Archive for March, 2017

Black Lives Matter joining forces with minimum wage activists for nationwide protests – Chicago Tribune

A cluster of Black Lives Matter groups and the organization leading the push for a $15-an-hour wage are joining forces to combine the struggle for racial justice with the fight for economic equality, just as the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. tried to do in the last year of his life.

They are launching their first national joint action on April 4, the 49th anniversary of King's assassination, with "Fight Racism, Raise Pay" protests in two dozen cities, including Atlanta; Milwaukee; Memphis, Tennessee; Chicago; Boston; Denver; and Las Vegas.

King was gunned down in 1968 while on a visit to Memphis to support striking black sanitation workers.

"When MLK was assassinated, he was talking to workers who were dealing with union-busting, unfair wages," said Kendall Fells, organizing director for the Fight for $15. "The bottom line is that every day, workers of color across the country face deep-seated racism that would seem to be out of Dr. King's era, but sadly it's still happening today."

Fells said the new political reality requires the groups to band together. After President Donald Trump's election, some civil rights and social justice organizations are taking an all-hands-on-deck approach against an administration they see as hostile to the working poor and minorities.

By working together, the two groups can reach more people and amplify their messages, activists say.

"What we both realize is we're stronger when we operate together," Fells said.

Fight for $15 has helped raise the minimum wage in places like New York and Washington. The Black Lives Matter movement grew largely out of the protests over the fatal shooting of Michael Brown by a white officer in Ferguson, Missouri, in 2014. The organization has demanded police reforms and an end to killings of unarmed black people.

Fight for $15 and Black Lives first came together in Ferguson. The nearly all-black workforce at the neighborhood McDonald's had been on strike before Brown was killed. After Brown's death, those workers used their organizing skills to protest police department practices.

In a controversial 1967 speech titled "Beyond Vietnam," King made a radical shift in his message, speaking out about the triple evils of war, racism and capitalism and linking economic and racial inequality. That same year, the civil rights leader launched his Poor People's Campaign to address disparities in employment and housing.

"We're not simply remembering his assassination," said the Rev. William Barber II, who will lead the Memphis protest. "We're remembering why he was there and reimagining that for the 21st century. Dr. King was connecting black and white poverty and saying black and white poor people need to be allies."

Asha Ransby-Sporn, national organizing chair with the Black Youth Project 100, one of dozens of Black Lives groups that are taking part in the protests, said police harassment and the routine treatment of blacks as criminals are among the biggest barriers to economic justice for black Americans.

Broadening the coalition, as King attempted, is important, she said.

"We can't fight on any of these fronts without fighting on all of them," Ransby-Sporn said.

Terrence Wise, a $9.50-an-hour McDonald's employee and Fight for $15 organizer in Kansas City, Missouri, plans to take part in the April 4 protest there.

"It's one thing to be able to make a living wage, but to go home from work and be harassed by the police or treated differently in our communities, or discriminated against in the workplace ... I need to be treated as a human being," Wise said. "They're one and the same fight."

Original post:
Black Lives Matter joining forces with minimum wage activists for nationwide protests - Chicago Tribune

‘Black Lives Matter’ protesters clash with critics at Baltimore vigil for NYC stab victim Timothy Caughman – New York Daily News

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Sunday, March 26, 2017, 7:04 PM

A Baltimore vigil honoring the black victim of an accused white killers racist manhunt turned into a shouting match Saturday night between demonstrators and hecklers offended by the Black Lives Matter banners.

White protesters carrying the signs gathered in the Baltimore neighborhood of James Jackson to denounce the accused killers racist stalking swing that ended in the fatal Midtown Manhattan stabbing of an elderly black man.

Horrified residents tried to paint a more inclusive picture of the citys Hampden section, which is also home to Jackson, 28, who told police he boarded a bus in Maryland en route to New York on a sick mission to target black men before settling on Timothy Caughman, and stabbing him to death last week a 2-foot sword.

But the vigil, outside the St. Luke's Evangelical Lutheran Church, also drew hecklers annoyed that the neighborhood group would align itself with the Black Lives Matter movement

EXCLUSIVE: Jackson voices twisted regrets over killing Caughman

Idiots, one driver shouted as he drove past the gathering.

All lives matter, shouted another dissenter.

If they did, a protester retorted, he wouldnt be dead.

Baltimore resident Megan Kenny said the neighborhood has a dubious history.

De Blasio: Timothy Caughmans murder an act of domestic terrorism

There is something about Hampden that racist people feel comfortable here, Kenny said.

In a city where the population is more than 60% black, nearly 79% of the neighborhoods residents are white, according to demographic statistics from Baltimores department of health.

St. Luke's pastor, Vicar Jim Muratore, said he is ashamed of Hampdens past.

"We cannot ignore the history that cultivated Hampden's reputation as a neighborhood to which African American people do not go," Muratore said in a Facebook post.

KING: No place for attacks on character of Timothy Caughman

"That has begun to change, but we still have a long road ahead of us. Hampden was a stronghold for the Ku Klux Klan for generations. Landlords bought up houses to keep out 'the blacks.' Even our own church hosted black-face minstrel shows as a popular event for the community. Yes. That's racist."

Protesters expressed their condolences for the victim.

"This horror began right here," Baltimore City Councilwoman Mary Pat Clarke told the group.

