Tag: Bigotry
7 clips from The Majority Report. They cover everything from ICE staging photo ops to tRump’s lies being corrected on TV, to vote blue no …. not for Zohran Mamdani and then the genocide in Gaza
βThis Book is Gayβ among 55 titles banned in Florida, including in Broward County
Again I keep saying this, it is a fundamentalist Christian attempt to remove all media featuring or talking about the LGBTQ+.Β They do not want LGBTQ+ children seeing themselves in media, in library books, but more important they do not want straight cis kids to read or see kids who are different who are accepted.Β Β They want kids to grow up thinking those LGBTQ+ kids are bad and need to be ostracized or harassed / threatened to be cis straight.Β They want to return to the society / schools of the 1950s.Β These people can not accept that other people and other cultures exist that are different from the way they feel or live.Β Β They want what Russia and Hungary did, outlaw being gay in public.Β Hugs
The Florida Department of Education has identified more than 50 books it says are no longer permitted in public schools across the state, citing inappropriate and pornographic content.
But some parents and advocacy groups are questioning whether the state should have the final say over what books are allowed in schools β including in Broward County.
A parent who spoke with Local 10βs Roy Ramos on Thursday with believes families should have input, and that local reviews should take place before books are removed.
βYou will remove these 55 books,β said Stephana Ferrell, a parent and director of the Florida Freedom to Read Project, responding to the stateβs recent directive.
The Department of Educationβs list bans 55 titles from public school libraries statewide. Ferrell said the move overrides local input.
βEvery district basically got that message that those 55 books violate the law according to the state. It doesnβt matter if local community standards say no, these books are okay for certain grades and we believe them to fit our community standards,β she said.
Local 10 obtained a copy of the banned list. Some of the titles were described by the state as pornographic and unsuitable for children.
Among them:Β Choke,Β This Book Is Gay,Β Forever, andΒ Breathless.
Portions of these books contain graphic content, including descriptions of male genitalia, sexual acts and intercourse β some of which were too explicit to air on television.
βThey are saying we can remove these books based on experts alone and it doesnβt matter what the literary value is,β Ferrell said. βThey are making the argument that our school library are government speech and they can decide what is appropriate or not.β
Under current Florida law, parents may challenge books in their school district. Those challenges are then reviewed by a committee to determine whether the content is inappropriate.
Ferrell argues the state is bypassing that process entirely.
βI believe that you have to review these books in their entirety to determine whether or not the intent of the work is to sexually excite the reader,β she added. βThere is no opportunity for local parents to get involved. βNone of it matters. The state has decided for us.β
Broward County schools were given until Tuesday to comply with the directive and remove the books.
The list currently includes 55 titles, but critics believe more will be added.
Local 10 has reached out to Broward County Public Schools for comment on the stateβs order.
Four clips from The Majority Report. One on Gaza war crimes committed by Israel, one on ICE, one on tRump’s attacks on schools, and one on the jobs numbers.
An Important Read About Black-Owned Businesses In These Days
Ami ColΓ© is closing. The brandβs story has implications for the Black beauty industry.
Aug 04, 2025
This story was originally reported by Marissa Martinez of The 19th. Meet Marissa and read more of their reporting on gender, politics and policy.
Next month, beauty brand Ami ColΓ© will shutter, marking an unfortunate reality for many Black-owned businesses β what happens when financial interest dries up?
Founder Diarrha N’Diaye-Mbayeβs July announcement, which she detailed for The Cut, shocked many across the beauty space.
In the piece, NβDiaye-Mbaye outlined the journey of starting her business, from growing up in her motherβs Harlem braiding salon to pitching Ami ColΓ© β known for their innovation in lip oils and shade-inclusive makeup β to over 150 investors in 2019. After a surge in support for Black entrepreneurship following the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis in 2020, NβDiaye-Mbaye said she received more interest in the brand, becoming one of 30 Black women to raise $1 million for her start-up within months.
But four years after her official launch, NβDiaye-Mbaye said growth at Sephora couldnβt compete with corporate brands, and scaling up production to meet potential demand came at a steep cost when online influence fluctuated.
βInstead of focusing on the healthy, sustainable future of the company and meeting the needs of our loyal fan base,β NβDiaye-Mbaye wrote, βI rode a temperamental wave of appraising investors β some of whom seemed to have an attitude toward equity and βbetting big on inclusivityβ that changed its tune a lot, to my ears, from what it sounded like in 2020.β
This sentiment isnβt unique among Black entrepreneurs. Five years after venture capital firms, investors and consumers alike followed a wave of support for Black-owned businesses, interest in diverse brands has waned significantly. Through TikTok and other social media platforms, access to an audience has never been greater, but the capital needed to sustain brands at a high profile has dropped off.

Nationally, there has been a societal swing β in tandem with pressure from President Donald Trumpβs administration β against intentional incorporation of diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) in creatorsβ paths, with waning urgency to support these businesses en masse. And the amount of money flowing to Black-founded companies has hit a multiyear low, according to the business publication Crunchbase News. Only $730 million β 0.4 percent of all funding β went to startups with a Black founder or co-founder last year, down more than two-thirds from 2021. The startups that did receive funding were mostly in the tech or health spaces.
Esthetician and beauty influencer Tiara Willis said she has noticed that cultural shift in support over the last five years. Brands rushed to onboard diverse creators in the summer of 2020. Now, the long-term partnerships, increased shade ranges and targeted marketing seem to have wavered. NβDiaye-Mbayeβs struggle to meet demand as influencers promoted her products is something that would have been covered by investors who were in it for the long haul, Willis said.
She pointed to celebrity founders like Hailey Bieber, whose Rhode makeup and skin care brand began with millions of dollars to swing big while starting her business. Rhode was acquired by e.l.f Beauty for $1 billion in May.
βThey rarely ever start by themselves, like the rest of us do β they already have someone on their team,β Willis told The 19th. βTrying to build your own brand while trying to compete with companies who are able to launch products every two seconds, and are able to fill retail space and have less obstacles than brands like Ami ColΓ© β itβs not entirely surprising she wasnβt able to keep up.β
Black creators voiced concern immediately following NβDiaye-Mbayeβs announcement, calling her brandβs shuttering βdishearteningβ and indicative of larger trends in the Black beauty space. Being able to trust that a brand like Ami ColΓ© would have inclusive shade ranges and products by virtue of their leadership made shopping simpler, some said on social media.
Sephora store shelves reflect a mad dash to support Ami ColΓ© and restock on favorites before the brand officially closes in September. Sales associates told The 19th that the lip oils had sold out online and in store immediately following the announcement, though the demand for other products has slowed since.
But consumers should not feel the pressure to support Black-owned businesses when the larger issue is who has access to capital and investors, some creators pointed out. The issue isnβt the lack of customers, Javon Ford, a cosmetic chemist and entrepreneur, said in a recent TikTok video.
βThat is not a sustainable business model. The issue is money. Itβs capital. Operating in a retailer like Sephora is expensive,β Ford said. βThatβs how cutthroat retail is when you scale to a certain extent, and this is also why exit strategies are important, because itβs really hard to keep up with legacy brands.β
Willis echoed the unstable environment in which Black influencers like herself find themselves: βIt creates financial insecurity, where I get the most support of brands based on whatβs going on in the news, versus getting support because of my work and my talent and the things I provide to the table.β
Whistleblower: 10-year-old Palestinian boy βgunned downβ after receiving food aid
Former US Green Beret says Israel committed war crimes at Gaza food distribution site | BBC News
In Gaza, hunger forces impossible choices as Hamas releases propaganda video of hostage
Doctor Gives Eyewitness Account Of Gaza Horrors| Dr. Ambereen Sleemi | TMR
ICE is thugs targetting brown people who are US citizens, detaining them, taking their ID and not returning it, assaulting them, then making up charges against them.
Trump Order Kills Annual Arizona LGBTQ Film Festival
Again the attempt to kill diversity and the LGBTQ+ representation.Β This may seem small potatoes but again this is about erasing the LGBTQ+ community.Β Hugs
July 24, 2025
Just in viaΒ press release:
We are writing with profound regret to inform you that the 17th annual Desperado LGBTQ+ Film Festival has been canceled. This decision comes in direct response to recent presidential executive orders impacting Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) efforts at public institutions, including our community college district.
As a publicly funded institution, we must comply with these orders. Failure to do so would jeopardize the districtβs federal funding, including student financial aid and grants that support over 300 positions across our campuses. The loss of such funding would create a ripple effect, significantly affecting students, faculty, staff, the community, and the educational services we provide.
Thank you to our audience that has made Desperado possible for the past sixteen years. You have helped us provide a platform for underrepresented voices and celebrate the richness of the LGBTQ+ community through the power of film. We are deeply grateful.
While we are heartbroken to pause this yearβs event, we hope this is not a farewell but a momentary pause. We look forward to the possibility of resuming the festival when conditions allow.
Read the fullΒ press release. The festival is hosted by a student organization at Phoenixβs Paradise Valley Community College, which receives federal funds.