Archive for March, 2017

Niki Ashton kowtows after Black Lives Matter accuses her of ‘cultural appropriation’ for Beyonce lyrics in campaign meme – The Rebel

NDP Leadership candidate Niki Ashton removed a meme from her social media accounts which included the lyrics to the left from the Beyonce song 'Irreplaceable'.

After posting the meme on Twitter, a Black Lives Matter Vancouver account confronted the NDP leadership hopeful. Appropriating Black culture is not intersectional feminism. Please delete your "to the left" FB post & address the issue, the account tweeted.

Ashton then removed the meme and responded by THANKING the radical BLM account. We removed it.Not our intention to appropriate. We're committed to a platform of racial justice+would appreciate ur feedback, she replied.

She then followed it up with a couple of other tweets. As noted I appreciate the msg from @BLM_Van. Showing respect is what building a movement is all about and I will not tolerate racism or hate speech directed at #BLM or any community.

As iPolitics points out, there was an immediate backlash to Ashton removing the tweet with some calling her to 'have a backbone'.

SOUND OFF: should she have deleted the tweet?

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Niki Ashton kowtows after Black Lives Matter accuses her of 'cultural appropriation' for Beyonce lyrics in campaign meme - The Rebel

Outrage Over ‘Offensive and Scary’ St. Patrick’s Day ‘Drunk Lives Matter’ T-Shirt – Heat Street

An event organizer who sells parody T-shirts has come under fire after putting one on sale in time for St Patricks Day bearing the slogan Drunk Lives Matter.

Some people have claimed the shirt is offensive and scary.

The company behind the parody T-shirt, PubCrawls.com, now appears to be in hot water having adapted the nameof the anti-police movement Black Lives Matter. It uses the same font as BLM shirts.

The Baltimore Radio 92Q Jam attacked the company,saying:For people of color its already scary enough to see masses of drunk white people roaming around town, but to see them intoxicated and making fun of a movement whose goal is to save our very lives? Well, thats damn near terrifying.

FYI: St. Patricks Day is this Friday, March 17. Be careful folks, the radio station added.

Melissa Kravitz, a writer at left-leaning Mic.com, alsoattacked the shirt, claiming itcalls the whole of St Patricks Day into question.

This parody delegitimizes the Black Lives Matter slogan by altering it to encourage a day of debauchery and binge drinking, and the shirt also implies the main point of St. Patricks Day is to get drunk, shewrote.

She added: A swarm of drunken St. Patricks Day celebrators wearing a shirt that essentially denounces the BLM movement is a scary thing to imagine encountering, but PubCrawls.com has made it a possibility.

The t-shirt,sold on Amazon, also attracted some negative reviews. This is extremely racist. Amazon, you should remove this immediately. There is nothing funny about the murder of black people, said one reviewer.

Another review said: I never knew! Oh wait this is supposed to be funny? My bad. In that case its disgusting.

As an African American I CAN NOT give this any stars but Im forced to give it one! I cant imagine what would allow you to think this was a good idea to sell! What could you be thinking apparently YOU WERE NOT thinking about your African American customers and how much this would hurt them! wrote a reviewer.

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Outrage Over 'Offensive and Scary' St. Patrick's Day 'Drunk Lives Matter' T-Shirt - Heat Street

I fought the cops in the 1990s and I support Black Lives Matter now – Daily Xtra

Theres a fundamental us against them flaw in the recurring argument that Black Lives Matter is somehow hijacking Pride.

Just last week, former Vancouver Pride executive director Ray Lam accused BLM Toronto of hijacking Prides across the country, of holding the queer community hostage with its bombastic demand to ban police, of raining on our parade and stealing our voice and power as a community.

Lam also points, in his Georgia Straight column, to pressing queer problems that he considers more worthy of attention, and notes that the petition to keep Vancouver police in the parade drew about three times as many signatures as BLMs petition to remove police.

But what Lam fails to grasp is that were all part of the same movement towards equality, and queers of colour have been in the front lines since Stonewall. BLM is part of our community. And they are telling us the privilege of a comfortable relationship with police does not extend to all of our members.

I agree with Lams suggestion that we need queer community leaders, not party planners parties are an essential part of the economy of Pride but they are not the reason for Pride. This is an opportunity for queer community leaders to support some of our most marginalized members, listen to what theyre telling us, and be part of an ongoing conversation with BLM and police.

Leadership is not necessarily about doing whats popular.

Quoting petition stats is the weakest argument in a debate on social reform. Basing decisions on public polls serves only to support the privileged majority. While frequently mistaken for democracy, its the antithesis of social reform.

If the Gay Alliance Toward Equality had petitioned Vancouverites in 1978, do you think the first Pride parade would ever have happened here?

Even if GATE had only petitioned the existing LGBT population at the time, the results wouldve undoubtedly leaned towards maintaining the status quo and not making a fuss. And Pride has always been about making a fuss.

Of course its terrific that the police have come as far as they have. I was on hand for the planning of demonstrations in front of Torontos 52 Division in the early 90s with other Queer Nationalists. I have witnessed the encouraging developments within police departments across the country. But I only witness a part of the reality the part that directly affects me. And certainly I want to celebrate those developments.

But when a broader reality is brought to my attention when Im told there are still members of my community who are not enjoying the protection and freedom of those developments why would I choose to celebrate a partial win at the expense of queer voices?

Because to contemplate anything else is uncomfortable?

And finally, as a devout Streisandian (who kneels at the altar of Merrill and Styne), I would like to put an end to the blasphemous use of the raining on our parade analogy. It doesnt hold up and its truly tiresome. BLM has not performed a mystical rain-making incantation. Theyre pointing out that while some of us are under the big tent enjoying the catering, others are still standing out in the rain.

If were not willing to listen to the most vulnerable and marginalized voices within the complicated queer community, then our Pride is being regulated by easy choices instead of being liberated by hard truths.

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I fought the cops in the 1990s and I support Black Lives Matter now - Daily Xtra

Shortcuts & Delusions: Chasing Shadows, Tilting At Windmills – Being Libertarian


Being Libertarian
Shortcuts & Delusions: Chasing Shadows, Tilting At Windmills
Being Libertarian
For years, a great many conservatives and libertarians warned that President Obama was a socialist, communist, or worse. Obama is undoubtedly of the Progressive Left, but he turned out to be a bigger advocate for corporatism than the workers owning the ...

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Shortcuts & Delusions: Chasing Shadows, Tilting At Windmills - Being Libertarian

How The Tax Code Picks Winners And Losers – Being Libertarian


Being Libertarian
How The Tax Code Picks Winners And Losers
Being Libertarian
It's never optimal for the government to sway private decision making one way or the other, even if it's encouraging actions we support. This can be tough to process even for the most libertarian-leaning minds. This is especially true for tax policy ...

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How The Tax Code Picks Winners And Losers - Being Libertarian