"We are ashamed, distressed and in sympathy with his family in New York. We came here to change people who hate like that."

Read more from the original source:
'Black Lives Matter' protesters clash with critics at Baltimore vigil for NYC stab victim Timothy Caughman - New York Daily News

Local Black Lives Matter movement hosts first march – Iowa State Daily

Rain and cold conditions did nothing to thwart individuals from participating in a Black Lives Matter (BLM) march and rally Saturday afternoon near downtown Ames.

The event was organized by Sean Carlton-Appleton and Abdul Muhammad, co-founders of Ames' BLM movement.

A group of about a hundred Iowa State students, faculty and community members participated in the march that began at Brookside Park. The march continued along Sixth Street before making a right turn onto Northwestern Avenue, continuing into the downtown section of Ames before coming to a conclusion at the United Community Church of Ames.

Candidates for the Ames School Board, such as Monic Behnken, professor of criminal justice studies at Iowa State, spoke on the importance of equality in education to attendees of the post-march rally at the church.

Behnken acknowledged the recent research that showed an achievement gap between white and black students at Ames' schools. Many students and community members spoke of their gratitude for the march and shared their experiences dealing with racism.

Many Iowa State Students acknowledged incidents that have occurred on campus, such as posters that were hung on campus displaying swastikas.

We have these conversations the wrong way, Muhammad said.

Immigrants and multicultural students from Ames High School shared their experiences dealing with racial stereotypes and having labels placed upon them. An individual took to the microphone and sang Lift Every Voice and Sing, which is widely heralded as the African-American national anthem created by James Weldon Johnson in 1899.

Natasha "Tasha" Hill, sophomore in global resource systems,said there had not been much activism on Iowa States campus and needed to attend the event for herself. Hill had received an invite to the march through Facebook and sent it to her friends. Ebere Agwuncha, sophomore in pre-agriculture, was a student in attendance who migrated with his family from Algeria to America at a young age.

"No one is talking about discrimination, no one is talking about prejudice, no one is talking about labels and Trumps president, Agwuncha said. You dont have to be against your own culture.

Walter Svenddal, sophomore in computer engineering, said he decided to attend to support his friends. Svenddal said he found comfort in being surrounded by individuals with diverse backgrounds at the rally.

The message from today was really an empowering, solid message, Svenddal said.

Read more here:
Local Black Lives Matter movement hosts first march - Iowa State Daily

Homeowner told to take down Blue Lives Matter flag deemed ‘racist’ – NBC4i.com


NBC4i.com
Homeowner told to take down Blue Lives Matter flag deemed 'racist'
NBC4i.com
She called them to ask why and they told her they had received a complaint that it was considered racist and offensive and anti-black lives matter, Gaddie says. The homeowners' association stated they have the right to refuse any flag for any reasons ...
Florida Homeowner Forced to Remove 'Racist' Blue Lives Matter Flag?snopes.com
Florida woman told to take down her 'Blue Lives Matter' flag in St. John's CountyWPTV.com
Homeowner forced to remove Blue Lives Matter flag after it's dee - WNEM TV 5WNEM Saginaw
fox2now.com
all 28 news articles »

See the article here:
Homeowner told to take down Blue Lives Matter flag deemed 'racist' - NBC4i.com

Democrat in district won by Trump running for governor – The Hill

Rep. Tim Walz (D-Minn.) said Monday he will run for governor of Minnesota next year, creating a potential pickup opportunity for Republicans in a district won handily by President Trump.

Walz told the Post Bulletin that he will officially file the paperwork for his candidacy later Monday.

"I think now more than ever people are just wanting [government] to work. They are not looking for the partisanship. They are not looking for me to have all the answers, but they are certainly looking for me to bring people together to find those solutions that we all know are there," Walz said.

His decision to run for governor would make what was already expected to be a competitive district even more so in 2018.

He barely won reelection in November, defeating Republican Jim Hagedorn by less than a point. Hagedorn is already running for the seat again.

Trump won 53 percent of the vote in Walzs district, compared to Democratic nominee Hillary ClintonHillary Rodham ClintonCheney: Russian election interference could be act of war Conservatism's worst enemy? The Freedom Caucus. The Hill's 12:30 Report MOREs 38 percent.

The House GOP campaign organization, the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC), had already planned to make Walz a target next year.

Apparently, Tim Walz would rather bail out than face a tough race for his seat, NRCC spokesman Matt Gorman said in a statement. The NRCC will continue to target this open seat aggressively and are confident well turn it red in 2018.

Walz told the Post Bulletin that hes confident Democrats can keep the seat in their column. Democrats would need to flip 24 GOP-held seats in order to win back the House next year and can't afford to lose any seats they currently hold.

"I trust the people of the 1st District. I would argue they've chosen wisely six times in a row, and I anticipate they'll continue to do so, Walz said.

Walz is entering a crowded field for his party's gubernatorial nomination. Three other candidates are running for the Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor nomination for governor: St. Paul Mayor Chris Coleman, Minnesota state Rep. Erin Murphy and State Auditor Rebecca Otto.

Rep. Rick Nolan (D-Minn.), another Democrat targeted by the NRCC in a district won by Trump, is also considering a gubernatorial bid.

See original here:
Democrat in district won by Trump running for governor - The Hill