Archive for April, 2017

Black Lives Matter Cincinnati discusses Cameo shooting – The News Record

Black Lives Matter Cincinnati (BLMC) hosted a discussion about the Cameo Nightclub shooting, as well as police and race relations on Saturday in the Bush Recreation Center in Walnut Hills.

At the start of the meeting, the organization stated that the police were unwelcome and asked any law enforcement present to leave.

Ashley Harrington, a member of the BLMC Steering Committee, began the discussion with a presentation on crime, legality and the circumstances that have hindered black people.

Crime and legality are both social constructs in the U.S. that are tied to class, race and capitalism, Harrington said.

She compared todays mass incarceration to slavery of the past. Todays prison system exists only as a form of free labor, said Harrington.

Harrington defined social alienation, which is an intentional high degree of distance between individuals and the society they live in.

There was equal representation of both races, as well as a variety of ages, and an almost equal amount of men and women in the room.

Three members of the Steering Committee that were present shared their ideas about police relations. All of the speakers agreed that police do not help, but only further create violence and fear within primarily black communities.

BLMC showed a video of Hamilton County Prosecutor Joe Deters, purportedly saying, "Cameo had a lot of people in there who are not good peoplethe majority had criminal records."

The event included a moment of silence for all of the victims of the shooting and their families.

Following that, the speakers discussed ways for communities to rise up together and respond to police brutality together, and then they proposed coming up with a uniform solution in which all communities could respond together.

At the end of the meeting, all of the people in the room were given the opportunity to ask questions and share ideas.

A lot of the discussion centered on gun violence.

Throughout the meeting, the main idea was to combat the current narrative and representation of black people in the media, to reduce police presence in Cincinnati and to build a sense of community among those living in this city.

We cant allow for this rhetoric that it is the fault of the black community, said BLMC Steering Committee member and University of Cincinnati student Mona Jenkins. We are going to stand up and respond to this. We need to start creating community opportunities for ourselves because others are not going to do it.

Jenkins spoke about issues like the closure of the Walnut Hills Kroger that many residents have relied on for years, as well as the opening of a gifted school in the area while the neighborhood school is failing.

Some leaders of Black Lives Matter Cincinnati offered information on black psychologists for anyone struggling with mental illness or coping with loss after the Cameo shooting.

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Black Lives Matter Cincinnati discusses Cameo shooting - The News Record

From Syria to Black Lives Matter: 3 ways WWI still shapes America – CNN

But on May 4, 1918, Johnson grabbed a two-inch bolo knife and a splintered rifle and did something so remarkable that he earned another name: "Black Death."

Johnson was a US sergeant standing sentry one night in a French forest when a German raiding party attacked. The swarming Germans shot Johnson in his lip, head and side. Yet Johnson kept shooting back. When his rifle jammed, he grabbed it by the barrel and clubbed more Germans. Then he used the bolo knife to stab and disembowel another enemy soldier. He kept throwing grenades until he fainted from blood loss.

When his comrades found Johnson the next morning, they discovered he had killed four Germans and wounded about 20 more. They could still see the bloody trails of wounded Germans who had crawled into the woods to escape Johnson's fury. Johnson had been wounded 21 times but somehow survived the hourlong battle.

"There wasn't anything so fine about it," Johnson would say later when praised for his gallantry. "Just fought for my life. A rabbit would have done that."

Johnson's story captures what's distinctive about the film. He was a black soldier who faced something even more lethal than German bayonets when he returned home. He discovered an America that was also at war with itself. Some of the most ferocious battles during World War I took place not in Europe but on the streets of America -- and some are still being fought today.

What should the President do when a foreign dictator is accused of murdering women and children? Does the US welcome too many immigrants? Are corporations too powerful? Are women treated like second-class citizens? Those might seem like questions ripped from today's headlines, yet they literally provoked riots and lynch mobs during World War I, the film shows.

Few people today, however, know how relevant the war remains because it seems so distant, trapped forever in wobbly black-and-white silent film, historians say.

Here are three battles from "The Great War" the United States is still waging:

They speak in funny accents and don't care about fitting in. So many are pouring across the border that they're threatening the American way of life. They're not real Americans.

That's what many Americans thought of German-Americans during World War I.

If you think political battles over immigration are tough today, they were vicious when America entered World War I, "The Great War" shows. A wave of hysteria aimed at German-Americans swept the nation as it struggled to assimilate what was then its largest ethnic group.

