No makeup, no dress code, singer Alicia Keys is shining with its own strength.
No one can deny the great talent of singer Alicia Keys with the warmth, friendliness and beauty of the hybrid is difficult to resist. The idea that everything was so perfect until Alicia decided to give up makeup as part of her journey of self-discovery and encourage women to be more confident in their looks.
Eliminate all stereotypes
When you look at the 11th season of The Voice of America, which is causing fever, you will see the face of singer Alicia Keys suddenly not attractive than the normal. The skin is soft, luscious, with a wide smile and warmth. Earlier, she made a cameo appearance at the MTV Video Music Awards in August with her face totally unattached. They were all surprised to see her confidently strode on the red carpet. Some people praise the hatch, but some people criticize with malicious words. But one who has the courage to step up to a big music event with no face to face does not have to pay attention to what other people think about themselves. Perhaps never in the history of the entertainment industry, has a female star A not dressed up in public and continue to commit to this "campaign" so determined.
Singer Alicia Keys once said, after years of publicity, her perception of perfection and beauty has changed. "I remember the first few years of showbiz, everyone was talking about my looks. Someone told me to look rough, some say I behave like a guy, that I'm definitely gay or I should be more feminine, "Alicia shared. Like many other women, Alicia is ashamed to be embarrassed if she is caught by a paparazzi in unattractive form. She also worries when out on the street everyone will see the defects on her face no sun. Gradually, Alicia lives in a complex and fearless fashion without makeup. Always try to be perfect to be accepted and loved by everyone that makes Alicia feel too tired. Then one day she decided to end all there.
"It was the most energetic, the most energetic, and the most energetic I've ever experienced."
As well as helping to be brave and confident, Alicia wanted to convey a clear message to women around the world. She wrote on the Lenny Letter: "Women are brainwashed by the aspirations of men in that they must look skinny, sexy, perfect. One of the things that made me so tired was the comments about the women of others. They put all women in a common pattern that makes ordinary people look abnormal simply because they are not skinny. "
Alicia's sincerity, simplicity, and longevity have kept the faith of the music industry, which has been saturated by a string of young singers emerging from electronic recordings, scandals and countless numbers. other frivolous. That even if you are different, separate from the crowd, going against the trend of no make up, you can still be loved all your heart, as the way that Alicia is getting more and more fans of the following. has nearly 20 years of singing. The singer of 15 Grammy Awards proved that, finally, the talent, the hard work, the enormous, unending work of an artist still triumphs over all the bizarre tendencies. of the time now. Unblocked, Unblocked Games, Unblocked School, ABCya 3, ABCya 2
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Thursday, 9 November 2017
Sunday, 9 April 2017
BET Awards 2016 Host and Performers — Including Future, D'Angelo and Alicia Keys
The 2016 BET Awards are poised to be, as the kids say, lit.
Set to air at 8 p.m. Eastern on its eponymous network on Sunday, June 26, the ceremony will feature star-studded appearances and performances, including a special Prince tribute from the likes of Sheila E., Janelle MonĂ¡e, D'Angelo and The Roots.
Read on for the full scoop on how to watch live and who's hosting, and for your guide to which performances are most likely to bring the house down.
How to Stream
There are three main ways to make sure you catch all the action this Sunday night.
Though the ceremony doesn't kick off until 8 p.m., red carpet coverage begins at 5:30 p.m. Eastern, and can be streamed live at bet.com/redcarpet.
Then, to watch all of the hot backstage drama unfold, head over to bet.com/backstage at 8:00 p.m. Eastern for The Backstage Live Stream, presented by Cricket Wireless and Nissan.
Finally, the main event will air internationally on BET itself — and if you don't have cable, keep your eyes peeled for Twitter reactions as the proceedings unfold.
The Hosts
The 2016 BET Awards will be hosted by Tracee Ellis Ross and her T.V. husband, Anthony Anderson, both of ABC's "Blackish". The duo will be sure to exchange playful barbs, and will introduce the list of nominees and winners for each category, which can be viewed here.
Anthony Anderson and Tracee Ellis Ross at the 75th annual Peabody AwardsSource: Evan Agostini/AP
The Performers
In addition to that Prince tribute that the network teased while simultaneously dragging Madonna's version at the Billboard Music Awards, Sunday night's show will feature performance will feature the talents of Usher, Future, Alicia Keys, Bryson Tiller and many more.
