Cardi B wins defamation lawsuit against YouTuber Tasha K

Rapper Cardi B won a lawsuit against YouTuber Tasha K for defamation, invasion of privacy and intentional infliction of emotional distress, and was awarded a seven-figure sum in damages.

           

https://www.facebook.com/cnn/posts/10162563136371509

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If it's real then it's not defamation, not unless it's a fabrication of videos or pictures comprises with speils of ExPLicaTions which are slanderous. Slandering in distinguish with #anticipation . #PerezHilton Video lookalike with my Daughter in vague as vaguely that could be used against her as a Hook whatever insinuation ---or----persuadingly with these STRANGER in Dubai hamdan #AnneCurtisSmith Videos. ️ #sangreai #davincicode ️??♟️♟️♟️?? #emotional #distressing if you cannot have what you wanted as wishes in this #damnation , meaning you're full PURsuitS in #mimicries by turning----up----side---down of events wouldn't be a guarantee at all in this #doginthemanger strategy as TETRA eye's. #EurwenHeussaff #Practicum #practicemakesperfect #practice #practicechallenge #hahaha #hahahaha #hahahahaha as #HaH ️


Du Bois also knew that Black America had never consisted of one social or economic class. Even before the outbreak of the Civil War, about 11 percent of Black America was free, some born into families that had been free for generations. And in 1899, when Du Bois published his seminal sociological study, “The Philadelphia Negro,” he was already noting that these two classes had morphed into four: the middle class and above, working people (“fair to comfortable”), the poor and, in terms his Victorian contemporaries would have approved of, the “vicious and criminal classes.”

Du Bois would probably be astonished to see how these classes have fared, especially since the death of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968, just as new affirmative action programs were beginning to expand drastically the ranks of black students on white campuses and thus to affect the class structure of Black America.




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