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Al Sharpton, Sony Co-chief Meet Over Racist Emails – Video


Al Sharpton, Sony Co-chief Meet Over Racist Emails
Al Sharpton, after sitting down with reeling Sony Entertainment co-chair Amy Pascal, said the racial makeup of 21st century Hollywood lags decades behind the times. An apologetic Pascal met...

By: New York Daily News

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Al Sharpton, Sony Co-chief Meet Over Racist Emails - Video

The Israelites: Al Sharpton – Justice for All March: Waking Up From The American Dream – Video


The Israelites: Al Sharpton - Justice for All March: Waking Up From The American Dream
Go to: https://www.youtube.com/user/joiniuic... For all our youtube channels. SUBSCRIBE NOW! For more Knowledge visit http://IsraelUnite.org For more Videos visit http://IsraelUnite.org/videos...

By: IUIC Washington DC

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The Israelites: Al Sharpton - Justice for All March: Waking Up From The American Dream - Video

Al Sharpton goes to Hollywood: Amy Pascal meeting nets clout in Sony creative process

The Rev. Al Sharpton is surrounded by other civil rights leaders while he speaks during a news conference at the National Action Network headquarters in New York, Thursday, Dec. 4, 2014. National Urban League President Marc Morial calls the lack ... more >

Hollywood has just joined forces with Al Sharpton and his National Action Network after a meeting with Sony Pictures Entertainment co-Chairman Amy Pascal.

Ms. Pascal met with the activist and MSNBC host on Thursday as a result of leaked emails tied to the Sony hacking. Those private messages revealed Ms. Pascal making numerous racial jokes about the kind of movies President Obama prefers to watch.

We have agreed to having a working group deal with the racial bias and lack of diversity in Hollywood, Mr. Sharpton said Thursday, The New York Post reported.

SEE ALSO: George Clooneys free speech petition gets zero Hollywood support after Sony hacking

The agreement also includes the National Urban League, the NAACP and the Black Womens Round Table, the newspaper said. The organizations would be addressing what Mr. Sharpton called an inflexible and immovable racial exclusion in Hollywood.

When asked about the fate of Ms. Pascal, the MSNBC host replied that the jury is still out, The Post reported.

Ms. Pascal has not commented publicly on her meeting with Mr. Sharpton.

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Al Sharpton goes to Hollywood: Amy Pascal meeting nets clout in Sony creative process

Distance Learning And Crime Scene Investigation – Video


Distance Learning And Crime Scene Investigation

By: Top Online Education

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Distance Learning And Crime Scene Investigation - Video

European leaders warn against too much economic pain on Russia

The European Union's unanimous resolve to punish Russia for its aggression in Ukraine appeared to be cracking as French, German, Austrian and Italian leaders voiced concern at an alliance summit of inflicting too much pain on Moscow as its economy tumbles.

French President Francois Hollande was the first to step out of the 28-nation bloc's collective drive for further sanctions on Russia when they were discussed at a summit in Brussels on Thursday night.

"There were no new sanctions [adopted], because there should not be," Hollande told reporters after the session. He said the leaders had agreed to maintain the status quo in hopes of seeing the Kremlin follow through on recent hints that it is pressing pro-Russia separatists in eastern Ukraine to honor a shaky cease-fire.

If Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers on his recent calls for peace in embattled eastern Ukraine "then there is no need for new sanctions -- on the contrary, in that case we should think about how we too could begin to de-escalate," Hollande said, according to the Deutsche Welle news agency.

France is one of the countries whose own economies have been hit by the sanctions against Russia. Delivery of two Mistral aircraft carriers built under contract for Russia has been canceled by Paris in conformance with a European Union and U.S. ban on sales of weapons and military assets to Russia.

Hollande's appeal for the European allies to keep sanctions relief on the table as a carrot to reward any positive changes in Russia's behavior toward Ukraine struck a chord with others in the alliance.

The European Union's new foreign policy chief, Federica Mogherini, warned that pushing Russia into a deeper economic crisis was in nobody's interest.

"The fact that Russia is in a difficult situation from a financial point of view is not good news, not for the Russian citizens, not for Ukraine and not for Europe and the rest of the world," she said after the Thursday night meeting.

Austrian Chancellor Werner Faymann and Italian Prime MinisterMatteo Renzi also expressed their opposition to any further economic pressures on Russia, which has seen its currency, the ruble, battered by the sharp fall in global oil prices and withering capital flight as foreign investors scuttle their Russian operations.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has been heading the camp of EU leaders committed to keeping the economic pressure on the Kremlin until Putin reverses his illegal seizure of Ukraine's Crimea region and makes visible efforts to keep Russian arms and fighters out of eastern Ukraine.

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European leaders warn against too much economic pain on Russia