Set to air at 8 p.m. Eastern on its eponymous network on Sunday, June 26, the ceremony will feature star-studded appearances and performances, including a special Prince tribute from the likes of Sheila E., Janelle MonĂ¡e, D'Angelo and The Roots.
Read on for the full scoop on how to watch live and who's hosting, and for your guide to which performances are most likely to bring the house down.
How to Stream
There are three main ways to make sure you catch all the action this Sunday night.
Though the ceremony doesn't kick off until 8 p.m., red carpet coverage begins at 5:30 p.m. Eastern, and can be streamed live at bet.com/redcarpet.
Then, to watch all of the hot backstage drama unfold, head over to bet.com/backstage at 8:00 p.m. Eastern for The Backstage Live Stream, presented by Cricket Wireless and Nissan.
Finally, the main event will air internationally on BET itself — and if you don't have cable, keep your eyes peeled for Twitter reactions as the proceedings unfold.
The Hosts
The 2016 BET Awards will be hosted by Tracee Ellis Ross and her T.V. husband, Anthony Anderson, both of ABC's "Blackish". The duo will be sure to exchange playful barbs, and will introduce the list of nominees and winners for each category, which can be viewed here.
Anthony Anderson and Tracee Ellis Ross at the 75th annual Peabody AwardsSource: Evan Agostini/AP
The Performers
In addition to that Prince tribute that the network teased while simultaneously dragging Madonna's version at the Billboard Music Awards, Sunday night's show will feature performance will feature the talents of Usher, Future, Alicia Keys, Bryson Tiller and many more.
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Monday, 18 April 2016
'Empire' Fall Finale Spoilers: What Will Lucious Do For Song Of The Year Award? Alicia Keys To Guest Star
Facebook/FOX Official Page
The
hit hip-hop television drama series "Empire" has gotten bigger and
bigger as the conflicts between the shows' main characters, the Lyons
family, seem to be getting nastier as the season progresses. The show is
already one episode away from its fall finale on December 2, after
which it returns on March 30, 2016 for the second half of the season.The fall finale, according to a report in CarterMatt, will be an episode categorized as "the craziest installment" of the show yet. With an episode titled "Et, Tu, Brute," the report said that if fans go by the implication of the title, it likely signifies that a big betrayal within the Lyon empire is about to happen.
The episode's official synopsis is as follows: "Lucious makes a reckless play for the streaming service that he believes will make him the most powerful man in music, only to learn that the entire business strategy was part of a scheme that might jeopardize everything for which he has worked so hard. Meanwhile, Cookie decides to plan a concert at the prison where she spent 17 years locked away from her family; and you won't want to miss the last few minutes that will leave you speechless." The report predicts that a huge cliffhanger is in store for viewers of the show.
According to another report in International Business Times, the fall finale will show Lucious very much caught up in his obsession to get the prestigious Song of the Year Award of the American Sound Awards. His obsession is based on his belief that getting this award will prove his greatness. "Empire" showrunner Ilene Chaiken revealed in an interview with TV Guide that the reason why Lucious wants it "more than life itself" is because it is "a symbol of greatness for a man who is wont to say things like, 'I am more powerful than God.'" This obsession, however, may likely mean destroying the career of one of his own sons, Hakeem (played by Bryshere Y. Gray), who is on his mother's (Cookie) side. Hakeem has been nominated as Rapper of the Year by ASA, but his success, according to the report, is not doing his emotional health any good.
In the meantime, one of the sons, Jamal (Jussie Smollett), will be performing with Alicia Keys, who is guest starring as an ASA award-winning singer Skye Summers.
The fall finale episode airs on December 2, Wednesday.
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Levi's partners with Alicia Keys for new women’s collection
Singer Alicia Keys will lend her voice and style to the Levi’s brand for a new women’s denim collection and global campaign.
The Live in Levi’s campaign will showcase the Grammy winner’s powerful voice with “28,000 Days,” an exclusive song as the soundtrack of the campaign.
Levi’s new collection, touted as “transformational” by the company, has been in the making for decades. The brand invented the original blue jean in 1873, the iconic 501, and then created the first-ever blue jean for women in 1934. Levi’s has been fine-tuning its women’s jean styles ever since.
For fall, Levi’s said it pairs all this knowledge with today’s innovation and research to create a new collection rooted in the key fits, styles and details women want.
Using the latest fabric innovations and slimming technologies,
advanced stretch and recovery, signature details and finishings, Levi’s
said it has created the “perfect fitting” jean for each body type.
