Archive for October, 2020

Poor crop boosts year on year NSA in Sept. by Rs. 108 per kilo – ft.lk

Forbes and Walker Tea Brokers said National average for the month of September 2020 totalled Rs. 619.33 ($3.38) vis--vis Rs. 618.32 of August 2020, showing a marginal increase of Rs. 01.01 month on month.

However, in comparison to the September 2019 average of Rs. 511.31 (USD 2.84), shows a significant increase of Rs. 108.02 ($ 0.48) YOY. This was due to the sharp decline in the tea crop.

In terms of respective elevational averages for September 2020 High Growns, totalling Rs. 555.98 ($ 3.03) has recorded a decrease of Rs. 16.40 month on month vis--vis Rs. 572.38 of August 2020. When compared to September 2019 average of Rs. 458.55 ($ 2.55), a fairly significant increase of Rs. 97.43 is recorded YOY.

Mediums, averaging Rs. 538.04 ($ 2.93) for September 2020, have recorded a decrease of Rs. 25.74 vis--vis Rs. 563.78 of August 2020. When compared to September 2019 average of Rs. 436.55 ($ 2.42), shows a substantial increase of Rs. 101.49 YOY.

Low Growns, totalling Rs. 661.61 ($ 3.61) for September 2020, recorded a marginal decrease of Rs. 03.26 vis--vis Rs. 664.87 of August 2020.

Forbes said the average shows a significant increase of Rs. 117.68 YOY when compared to Rs. 543.93 ($ 3.02) of September 2019.

During January-September 2020 cumulative national average of Rs. 623.49 ($ 3.39), an increase of Rs. 81.61 ($ 0.34) is recorded vis--vis Rs. 541.88 ($ 3.06) of January-September 2019.

High Growns for the period January-September 2020 of Rs. 565.11 ($ 3.08) have shown an increase of Rs. 58.29 vis--vis Rs. 506.82 ($ 2.86) of January-September 2019. Mediums averaging Rs. 546.91 ($ 2.98) have shown an increase of Rs. 78.25 vis--vis Rs. 468.66 ($ 2.64) of January-September 2019. Meanwhile, Low Growns totalling Rs. 665.81 ($ 3.63) for January-September 2020 have shown the highest increase of Rs. 92.84 vis--vis Rs. 572.97 ($ 3.23) of January-September 2019.

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Poor crop boosts year on year NSA in Sept. by Rs. 108 per kilo - ft.lk

Florida road to be named after Trayvon Martin – WSET

  1. Florida road to be named after Trayvon Martin  WSET
  2. Miami street to be named after Trayvon Martin  WRCB-TV
  3. Street Outside Trayvon Martin's High School To Be Named After Him  news9.com KWTV
  4. Street Near Trayvon Martins Miami High School Will Be Renamed for Him, 8 Years After His Death  PEOPLE
  5. We Still Want George Zimmerman In Jail: Street In Miami To Be Named After Trayvon Martin  Hip-Hop Wired
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Florida road to be named after Trayvon Martin - WSET

George Floyd’s Death Distresses and Inspires Wesley Students and Faculty – The Whetstone

By Wendy-Akua Adjei; The Whetstone

WesleyalumnusDaQuanMartinsaid hewas very upset when he heard what happened to George Floyd, theblack man killed when a white police officer kept a knee on his neck for eight minutes and 46 seconds in Minneapolis last Memorial Day.

The emotion I felt at that time was anger, he said.A lot of it because Im tired of seeing the same results with the same people in the same uniform.There were real chills running down my body as I was standing outside in the heat on an 88-degree day.

Black Lives Matter rally in Wilmington

Students, faculty, and staff at Wesley were mostly sad and not surprised to see or hear about the killing of George Floyd. This incident stirred up feelings of the deep wound of racial anger and bewilderment in the United States and is well reflected at Wesley College.

North Campus Area Coordinator Jovana Fitzgeraldsaid Floyds death affected her family.