America didn't just declare war on Germany -- it waged war on German-American culture. Newspapers warned of "German troublemakers" and "German traps." People refused to drink German beer, and children were instructed to rip German songs out of music books. In one Ohio town, officials slaughtered all dogs belonging to German breeds.

A German-American coal miner accused of being a spy was even attacked by a mob, stripped of his clothes and hanged from a tree, the film reveals. The Washington Post applauded the mob's actions.

It was a time of demographic panic. When World War I erupted in Europe in 1914, the United States had a population of about 100 million immigrants. Millions of other Americans had parents who were born abroad.

Those citizens who didn't fit the definition of a "real American" faced persecution and torture. One of the most wrenching segments in the film looks at the story of three US citizens who became conscientious objectors to the war. They were David, Michael and Joseph Hofer, otherwise known as the "Hofer brothers."

The three South Dakota men were members of the Hutterites, a group of Christian pacifists. Hutterite men already drew suspicion because they wore long beards and hair and spoke German.

When the Hofer brothers were drafted, they refused to fight or wear a uniform. They were imprisoned in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, and brutally treated. They were denied food and water, forced to stand in freezing temperatures with scant clothing, and chained in a cell for up to nine hours a day. Two of them died. But none recanted their religious beliefs.

As a final indignity, the body of one of the two brothers who died was dressed in the military uniform he refused to wear when he was alive.

Brutality wasn't confined to the trenches of Europe. There was plenty of it in the streets of America.

When President Donald Trump dispatched Tomahawk missiles to an air base in Syria last week after the country's ruler was accused of launching lethal chemical attacks, he was operating from a script first penned by President Woodrow Wilson during World War I.

It was Wilson who said America should enter the war to make the world "safe for democracy." The notion that America had a moral responsibility to respond militarily to atrocities abroad began during World War I, "The Great War" shows.

"The modern version of the United States is born in this war," says Carlin, the "Hardcore" podcast historian.

"The Great War" also shows how the idealism of war can be used to crush populist movements.

World War I occurred during a surge of progressive activism in the United States. The labor movement was powerful, and socialists, communists and anarchists were common figures in public life. Women were leading the anti-war effort as well as crusading for the right to vote.

Yet much of this progressive momentum was halted by a crushing of popular dissent by the federal government, the film shows.

During the war, Wilson signed the Espionage Act and Sedition Act, which made it illegal to say almost anything against the United States or its war effort. Criticism of the US became dangerous. American internment camps didn't begin with the Japanese in World War II. The US government created them for political prisoners during World War I, the film shows.

That suppression even targeted one of the most famous progressive leaders of the time, Eugune Debs. Debs was the Bernie Sanders of his day. A socialist labor organizer and presidential candidate, he was arrested in 1918 for giving an anti-war speech and sentenced to 10 years in prison under the Espionage Act.

Wilson ultimately paid a price for his clampdown on radical and liberal groups. After the war ended, he tried to create a League of Nations that would mediate international disputes and prevent another world war from erupting. But he couldn't get the US Senate to agree to join the League, in part because his crackdown on anti-war activity had alienated or weakened any potential progressive allies.

Wilson would die of a stroke just six years later. He is depicted in the film as a tragic figure -- idealistic but deeply racist, a gifted politician who could have seen his League of Nations succeed if he had just bent a little to his political opposition.

She was born to a prosperous Quaker family in New Jersey but spent her life reviled by much of the American public. She was attacked by angry mobs and force-fed in prison after going on a hunger strike. Once, prison officials even tried to declare her insane.

Nevertheless, Alice Paul persisted.

One of the revelations of "The Great War" is the prominence of American women in the debate about World War I. It was a time of surging women's activism that would culminate in 1920 with the ratification of the 19th Amendment, giving women the right to vote.

Paul is one of the most fascinating characters in "The Great War." She would have fit right in with the massive Women's March on Washington the day after Trump was inaugurated. She placed relentless pressure on Wilson by asking how America could fight for democracy abroad while denying women the right to vote at home.

Black American soldiers fought some of the same battles to proclaim their humanity, the film points out.

When many entered the war, they were initially kept from the fighting by being assigned to clean latrines pits and unload supplies. Some were paired with French fighting units, who treated them with more respect than their white counterparts. Some of the most moving images from the film show black soldiers smiling and bantering easily with French troops.

"Folks didn't think about the etiquette of white supremacy any more than a fish thinks about the wetness of water. But when you step out of a system that people have told you is the only way, and then you look around and there are these people in the world working under a different set of rules, it changes people's imagination."

White America, though, wasn't ready for this New Negro. When these black soldiers returned home, many were greeted by the "Red Summer," often described as a wave of deadly race riots that swept through at least 25 American cities in 1919.

Calling them race riots, though, doesn't fully capture what happened, says Lentz-Smith, author of "Freedom Struggles: African Americans and World War I."

"You say riots and people think breaking shop windows and stealing stuff," she says. "They don't have a sense of what white mob violence really looks like. This is going into a black community on a rampage, trying to destroy black wealth, trying to hurt or kill black people. Folks say they're more akin to pogroms in the Jewish communities than any kind of riots we're seeing now."

This is the world Sgt. Johnson returned to after his heroic exploits in France. The French army awarded him its highest medal for valor. But the US Army didn't mention his 21 wounds in his discharge papers or give him disability pay. He returned to his job as a railway porter in Albany, New York, but his injuries made it impossible to continue.

Johnson's health faded as he descended into alcoholism and poverty. His wife and children left him, and he died in 1929 at age 32. His descendants believed he was buried in a pauper's grave.

But Johnson's story still had a surprise or two left.

A son, Herman, would join the famed Tuskegee Airmen during World War II and eventually lead a campaign to commemorate his father. Politicians got involved. A monument was built in Albany to honor Johnson. And the US Army awarded him a posthumous Medal of Honor.

But the Army's highest decoration for valor came with a strange twist. During its research, the Army discovered that Herman Johnson wasn't actually related to the man he thought was his father. The Army attributed Johnson's mistake to "historical inaccuracy, not fraudulent representation."

Then something else happened.

It turned out Johnson was never buried in a pauper's grave. Someone remembered the soldier known as "Black Death." He had been buried with full honors at Arlington National Cemetery, the final resting place for famous American soldiers such as Gen. George C. Marshall, President John F. Kennedy and World War II hero Audie Murphy.

Henry Johnson started as a railroad porter, then became the "Black Death." Ultimately the Great War left him with one last title:

American hero.

See more here:
From Syria to Black Lives Matter: 3 ways WWI still shapes America - CNN

Watch: SNL Hilariously Mocks Pepsi’s ‘Tone Deaf’ Commercial that Exploits Black Lives Matter Protests – AlterNet


AlterNet
Watch: SNL Hilariously Mocks Pepsi's 'Tone Deaf' Commercial that Exploits Black Lives Matter Protests
AlterNet
Since premiering the ad earlier this week, PepsiCo has taken a beating from the public and the press for co-opting Black Lives Matter and various other socially conscious protest movements in a cynical attempt to sell soda, resulting in a public ...
Pepsi's uncool attempt to borrow a Black Lives Matter imageMiami Herald (blog)
Kendall Jenner's Controversial Pepsi Ad Sparks Black Lives Matter DebateCBS Baltimore / WJZ
Infamous Pepsi Kendall Jenner Cop Video shot in Thailand, Actors Clueless As To Racial Anglelegal Insurrection (blog)
Daily Caller -Washington Post -RollingStone.com -PepsiCo
all 324 news articles »

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Watch: SNL Hilariously Mocks Pepsi's 'Tone Deaf' Commercial that Exploits Black Lives Matter Protests - AlterNet

How Black Lives Matter Philly is responding to 36 hours of right-wing media attacks – Billy Penn

Screenshots via Facebook and Breitbart

Their online mentions are not great.

Apr 05 2017 11:00 am

Right-wing media outlets including Breitbart, TheBlaze and Drudge Reportspent the last two days postingaboutBlack Lives Matter Philly, saying the groups black-only April meeting discriminates against white people.

But the organization, which has designated black-centered spaces since its inception in 2015, is defending the practice and asking critics to check their civil rights history.

Black-centered spaces provide black people with the opportunity to come together to strategize, organize and heal in fellowship without the fear of violence and co-optation, said L. Williams, a BLM Philly member who requested Billy Penn not publish her first name for safety purposes.

Earlier this week, Black Lives Matter Philly an affiliate of the national Black Lives Matter organization advertised its April 15 open meeting, noting this is a black only space.When someone tweeted at the organization Monday morning regarding the policy, they pointed out that Malcolm X took our same stance and replied that anyone who identifies as a person of the African Diaspora was welcome to attend. If not, you can support us in other ways.