The latest “Live in Levi's” campaign continues to pay homage to the brand’s 140-plus year history of being constant go-to pieces for many – from rock stars to presidents, farmers to fashion icons, entrepreneurs to the everyman.
The Live in Levi’s campaign will showcase the Grammy winner’s powerful voice with “28,000 Days,” an exclusive song as the soundtrack of the campaign.
Levi’s new collection, touted as “transformational” by the company, has been in the making for decades. The brand invented the original blue jean in 1873, the iconic 501, and then created the first-ever blue jean for women in 1934. Levi’s has been fine-tuning its women’s jean styles ever since.
For fall, Levi’s said it pairs all this knowledge with today’s innovation and research to create a new collection rooted in the key fits, styles and details women want.
The latest “Live in Levi's” campaign continues to pay homage to the brand’s 140-plus year history of being constant go-to pieces for many – from rock stars to presidents, farmers to fashion icons, entrepreneurs to the everyman.
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Tuesday, 2 February 2016
Alicia Keys and BlackBerry? Why celebrities answer the call of tech companies
Lady Gaga and Will.i.am have also snaffled 'creative director' jobs for hi-tech corporations. What's the appeal of these gigs – are they anything more than a photo op?
Most companies would struggle when faced with a rapidly declining market share, but not BlackBerry. It may be losing customers to Apple and Samsung all over the place, but it knows exactly how to reel them all back in – by unveiling Alicia Keys as its new creative director.
It's a genius move. Nobody understands BlackBerries like Alicia Keys does. In retrospect, it's clear that most of her songs were really about smartphones all along, If I Ain't Got You was about the time she lost her BlackBerry and had to temporarily make do with a substandard Nokia, for example, and Girl On Fire was about the time she made the regrettable decision to buy a Kindle tablet instead of a BlackBerry Playbook. Surely Alicia Keys will lead BlackBerry into a brave new future; a future where all the ringtones sound like generic R&B and Alicia Keyshas to be careful not to let anyone photograph her using an iPhone.
But BlackBerry isn't the first tech company to draft in a celebrity to beef up its credibility. Three years ago, Lady Gaga was named as the creative director of Polaroid. She even designed a printer for the company. Admittedly it couldn't have looked any more generic if it tried, and people only buy Polaroids ironically now, but it's the thought that counts. Two years ago, Will.i.am from the Black Eyed Peas was named as the director of creative innovation at Intel; a move that suggested a horrible future where one day he'd mumble disinterestedly over a loop of the company's jingle for three minutes and release it as another godawful single.
Similarly, Microsoft drafted Jessica Alba in to launch Windows 8 last year. This was a step down from what the norm – she wasn't made a creative director of anything, not even of the box that Windows 8 phones came in – but on the plus side she gave the photographers something other than banks of worried-looking tech journalists to take pictures of.
Now we just have to wait and see whether Alicia Keys can live up to her creative-directing peers. If she can, who knows, that double concept R&B album about the annoying flashing red light in the corner of her BlackBerry might finally become a reality.
It's obvious that this sort of arrangement has a mutual benefit - the companies know that kids will react more strongly to, say, Lady Gaga than a balding divisional conglomerate head, and the celebrities can flatter themselves to think that they're anything other than a last-ditch attempt to save a firm from bankruptcy. It's a win-win for everybody, especially people who enjoy watching Alicia Keys hold a telephone that she doesn't really seem to care about very much.
Thorsten Heins, CEO of RIM, introduces Alicia Keys as the global creative director of BlackBerry. Yes. Photograph: Mark Lennihan/AP
Most companies would struggle when faced with a rapidly declining market share, but not BlackBerry. It may be losing customers to Apple and Samsung all over the place, but it knows exactly how to reel them all back in – by unveiling Alicia Keys as its new creative director.
It's a genius move. Nobody understands BlackBerries like Alicia Keys does. In retrospect, it's clear that most of her songs were really about smartphones all along, If I Ain't Got You was about the time she lost her BlackBerry and had to temporarily make do with a substandard Nokia, for example, and Girl On Fire was about the time she made the regrettable decision to buy a Kindle tablet instead of a BlackBerry Playbook. Surely Alicia Keys will lead BlackBerry into a brave new future; a future where all the ringtones sound like generic R&B and Alicia Keyshas to be careful not to let anyone photograph her using an iPhone.