It sparked a lot of interesting conversations within my household. shesaid. Trayvon Martin (Martin, a 17-year-old Black youth, was killed in 2012 when George Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch captain, who is white, shot him in Sanford, Fla.) was one of the cases that I kept thinking about and that my mother and I talked about. My mom is white, so when I was growing up it was hard for meto talk to her about cases like Floyd and Martin.

Professor of Religion Jeffrey Mask said he was sad that Black people continue to be killed by the police.

My first reaction hearing about Floyd was, Not again, Mast, who is white, said. How many timesis this going to happen? What were doing with the police in America is wrong. This is nothing new inAmerica and there isnt a political will to do something about it.

Floyds death was recorded and went viral on social media, re-sparkedthe Black Lives Mattermovement last summer.

Quameshia Callwood, the director of campus life,said she was upsetwhen she saw the video of Floyd.

I felt enraged because his life was taken for somethingsoinsignificant as the color of his skin, and for hate,Callwood, who is Black, said.

Floyds deathhit home for a lot of African Americansacross the country, includingsenior LydiaLaSure, who saidshe felt she had a duty to join protestsin her hometown ofBridgeton,N.J.

I felt I had to do something because it could have been me or someone I know,LaSure, who is Black, said.

SeniorMaliaSmith, who is Black,said shedid not attend a protest, butsaidFloyd could havebeen a loved one.

Being Black is an unwritten crime, we always fit the profile, she said.Itsnot just the police we fear, but racists in general. We have to be vigilant and always watch our backs.

Christine McDermott, director of student success and retention, said she was saddened to see the video of Floyds death.

I thought[the video of George Floyds death]was a joke at first. McDermott, who is white, said.But then I realized as I watched it that it wasnt a joke. When I realized the video was real and that the officers were literally killing him, I cried.

LaSuresaid she was happyto see and hearabout theprotests around the U.S.and in her hometown.

We all came together to support agood cause, and it wasnt just Black people,there wereHispanicsand white people. she said. It was nice to see us standing together against a great injustice.

Senior Mercy Ariyo, who is Black, said she attended protests in Philadelphia.

It was beautiful to see Black people come together as well as the white people supporting the movement. she said. But we need more help from white people than just protesting.

SeniorMariaynaLovelace, who is white, said white people need towork harder to change racism in America.

At this time, we cant be neutral or not have an opinion.she said.We must actively work to end systemic racism.

Lovelace said the Black Lives Matter movement helped her understand white privilege.

Not everyone who is white has had a perfect life, but the color of their skin is one of the things that does not make their life harder, she said. There are many things I never thought about that this movement has brought to my attention.

Black Lives Matter rally in Wilmington

Senior Elizabeth Manlove said white people need to realize theirprivilegein order to help change society.

I am disgusted that my friends and family of color have to be worried aboutthe things that they do because, as a white female, I realize my level of privilege. she said. Change will occur when people realize how things impact more than just themselves.

Many Blacks said they are too getting too used to events such as Floyds death, including the deaths of Sandra Bland, Trayvon Martin,BreonnaTaylor and Eric Garner also have been killed presumably because they were Black.

Smithsaid she hated what she saw on the video that showed Floyds death, but wasnt surprised.

If Im going to be 100 percenttruthful,the video (of Floyds death) didnt hit me as hard as it would have a couple years ago. she said.WhenTrayvon Martin was killed I was a lot more responsive because it was one of my very first experiences with this kind of death.

Martinsaid he is no longer surprised when he sees another black person being killed.

Im still human with a compassionate side and that side is what gets mebecauseno one deserves to be shot multiple times where every situation with these cops couldve been controlled, he said.

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George Floyd's Death Distresses and Inspires Wesley Students and Faculty - The Whetstone

Trayvon Martin to Be Honored With Street Named After Him – The Root

Photo: Ben Gabbe (Getty Images)

The death of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin at the hands of neighborhood vigilante George Zimmerman was the first high-profile case to spark what would later become the Black Lives Matter movement. Now, the street outside of the high school Trayvon attended is set to be named after him.

The Miami Herald reports that last week, Miami-Dade commissioners approved a resolution to add Trayvons name to the part of Northeast 16th Avenue that leads to Dr. Michael M. Krop Senior High, where he was in the 11th grade at the time he was killed.