By Monday afternoon, The Daily Caller published an article titled Black Lives Matter Philly Bans White People From Its Meetingsand Breitbart wrote white people banned from Black Lives Matter meetings in Philadelphia.Later that day, Drudge Report tweeted out the Daily Caller article to its more than 1.1 million Twitter followers. The Blazealso published an article about it Tuesday.

This morning, Black Lives Matter Philly released a lengthy statement about the backlash, writing We are unapologetically Black and believe having Black only spaces where Black people can come together to strategize, organize, heal and fellowship without the threat of violence and co-optation is an important part of Black liberation.

The organization wrote that the idea of black-only spaces is associated with the teachings of Malcolm X, Stokely Carmichael, Marcus Garvey and other black leaders. The teachings, they wrote, saythat we, Black people, are in the best position to define and create our own plan and path towards freedom and liberation based upon our own unique experiences as Black people in the United States.

They continued:

BLM Philly isnt the first or the only membership organization to restrict access to certain spaces based on a variety of criteria. There are religious ceremonies and events that people cannot attend unless they are a member of that faith.There is a huge difference between a systematic denial of a persons access to public spaces such as restaurants, hotels, schools and hospitals simply based on their skin color, and saying that a meeting is a Black-centered space. Trying to compare legal segregation and structural racism to lack of access to our meetings is a false dichotomy and the epitome of privilege.

Williams said Black Lives Matter Philly has routinely held meetings considered black-centered spaces, but this is the first time theyve dealt with widespread backlash.She said the grouproutinely directs others toward other organizations they can get involved with, including the Philly chapter of Standing Up for Racial Justice, a national organization that aims to mobilize white people for racial justice, POWER, Philly for REAL Justice and other groups in the city.

She said despite the relentless online attacks, Black Lives Matter Philly remains dedicated to hosting events with black-centered spaces.

Its been tiring, Williams said. Were trying to actively work to end white supremacy and racism, and our entire last 36 hours we have spent having to defend our position.

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How Black Lives Matter Philly is responding to 36 hours of right-wing media attacks - Billy Penn

Morning Spin: Lipinski facing challenge from progressive Democrat in Southwest Side congressional district – Chicago Tribune

Welcome to Clout Street: Morning Spin, our weekday feature to catch you up with what's going on in government and politics from Chicago to Springfield. Subscribe here.

Topspin

Democratic U.S. Rep. Dan Lipinski is headed for a primary challenge next year in the Southwest Side and southwest suburban 3rd Congressional District.

Marie Newman, a marketing consultant from La Grange, is looking to push a more progressive agenda.

In an email to supporters scheduled to go out Monday, Newman declares: Im in.

Over the past many months, I have attended over 55 group coffees and advocacy meetings throughout our district and Ive heard your concerns about our community and our country, she said in a statement.

"You shared your worries, your hopes, and your ideas. And many of you asked me to run for Congress -- because on issue after issue, Dan Lipinski hasnt been there for us. He is out of touch with our district, she said.

Lipinski, who succeeded his father, Bill, holds a more social conservative ideology than most Chicago Democrats specifically on issues involving abortion and womens health care.

Newman was born in Beverly and raised in Palos Park. After years of working in advertising, she started her own consulting business.

Im going to need your help. Its going to be a tough fight to reclaim our seat in Congress from a family of Washington insiders with a substantial war chest, whove held their seat in Congress for two generations, she said in her statement. After meeting with so many of you, I know we can do it from the grassroots up.

One side note: Lipinski dispatched help to Bolingbrook Mayor Roger Claar in his re-election bid after being challenged over his support and fundraising help for President Donald Trump. With mail-in ballots still to be counted, Claar appeared to narrowly hold on to win. (Rick Pearson)

What's on tap

*Mayor Rahm Emanuel is expected to attend the Cubs ribbon cutting ceremony on the new plaza outside Wrigley Field.

*Gov.BruceRauner will "announce new steps to strengthen hate crimes investigations in Illinois" at the Thompson Center.

*A joint meeting of two Chicago City Council committees will consider the appointment of Laura Kunard to the new job of deputy city inspector general for public safety.

*ACLU Executive Director Colleen Connell will speak at theCity Club of Chicago.