Will.i.am in his role as Intel's director of creative innovation. Photograph: Bloomberg via Getty Images
But BlackBerry isn't the first tech company to draft in a celebrity to beef up its credibility. Three years ago, Lady Gaga was named as the creative director of Polaroid. She even designed a printer for the company. Admittedly it couldn't have looked any more generic if it tried, and people only buy Polaroids ironically now, but it's the thought that counts. Two years ago, Will.i.am from the Black Eyed Peas was named as the director of creative innovation at Intel; a move that suggested a horrible future where one day he'd mumble disinterestedly over a loop of the company's jingle for three minutes and release it as another godawful single.
Jessica Alba introduces another important Windows 8 announcement to a room of spellbound tech journos. Photograph: Stephen Lam/Getty Images
Similarly, Microsoft drafted Jessica Alba in to launch Windows 8 last year. This was a step down from what the norm – she wasn't made a creative director of anything, not even of the box that Windows 8 phones came in – but on the plus side she gave the photographers something other than banks of worried-looking tech journalists to take pictures of.
Now we just have to wait and see whether Alicia Keys can live up to her creative-directing peers. If she can, who knows, that double concept R&B album about the annoying flashing red light in the corner of her BlackBerry might finally become a reality.
It's obvious that this sort of arrangement has a mutual benefit - the companies know that kids will react more strongly to, say, Lady Gaga than a balding divisional conglomerate head, and the celebrities can flatter themselves to think that they're anything other than a last-ditch attempt to save a firm from bankruptcy. It's a win-win for everybody, especially people who enjoy watching Alicia Keys hold a telephone that she doesn't really seem to care about very much.
Alicia Keys laments 'heartless' justice system in reform pitch to Congress
‘We can no longer afford to be this cruel to our young’ singer-songwriter tells congressional staffers at event with Senator Cory Booker and activist Van Jones
From time to time, celebrities visit Washington to join advocates in favor of a cause – often raising the profile of an issue by giving extra weight to an otherwise routine press conference or committee hearing.
On Monday, the singer-songwriter Alicia Keys chose a decidedly low-key way to do this, delivering an impassioned plea to staffers on Capitol Hill, where Congress is weighing landmark legislation to reform the criminal justice system.
Keys spoke not as the recipient of multiple Grammy awards, nor as an international superstar of more than a decade. She addressed the crowd as a mother.
Keys had just arrived from Baltimore, where protests were sparked earlier this year after Freddie Gray, an unarmed 25-year-old black man, died in police custody. Keys had spent hours on Monday meeting the families of those who had been incarcerated, in some cases parents who saw their children tried as adults at ages as young as 15.
“Nowhere in the rest of the western world are juveniles being tried as adults, or even worse, sentenced to life sentences without parole,” she said. “Is this who we are now? Is this who we want to be?
“These are just regular boys and girls, trying to find their way.”
Joining Keys were Senator Cory Booker, one of the leading proponents of criminal justice reform, and civil rights activist Van Jones. Booker, from New Jersey, is a member of a bipartisan Senate group that in September reached a compromise that aims to lower mandatory minimums for non-violent drug offenders and reform a justice system that disproportionately impacts minorities, particularly African Americans.
In an interview with the Guardian after the event, Keys underscored the urgency of the moment following a year marked by national demonstrations over race relations and the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement.
“We need to take that momentum and utilize it,” she said. “We’re losing lives, stopping lives.”
Reflecting on her meetings in Baltimore, she said she had been struck by the different trajectories among the youth she encountered.
One young man had been given the opportunity to go to a high school that propelled and supported him, turned around his grades and helped him become the first member of his family to go to college. One girl had gone to prison when she was 14.
“It’s the opportunity or the lack of that makes all the difference in the world,” she said. “It really has the potential to change everything.”
Last year, Keys launched the We Are Here movement, to push for social justice on a wide range of national and international issues including racial inequity in the US. She has also supported Cut50, an organization co-founded by Jones that seeks to reduce the prison population by 50% over the next 10 years.
On Capitol Hill, Keys urged attendees to sign an online petition that would be delivered to the White House once it reached 1m signatures.
Criminal justice reform was “extremely urgent”, she told the Guardian, pointing to a limited window of time to mount pressure on lawmakers. Asked how escalating tensions between police officers and minorities factored into her message, she said it was no surprise that communities of color lacked trust in law enforcement.
“One of the most important things that I saw [in Baltimore] was people are guilty before they’re even proven innocent,” Keys said. “They’re not assumed to be innocent, they’re assumed to be guilty.
