 25:48.

-------------------------------------------

Washington Democrats gear up for majority in US House - Duration: 2:06.

For more infomation >> Washington Democrats gear up for majority in US House - Duration: 2:06.

-------------------------------------------

#AskIvo: Is the United States a Viable Mediator in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict? - Duration: 1:55.

Hi, I'm Ivo Daalder, the president of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs. And

this is #AskIvo, a new series where you get to ask me about questions on global

issues of concern to you.

Dina Hananiah asks on Instagram: Do you

think the US currently stands as a viable mediator for the

Israeli-Palestinian conflict. That's a great question Dina. Clearly

President Trump has taken a different approach than his predecessors on the

question of how to get peace in the Middle East between Israelis and

Palestinians. President Trump has decided that the way to get to the Middle East

is to make very clear that we stand with Israel.

Now, he's therefore moved the embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. And he's made

very clear that when it comes to Israel's security

Israel has no better friend than Donald Trump. Now the question is, is that going to

work? On one hand, maybe not. The Palestinians have made very clear

that they don't want to deal with a Trump administration that is so biased

against them—at least that's how they view it. But on the other hand, as

President Trump likes to say, the previous attempts of trying to be in the

middle hasn't worked. And as he makes very clear to the Israeli prime minister

every time he talks to them, while he gave them a lot in moving the embassy

to Jerusalem, the time will come when Israel will have to give a lot to get to

peace. So, maybe a day will come in which President Trump pushes the Israelis to

make real concessions and peace in the Middle East may become possible. Who

knows? He is the great deal maker, and maybe on this issue he can make the real

deal. Thanks for tuning in. Want to ask me a question? Shoot me a tweet hashtag

AskIvo.

For more infomation >> #AskIvo: Is the United States a Viable Mediator in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict? - Duration: 1:55.

-------------------------------------------

22 Buses Holding 900 Caravan Migrants Nearing U.S. Border - Duration: 2:16.

For more infomation >> 22 Buses Holding 900 Caravan Migrants Nearing U.S. Border - Duration: 2:16.

-------------------------------------------

North Korea to deport U.S. citizen detained for illegal entry - Duration: 0:38.

Pyeongyang plans to deport an American who illegally entered the regime last month.

According to the North's Korean Central News Agency,... the U.S. citizen -- identified

as Bruce Lowrance -- has been detained in the communist state since he was caught on

October 16th -- after crossing the border with China.

The state media in the North claim he confessed to entering the hermit kingdom under the direction

of the CIA.

However, they did not specify when Mr. Lowrance will be deported.

It's the first time this information has surfaced.

Some speculate, the fairly early deportation suggests Pyeongyang is willing to get the

stalled talks with Washington back on track.

For more infomation >> North Korea to deport U.S. citizen detained for illegal entry - Duration: 0:38.

-------------------------------------------

Filmmaker Embedded in Caravan Gets to the Truth - Migrants Themselves Expose US Media as Total Liars - Duration: 2:29.

For more infomation >> Filmmaker Embedded in Caravan Gets to the Truth - Migrants Themselves Expose US Media as Total Liars - Duration: 2:29.

-------------------------------------------

S. Korean automobiles racking up awards in U.S. market - Duration: 0:38.

South Korean automobiles are racking up awards in the US market california-based

vehicle valuation and auto research company Kelley Blue Book has named two

Hyundai cars as the best in their respective categories

Hyundai's kkona 1 sub compact SUV best buy of 2019 and the company's fellow

star n was named a best performance car and out of vlog a Southwest the

lifestyle media has named the newly designed compact sedan the 2019 Kia

Forte has its vehicle of the year the new Forte has been lauded for its

exceptional value luxury design and improved driving dynamics

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét