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Prom crowning sparks divide at Ohio high school
Story at a look
- Kettering Fairmont Excessive Faculty in Kettering, Ohio, made historical past by crowning two LGBTQ+ college students, seniors Dai’sean Conley and Rosie Inexperienced, as promenade king and queen.
- Conley and Inexperienced have been chosen for the consideration by their friends in school. Most are supportive, however some, Conley mentioned, have been sad with the end result of the vote.
- Regardless of some complaints, the Kettering Metropolis Faculty’s Board of Schooling has no intention of taking any motion.
DAYTON, Ohio (WDTN) – Kettering Fairmont Excessive Faculty in Kettering, Ohio, made historical past by crowning two LGBTQ+ college students, seniors Dai’sean Conley and Rosie Inexperienced, as promenade king and queen.
Now, the board of training is listening to from residents in the neighborhood who wish to stop one thing related from taking place once more.
Conley and Inexperienced have been chosen for the consideration by their friends in school. Most are supportive, however some, Conley mentioned, have been sad with the end result of the vote.
“Even after I was given the crown and I placed on my head, there’s quite a lot of boos within the crowd,” Conley mentioned. “I didn’t hear them. I solely heard the congratulating, which I used to be very grateful for.”
Regardless of help from friends, Conley and non-binary senior Rosie Inexperienced acquired unfavourable suggestions on-line. It was hurtful to Conley, and it took her time to heal.
“It’s very demeaning,” Conley mentioned. “It takes loads for a person to have the ability to carry themself again to who they’re and believing in themselves and being totally assured and never letting issues like that pull them out of who they’re as an individual.”
Previous to a gathering of the native board of training, associates and allies rallied in help of the scholars.
“Completely each child ought to have the chance to be promenade king, promenade queen, something they wish to be. So I help the college and the scholars voting for who they wish to be promenade queen and king,” Jazzmine Brown, a 2014 graduate of Kettering Fairmont Excessive Faculty, mentioned. “I like that the neighborhood is right here backing up these youngsters. Some youngsters are right here as properly, talking out for what they imagine in and supporting their associates and their household right here.”
Contained in the assembly, some neighborhood members shared a distinct opinion. Native resident Joe Overholser believes promenade king and queen must be a organic female and male.
“Until the previous few years about all of the historical past on the earth, it’s form of been understood,” Overholser mentioned. “So, you realize, so for no matter cause the previous few years, it’s has been questioned. And I don’t assume that’s a superb factor for society.”
The Kettering Metropolis Faculty’s Board of Schooling has no intention of taking any motion, as they usually let pupil council run the promenade and all of the planning.
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Video: People’s March in Washington Draws Thousands of Demonstrators
new video loaded: People’s March in Washington Draws Thousands of Demonstrators
transcript
transcript
People’s March in Washington Draws Thousands of Demonstrators
Just two days before Donald Trump’s inauguration, thousands of people attended the People’s March across Washington.
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People power. We won’t go back. We won’t go back. There’s a lot of issues. One that comes to mind is the climate crisis. But also just rights for queer people. Rights for trans people. Rights for women, I think, are all things that a lot of people are gathered here today to raise their voices about and make known. Fight like hell for the living. Stop the bombs and the killing. It’s a nice reminder that even though we didn’t have the numbers in November, that we’re not alone. And it’s — we shouldn’t give up and just kind of roll on our backs. And in two years, we can make some more change.
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TikTok tells US users it is shutting down ‘temporarily’
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TikTok told its 170mn US users on Saturday that it will not be available “temporarily” after the expiry of a midnight deadline requiring its Chinese parent company ByteDance either to sell its stake in the app or face a ban.
In a pop up that appeared as users opened the short-form video app, the company wrote: “We regret that a U.S. law banning TikTok will take effect on January 19 and force us to make our services temporarily unavailable.”
It added: “We’re working to restore our service in the U.S. as soon as possible, and we appreciate your support. Please stay tuned.” The app otherwise is still working for users.
On Friday, the US Supreme Court upheld a law passed by Congress last year that requires ByteDance to sell the platform or face a nationwide ban on Sunday, spurred by concerns the platform could be wielded by Beijing for espionage or to spread propaganda. TikTok has denied that the Chinese government has any influence over the app.
On Saturday, president-elect Donald Trump said he would “most likely” issue a 90-day extension to the deadline when he comes into the White House on Monday.
However, the law will from midnight ban companies such as Apple, Google and Oracle from providing services to distribute or host the video app, or face fines of $5,000 per user – leaving them to decide whether to risk violating the law between the midnight deadline and Trump’s inauguration on Monday. Apple and Oracle declined to comment, while Google did not immediately respond.
Late on Friday, TikTok said that statements from the White House as well as from the Department of Justice had “failed to provide the necessary clarity and assurance to the service providers that are integral to maintaining TikTok’s availability” in the US, and that without “a definitive statement to satisfy the most critical service providers assuring non-enforcement, TikTok would be forced to go dark on January 19”.
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre on Saturday said in a statement there was “no reason for TikTok or other companies to take actions in the next few days before the Trump administration takes office on Monday”.
