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Continued curfews, primary races, Black Out Tuesday: 5 things to know Tuesday - USA TODAY

Continued curfews, primary races, Black Out Tuesday: 5 things to know Tuesday - USA TODAY

Continued curfews, primary races, Black Out Tuesday: 5 things to know Tuesday - USA TODAY
Jun 02, 2020 1 min, 49 secs

Curfews imposed as protests continue, the music industry will protest the death of George Floyd and more news to start your Tuesday.

cities, including New York and Washington, D.C., as groups of Americans continue to protest the killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police officers, while others are looting and committing acts of violence.

curfew to apparently clear the way for President Donald Trump to walk to St?

Amid racial unrest across the nation, President Donald Trump on Monday declared himself “the president of law and order” and threatened to deploy the U.S.

Presumptive Democratic presidential nominee and former Vice President Joe Biden will leave the state of Delaware for the first time since mid-March Tuesday when he goes to Philadelphia to deliver remarks on the ongoing unrest due to the killing of George Floyd by police in Minneapolis.

Seeking to elevate his voice in the national debate over racism and police brutality, Biden on Monday offered emotional support and promised bold action during an in-person discussion with black leaders in Wilmington, Delaware, and a subsequent virtual meeting with big-city mayors who are grappling with racial tensions and frustrated by a lack of federal support.

Democratic Presidential candidate Joe Biden met with community leaders at a predominantly African American church in his hometown of Wilmington, Delaware on Monday.

Several top record labels have said they will halt their business operations during Black Out Tuesday, a message of solidarity after the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis. "This is not a day off," Columbia Records announced in a tweet

Ariana Grande, Jamie Foxx, Nick Cannon and other entertainers have joined protests across the country over the death of George Floyd

According to multiple reports, a group of Facebook employees participated in a virtual walkout Monday to protest the way the social media giant handles posts from President Donald Trump

In the latest notable example, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has defended the company's decision to leave up a post by the president in which he warned, "When the looting starts, the shooting starts." The phrase echoes the language of a Miami police chief in 1967 and it was later used by segregationist presidential candidate George Wallace during the 1968 campaign

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