“Who would have trust when you’re attacked, and when you’re not given the opportunity to express yourself? When you’re just automatically judged that you’re there doing something wrong, whether you are or not.”
Keys said of the US criminal justice system: ‘People are not assumed to be innocent, they’re assumed to be guilty.’ Photograph: Jackie Brown/Splash News/Corbis
From time to time, celebrities visit Washington to join advocates in favor of a cause – often raising the profile of an issue by giving extra weight to an otherwise routine press conference or committee hearing.
On Monday, the singer-songwriter Alicia Keys chose a decidedly low-key way to do this, delivering an impassioned plea to staffers on Capitol Hill, where Congress is weighing landmark legislation to reform the criminal justice system.
Keys spoke not as the recipient of multiple Grammy awards, nor as an international superstar of more than a decade. She addressed the crowd as a mother.
Keys had just arrived from Baltimore, where protests were sparked earlier this year after Freddie Gray, an unarmed 25-year-old black man, died in police custody. Keys had spent hours on Monday meeting the families of those who had been incarcerated, in some cases parents who saw their children tried as adults at ages as young as 15.
“Nowhere in the rest of the western world are juveniles being tried as adults, or even worse, sentenced to life sentences without parole,” she said. “Is this who we are now? Is this who we want to be?
“These are just regular boys and girls, trying to find their way.”
Joining Keys were Senator Cory Booker, one of the leading proponents of criminal justice reform, and civil rights activist Van Jones. Booker, from New Jersey, is a member of a bipartisan Senate group that in September reached a compromise that aims to lower mandatory minimums for non-violent drug offenders and reform a justice system that disproportionately impacts minorities, particularly African Americans.
In an interview with the Guardian after the event, Keys underscored the urgency of the moment following a year marked by national demonstrations over race relations and the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement.
“We need to take that momentum and utilize it,” she said. “We’re losing lives, stopping lives.”
Reflecting on her meetings in Baltimore, she said she had been struck by the different trajectories among the youth she encountered.
One young man had been given the opportunity to go to a high school that propelled and supported him, turned around his grades and helped him become the first member of his family to go to college. One girl had gone to prison when she was 14.
“It’s the opportunity or the lack of that makes all the difference in the world,” she said. “It really has the potential to change everything.”
Last year, Keys launched the We Are Here movement, to push for social justice on a wide range of national and international issues including racial inequity in the US. She has also supported Cut50, an organization co-founded by Jones that seeks to reduce the prison population by 50% over the next 10 years.
On Capitol Hill, Keys urged attendees to sign an online petition that would be delivered to the White House once it reached 1m signatures.
Criminal justice reform was “extremely urgent”, she told the Guardian, pointing to a limited window of time to mount pressure on lawmakers. Asked how escalating tensions between police officers and minorities factored into her message, she said it was no surprise that communities of color lacked trust in law enforcement.
“One of the most important things that I saw [in Baltimore] was people are guilty before they’re even proven innocent,” Keys said. “They’re not assumed to be innocent, they’re assumed to be guilty.
“Who would have trust when you’re attacked, and when you’re not given the opportunity to express yourself? When you’re just automatically judged that you’re there doing something wrong, whether you are or not.”
She expressed a similar message in her formal remarks, emphasizing the need to show more compassion toward minority youth.
Every teenager makes mistakes, Keys pointed out. She certainly did, she said, as had everyone gathered in the room when they were teenagers. Keys recounted stories she had heard of those who grew up in environments in which one mistake could change an entire life.
“Fourteen years old and tried as an adult. Sixteen years old and tried as an adult,” she said. “We can no longer afford to be this cruel to our young ... It’s heartless.”
The criminal justice bill in the Senate, which cleared a committee vote last month, will not resolve every problem. But it would be the most significant federal action in decades. It also has the backing of the White House, where Barack Obama has made criminal justice reform a pillar of his second-term agenda.
Booker said Keys and others like her could play a “very powerful role” in helping to bolster the message, drawing on the involvement of artists like Harry Belafonte and Dick Gregory in the civil rights movement of the 1960s.
Booker told the Guardian the proposed criminal justice reforms would save billions in taxpayer dollars, lower crime and, more importantly, elevate potential in communities most deeply impacted by tough-on-crime laws.
“We are conducting our criminal justice system in a way that is incredibly expensive, it’s not making us more safe, and it’s just destroying human potential,” Booker said.
