Kimberly Jones – an activist whose passionate speech about race went viral after the George Floyd protests – says Donald Trump needs to apologize to Black America about his Tulsa election rally.
02.06.2020 - 06:33 / etcanada.com
January Jones has shared a rare picture of her son taking part in the #BlackLivesMatter protests.
“I promise that I will always continue to talk to my child about inequality. And I promise to do all I can to learn more,” Jones wrote next to a photo of Xander, 8, holding a sign reading “I can’t breathe”– some of the last words spoken by George Floyd.
“We have had many more of these necessary hard conversations over the last few days, about why people are so angry and sad,” the “Mad Men” alum
Kimberly Jones – an activist whose passionate speech about race went viral after the George Floyd protests – says Donald Trump needs to apologize to Black America about his Tulsa election rally.
Over the past few days, people across the USA, including several celebrities, have participated in the protest against the killing of George Floyd. People are coming together to raise their voices in support of the black victims of police brutality as part of the Black Lives Matter movement.
Hugh Jackman came under fire from fans on Twitter after sharing a photo of a protester hugging a police officer following the death of George Floyd during a brutal arrest.
Hugh Jackman came under fire from fans on Twitter after sharing a photo of a protester hugging a police officer following the death of George Floyd during a brutal arrest. The African-American man was killed after a white cop in Minneapolis, Minnesota knelt on his neck for almost nine minutes, despite Floyd’s insistence he couldn’t breathe.
Leslie Jones shared her reaction to the protests across the country when she visited Late Night on Tuesday. "I feel saddened," she said of watching the protests that began following the May 25 death of George Floyd.
Kelly Clarkson wants to see more peace in the streets.
Rihanna and Taylor Swift were among the stars taking part in Blackout Tuesday to protest against the death of George Floyd.
Actor Jamie Foxx lent his voice to a rally at San Francisco’s city hall on June 1, singing with his fellow protestors during the ‘kneel-in’ demonstration. The Ray Oscar-winner, 52, took to the podium during the protest and sang the verse from Isaiah 54:17. “No weapons formed against me, shall prosper, it won’t work. No weapons formed against me shall prosper.”
Jamie Foxx is encouraging others to take action and demand justice in order to enact real change. Following the fatal arrest of George Floyd, which has sparked outrage and protests across the nation, the 52-year-old actor joined thousands of peaceful protestors outside San Francisco's City Hall on Monday to honor the Minneapolis man, and countless other black lives that have been lost due to police brutality.
Jamie Foxx took the microphone at a rally to protest the killing of George Floyd on Monday (June 1, 2020).
Halsey and her ex Yungblud were two of the celebrities who took part in nationwide rallies over the weekend in the wake of George Floyd‘s death.
January Jones took to Instagram on Monday to share a photo of her 8-year-old son, Xander, taking part in a local protest. The rare photo of the child showed Xander wearing a mask with the words "Black Lives Matter" written across the front.
Superproducer Quincy Jones and rock icons The Rolling Stones are throwing their support behind the music industry’s Blackout Tuesday protest in response to the murder of George Floyd.
January Jones and her seven-year-old son, Xander Dane Jones, joined in the fight against racial injustice on June 1, protesting police brutality after the May 25 death of unarmed Black man George Floyd. In a post that the Mad Men alum, 42, made to her Instagram grid, January captured her son holding a sign that said “I can’t breathe,” the final words spoken by George as he was pinned down by police, losing his life as a result of asphyxiation.
Jamie Foxx has called for there to be a “deterrent” against police brutality as he addressed a demonstration about racism following the death of George Floyd in the US.
Puerto Rico Gov. Wanda Vázquez on Monday signed a new Civil Code that LGBTQ activists have sharply criticized.