The portion of the road will be called Trayvon Martin Avenue and, according to the Herald, Miami-Dades Public Works Department said the new road signs should be up within a few weeks.

From the Herald:

The motion approved unanimously by commissioners without discussion includes a focus on Martins life as a teenager in the Miami Gardens area, where he lived with Fulton.

Trayvon Martin was a typical teenager who enjoyed playing video games, listening to music, watching movies, and talking and texting on the phone, read the resolution, whose primary sponsor was Commissioner Barbara Jordan, the outgoing District 1 commissioner.

Martin was also developing advanced mechanical skills and, among other things, was known to be able to build and fix dirt bikes... Martin intended to stay close to home and attend college at either the University of Miami or Florida A&M University.

The county resolution adds Martins name to Northeast 16th Avenue between Ives Dairy Road and Northeast 209th Street.

G/O Media may get a commission

The resolution also mentioned that although Trayvon Martins life was tragically cut short, his death elicited national conversations about race relations, racial profiling, gun rights, and stand your ground laws and was a catalyst that set nationwide demands for social justice reforms in motion.

Right now, we are in the midst of a racial reckoning in America. The movement has largely been mobilized on social media, which is used not only to organize demonstrations but also to bring attention to the stories of injustice that would likely get little to no national media coverage otherwise. Although Zimmerman was acquitted of murder, in many ways these relatively new methods for raising racial awareness and forcing change started with Trayvon. His death arguably created the modern civil rights movement.

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Trayvon Martin to Be Honored With Street Named After Him - The Root

Why brands need to put Black Lives Matter in context | WARC – Warc

As brands increasingly recognise they need to acknowledge the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement, understanding its context and how other brands have both succeeded and failed in addressing it is a crucial first step.

Writing in the WARC Guide to brand activism in the BLM era, Husani Oakley, Chief Technology Officer at Deutsch New York, notes that, for brands, attaching messages to critical moments is a dangerous game if they do not first understand the moment itself.

Addressing matters of racial injustice in marketing without prior preparation has been replete with examples of inorganic, unauthentic messages and, as seen with Pepsis infamous 2017 Kendall Jenner spot, instant consumer backlash is the price paid, he says.

Therefore, it is necessary to understand how the BLM movement arrived at its current position. Moreover, he explains, it is actually comprised of three waves, which were formed not just by incidents of violence and murder against Black people, but also by how social media helped propagate awareness of BLM.

The Martin Wave began #BlackLivesMatter in 2013 after George Zimmerman was acquitted for the 2012 murder of Trayvon Martin, a 17-year-old Black teenager, in Sanford, Florida. The Brown Wave which followed the 2014 murder by a police officer of 18-year-old Black teenager Michael Brown Jr saw the movement take to the streets in Ferguson, Missouri with a focus on law enforcement officers murdering unarmed Black people.

If that involved a shift from a hashtag to a community, the May 2020 murder of George Floyd, caught on video, struck a chord with almost everyone. Black Lives Matter the phrase, as shorthand for a larger concept, was now mainstream, and what had been a limited movement was now mass mobilised, Oakley observes.

For clarity, he adds that Black Lives Matter the hashtag, the phrase, in all possible permutations is not Black culture. It is part of the bedrock upon which the American promise is built.

That said, embracing Black culture and acknowledging its place in American culture is how brands can show that Black Lives actually Matter.

Doing that in an appropriate way, he advises, requires an understanding of the history that has brought American society to this moment, an authenticity that avoids any othering effect, and diverse teams within brands that reflect the society they create messaging for.

For more, read Husani Oakleys article in full: The three social media waves of the Black Lives Matter movement and how they impact marketing in this moment

To complement the Guide, WARC will host a webinar on October 27 withguest editor Kai D. Wright andMonique Nelson, Chair and CEO at UWG titled Marketing to Multicultural Consumers Now and in the Coming Majority-Minority. You can register here.

Sourced from WARC

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Why brands need to put Black Lives Matter in context | WARC - Warc