Booker said he was pleased by the rare consensus across both parties in favor of reforming the system, but cautioned against complacency.
“This will be a long road. It’s going to be an every single day effort,” he said. “And we’ve got to keep the pressure on.”
Every teenager makes mistakes, Keys pointed out. She certainly did, she said, as had everyone gathered in the room when they were teenagers. Keys recounted stories she had heard of those who grew up in environments in which one mistake could change an entire life.
“Fourteen years old and tried as an adult. Sixteen years old and tried as an adult,” she said. “We can no longer afford to be this cruel to our young ... It’s heartless.”
The criminal justice bill in the Senate, which cleared a committee vote last month, will not resolve every problem. But it would be the most significant federal action in decades. It also has the backing of the White House, where Barack Obama has made criminal justice reform a pillar of his second-term agenda.
Booker said Keys and others like her could play a “very powerful role” in helping to bolster the message, drawing on the involvement of artists like Harry Belafonte and Dick Gregory in the civil rights movement of the 1960s.
Booker told the Guardian the proposed criminal justice reforms would save billions in taxpayer dollars, lower crime and, more importantly, elevate potential in communities most deeply impacted by tough-on-crime laws.
“We are conducting our criminal justice system in a way that is incredibly expensive, it’s not making us more safe, and it’s just destroying human potential,” Booker said.
Booker said he was pleased by the rare consensus across both parties in favor of reforming the system, but cautioned against complacency.
“This will be a long road. It’s going to be an every single day effort,” he said. “And we’ve got to keep the pressure on.”
Friday, 15 January 2016
Alicia Keys Pens Open Letter for Justice Reform
"Let’s release people who have made dumb mistakes in their past into a more compassionate America. We should strive to live in a country where your worst deed no longer defines you."
(Grant Lamos IV/Getty Images)
Alicia Keys wrote an open letter to encourage fans to sign a petition to reform the Justice system. In the note, the GRAMMY winner explains a need to “scale back overly harsh sentences for nonviolent drug offenders” adding the broken system is “destroying families.”
She adds, “Rather than treating drug addiction and mental illness with compassion and treatment, we punish and incarcerate mothers, fathers and children. Our prisons have become warehouses for the poor, addicted, and mentally ill. We have to change this.”
The call to arms comes following President Barack Obama‘s State of the Union speech yesterday (Jan. 12), in which he called for Justice reform.
Read her entire letter below:
Every night, nearly three million children go to bed with a parent behind bars.
We sell ourselves as the land of the free, but we have more people in prisons and jails than the whole Western world combined.
Is this our America?
On a recent trip to Baltimore, I saw firsthand how the prison system is destroying families. I spoke with an eight-year-old boy about his father, his hero, who “used to take him everywhere.” But now, his father is incarcerated. Sadly, his story is all too common across our nation: children are left to grow up without their heroes, who are also often their mothers, fathers, sisters, and brothers.
As a parent myself, I’m asking you to help us fix this system.
Rather than treating drug addiction and mental illness with compassion and treatment, we punish and incarcerate mothers, fathers and children. Our prisons have become warehouses for the poor, addicted, and mentally ill. We have to change this.
President Obama has asked Congress to pass a bill as soon as possible. Both the Senate and House Judiciary Committees have passed versions of a bipartisan bill that would scale back overly harsh sentences for nonviolent drug offenders. But a version of this bill still needs to pass the full Senate and House, which means it needs your support.
We sell ourselves as the land of the free, but we have more people in prisons and jails than the whole Western world combined.
Is this our America?
On a recent trip to Baltimore, I saw firsthand how the prison system is destroying families. I spoke with an eight-year-old boy about his father, his hero, who “used to take him everywhere.” But now, his father is incarcerated. Sadly, his story is all too common across our nation: children are left to grow up without their heroes, who are also often their mothers, fathers, sisters, and brothers.
As a parent myself, I’m asking you to help us fix this system.
Rather than treating drug addiction and mental illness with compassion and treatment, we punish and incarcerate mothers, fathers and children. Our prisons have become warehouses for the poor, addicted, and mentally ill. We have to change this.
President Obama has asked Congress to pass a bill as soon as possible. Both the Senate and House Judiciary Committees have passed versions of a bipartisan bill that would scale back overly harsh sentences for nonviolent drug offenders. But a version of this bill still needs to pass the full Senate and House, which means it needs your support.
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