The imminent shutdown caps a week in which TikTok and ByteDance executives have tried to hash out a plan to avoid closure, according to several people familiar with the matter.
On Friday, Trump said he had spoken to President Xi Jinping and discussed TikTok with the Chinese leader. Chinese state media said the two leaders had spoken but did not specify if TikTok was part of the conversation.
TikTok has said that a spin-off was not technologically feasible, while Beijing has previously indicated that it would oppose any sale.
Instead, the company had pinned its hopes on Trump, who during his campaign promised to “save” TikTok.
The uncertainty has prompted chaos inside the company itself. In the days leading up to the vote, the company rushed to reassure US staff that they would still have jobs and continue to be paid even if the app was shut down, according to three people with knowledge of the situation.
Meanwhile, marketers have already begun to divert advertising spending away from the platform. One media buyer said that they had paused all their spending on the platform in the US. However, TikTok was still encouraging them to spend their budget on the platform in other markets, the person said.
“It’s very messy and while people are not surprised, it was really impossible to plan for,” said the head of another big advertising agency.
Additional reporting by Zijing Wu in Hong Kong
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Trump's border czar says immigration raids will begin next week, including in Chicago
Incoming “border czar” Tom Homan said large-scale raids as part of President-elect Trump’s crackdown on illegal immigration are set to begin as soon as Tuesday.
In an interview with Fox News on Friday night, Homan did not offer further details, but he did confirm that Chicago will be one of the cities targeted.
“On Tuesday, ICE is finally going to go out and do their job. We’re going to take the handcuffs off ICE,” he said, referring to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
Homan, a former acting head of ICE, added that immigration agents will focus on the “worst first, public safety threats first, but no one is off the table. If they’re in the country illegally, they got a problem.”
The anticipated raids in Chicago were first reported by The Wall Street Journal. It comes after Homan visited the city in December and threatened to prosecute the city’s mayor if he refused to cooperate.
On Saturday, Homan told The Washington Post that the incoming administration was reconsidering launching raids in Chicago because details had leaked in the media, but had yet to make a final decision.
Chicago is one of the hundreds of sanctuary cities and counties in the U.S., which typically prohibit local resources from supporting federal immigration enforcement.
The prospect of raids in Chicago echoes Homan’s past remarks that he will not allow sanctuary jurisdictions to hinder the incoming administration’s crackdown on illegal immigration.
On Saturday, Beatriz Ponce de León, Chicago’s deputy mayor for immigrant, migrant and refugee rights, said the news that immigration raids could start in Chicago on Tuesday “wasn’t a surprise,” but that “hearing confirmation made it more real, more concrete.”
She said the city is prepared. In addition to community agencies holding “know your rights” events all over, she said Chicago leaders have met with city departments and sister agencies, such as the police and public school district, to detail existing city policies.
An estimated 11 million immigrants live in the U.S. without legal status.
Both Homan and Trump have vowed to carry out the largest deportation operation in U.S. history. But the plan is expected to face legal and logistical hurdles, including where to house millions of people once they are detained.
In Chicago, community organizers and elected officials scramble to encourage residents to not panic
On the city’s Southwest Side, Any Huamani, a community organizer with the Brighton Park Neighborhood Council, was fielding requests for Know Your Rights Trainings and leading a rapid response team via private group chat. Team members are ready to be dispatched in case ICE agents arrive in her community.
“Obviously each scenario is different,” Huamani said. “If they’re there to detain someone, rapid response teams respond in a different way. We have to yell out ‘These are your rights. You know, who can we call? Give us a phone number.’ And we’re also trying to record … ICE agents, if there’s an ICE truck or if it’s an unrecognizable truck.”
Meanwhile, 20 requests for trainings had come in.
The biggest fear among immigrants who don’t have a legal status in the U.S., Huamani said, is leaving their children behind.
During Trump’s first administration, his “zero tolerance” policy separated more than 5,000 children from parents who crossed the border, without systems to track and reunite families. Some also fear being detained or held in cities or states unfamiliar to them. Huamani has been advising people at risk of being detained by ICE to memorize at least three phone numbers so that they can be located if taken into ICE custody.
Organizers are worried that ICE agents could target the city’s Southwest Side and execute workplace raids in nearby suburbs, where there are also large concentrations of immigrants without legal status.
Garien Gatewood, Chicago’s deputy mayor of community safety, said the police department has been working under a welcoming city ordinance for 40 years, which stipulates that immigration enforcement is up to the federal government.
Chicago’s police department does not document immigration status, nor share information with federal immigration authorities, said spokesman Don Terry in a statement. But he added that police “will not intervene or interfere with any other government agencies performing their duties.”
“From the top down, everybody at CPD understands the roles that they play,” he said. “This is not the first time that they’ve had interactions with federal agents acting about immigration status.”
Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s office did not provide a response to news that immigration raids were going to start in Chicago next week. The office provided a transcript of the governor’s statement at a Dec. 11 press conference where he said he “believes it is his obligation to protect” immigrants without legal status who have not committed violent crimes.
WBEZ has more on how Chicago is preparing for the incoming Trump administration.
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