*Theweek ahead: On Tuesday, U.S. Rep. Danny Davis speaks to theCity Cluband the Cook County Board's Finance Committee could considerthe $36.5M Tyler Technology contract for Circuit Court case management system that was delayed at the last meeting. On Wednesday, there's a County Board meeting. On Thursday, a city committee could consider stricter party bus rules.

From the notebook

*This reminder brought to you by ...: The state wants to remind drivers to keep their car registrations current, but first, a word from its sponsors.

Illinois House lawmakers haveoverwhelmingly approved a measure that would allow the cash-strapped state to sell advertising on registration remindersmailed out to millions of homes each year.

The proposal aims to provide Secretary of State Jesse Whites office with an alternative funding source during the state budget impasse. The office wants to avoid a repeat of 2015, when it stopped mailing the annual renewal notices because of a lack of money. During the 10 months the mailers didn't go out, the number of people fined for failingto register their vehicles in time skyrocketed, leaving drivers on the hook for millions of dollars in late fees.

The ads could feature a range of businesses, including attorneys and restaurants. Companies regulated by the secretary of state, such as vehicle dealerships and driving schools, would be banned from participating. Also prohibited would be companies that make or sell alcohol, pharmaceuticals or medical marijuana. Politicians can't advertise either.

Rep. John DAmico, D-Chicago, said the secretary of states office spends about $400,000 a month on mailings and said the proposal would generate some cost savings for the state. It now moves on to the Senate.(Haley BeMiller)

*McSweeney sides with AG on worker pay: Republican Rep. David McSweeney said he sides with Democratic Attorney General Lisa Madigans efforts to have the courts decide that state workers cant be paid without a legislative appropriation but questions what took her so long. McSweeney said he disagrees with Republican Gov. Rauners efforts to fight Madigans push to end employee pay absent a budget and disagrees with a proposal backed by some Republicans that would ensure workers get paid through a continuing appropriation. She should have done it two years ago, McSweeney said of Madigan on WGN-AM 720. I mean, I dont understand why would a government appropriate money automatically? It doesnt make any sense. I want to pay state workers, but we should do it as part of a budget. Right now theres a proposal on the table that would pay state workers automatically forever, without an appropriations bill. How does that make any sense? Rauner has contended that Madigans efforts in the appellate court to lift a St. Clair County Court order requiring state workers to get their paychecks is part of a coordinated attempt by Democrats orchestrated by her father, House Speaker Michael Madigan, to shut down government. But McSweeney said the paycheck issue symbolizes the overspending going on in the state during its historic budget impasse. When did state workers become more important than the truly needy, social service agencies, than MAP grants for our college students? he asked. That is whats created this problem in our state is that for the last couple of years 91 percent of this budget has been on autopilot and were paying state workers without an appropriations bill. McSweeney said he favors giving Rauner a $32.3 billion lump-sum budget and letting the governor make specific cuts based on $38 billion in spending something Democrats are unwilling to do. (Rick Pearson)

*On the Sunday Spin:Tribune political reporter Rick Pearsons guests were state Rep. McSweeney, R-Barrington Hills, talking about the lack of a state budget; Dan Montgomery, president of the Illinois Federation of Teachers; and state Rep. Mike Zalewski, D-Riverside, talking about business tax credits. The Sunday Spin airs from 7 to 9 a.m. on WGN-AM 720. Listen to the full show here.

What we're writing

*Citydelays release of police shooting video despite 90-day policy

*Federal prosecutors seek 7 1/2-year prison termfor former CPS chief Barbara Byrd-Bennett.

*Chicago State board hires Vallasand a former dean to top interim posts.

*Illinois members of Congress support Syrian missile strike, but Democrats want debate on use of military force.

*Emanuel declines to pick sidesin Democratic race for Illinois governor.

*Kids poisoned by lead in CHA housing; landlords still got paid.

*HUD Secretary Carson to visit East Chicagoamid lead crisis.

*Gorsuch confirmed to Supreme Court without supportof Illinois' senators.

What we're reading

*For Cubs fans, sticker shockgoes with trip to Wrigley.

*On butter policy, Wisconsin doesn't stand pat.

*Large fries? Extra sauce? Why McDonald's wants to track all your dining habits.

Follow the money

*The Illinois Campaign for Political Reform's weekly update has a rundownof the big suburban races for mayor.

*Track Illinois campaign contributions in real time here and here.

Beyond Chicago

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Morning Spin: Lipinski facing challenge from progressive Democrat in Southwest Side congressional district - Chicago Tribune