Archive for May, 2017

UAE deployed US-made fighter aircraft to eastern Libya forces – The Libya Observer


The Libya Observer
UAE deployed US-made fighter aircraft to eastern Libya forces
The Libya Observer
TIME cited satellite images of the Al-Khadim airbase - published in an IHS Jane Defense report last year in October - located in eastern Libya, as seeming evidence of the deployment of six "Archangel" aircraft, manufactured by Iomax USA, adding that ...
Report: US-made military planes are being used in Libya's civil warMilitary Times
US-made planes are being used to support a Russian-backed general in LibyaBusiness Insider
UAE deploying US-made planes to support rival Libyan authorityThe New Arab

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UAE deployed US-made fighter aircraft to eastern Libya forces - The Libya Observer

Libya should be more of a priority for the US – Libya Herald


Libya Herald
Libya should be more of a priority for the US
Libya Herald
Libya should be more of a priority for the US, both in terms of helping address its immediate challenges but also harnessing the country's potential in the long-term, former prime minister Mahmoud Jibril told a conference in Washington this week ...

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Libya should be more of a priority for the US - Libya Herald

Black Lives Matter Won’t Like Barkley’s TNT Series on Race – NewsBusters (blog)


NewsBusters (blog)
Black Lives Matter Won't Like Barkley's TNT Series on Race
NewsBusters (blog)
There are so many black people out there who are destroying our race. We never call them out, and we've got to do a better job of that. If you ain't for us, you're against us. Black-on-black crime is an epidemic. We've gotta address that. My views on ...
Someone Thought It Was a Great Idea to Give Charles Barkley a Four-Part Doc on RaceSlate Magazine
Charles Barkley tackles uncomfortable conversations about race on new seriesSports Illustrated

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Black Lives Matter Won't Like Barkley's TNT Series on Race - NewsBusters (blog)

Can Black Lives Matter move up in the age of Trump? – The Daily News Online

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As various movements have sprung up like flash mobs to march and protest President Donald Trumps election, a question gradually occurred to me: Wheres Black Lives Matter?

Ever since the hashtag #BlackLivesMatter was born after a jury acquitted a neighborhood watch volunteer in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin in Florida in 2012, the loosely formed movement has turned up repeatedly to protest fatal shootings of unarmed black men and other racial disparities in the criminal justice system.

But since President Trumps election, we have seen new eruptions of racially suspicious police incidents, but not of major protests.

Last week, for example, we saw a suburban Dallas police officer charged with murder for allegedly firing his rifle into a car full of black teens, killing a 15-year-old boy.

Last month we saw the stunning video of police officers in Grand Rapids, Mich., holding a group of black children at gunpoint ranging in age from 12 to 14.

Yet as much as these disturbing stories made national news, they did not spark the major protests we have seen elsewhere. Why?

A Washington Post reporting team came up with one answer after interviewing what they described as more than half a dozen leaders in the Black Lives Matter movement.

The movement has entered a new phase, they were told. It is focused more on policy than on protest, all in response to the election of President Trump.

There are less demonstrations, Alicia Garza, one of three women credited with coining the #BlackLivesMatter hashtag, told the Post. People are channeling their energy into organizing locally, recognizing that in Trumps America, our communities are under direct attack.

Indeed, that makes a lot of sense at a time when Trumps election seems to have changed everything about how we Americans view the world.

But I think the energy and enthusiasm for Black Lives Matter street protests peaked out sooner than that. I think it happened last July when five police officers in Dallas were killed by a sniper at a Black Lives Matter protest. Ten days later, three more police were killed in Baton Rouge, La., after street protests over the shooting of another black man.

No, I dont believe it is fair to blame peaceful protestors for the shootings any more than I think it would be fair to blame Republicans for every deranged right-wing shooter who also happened to vote for their party. Still, its a little harder to criticize President Trump for his various inflammatory remarks if you dodge accountability for any anti-police tone in your protests.

Loosely organized flash-mob movements with weak leaders and vague agendas have become a trend in the Twitter age. But they tend to lack control over their members, their message and their momentum.

Lack of organizational discipline leads to embarrassments like the foolish protesters from St. Paul who chanted, Pigs in a blanket, fry em like bacon, while marching behind police officers at the Minnesota State fairgrounds two years ago. Conservative commentators still replay that video as though it was yesterday.

Everybody seems to have an opinion about what Black Lives Matter should do with itself. Heres mine: I think its time for the movement to move up from protests to planning, policies and programs. Protests have a lot of romantic appeal but theyre no substitute for an agenda, firm goals and a plan to get there.

Conservative media have pinned all manner of racist beliefs on Black Lives Matter, yet the movement has not put much of a priority on appointing official spokespeople to push back.

On the contrary, todays young self-styled woke (politically conscious) generation, I have found to my chagrin, too often thinks it is beneath them to arm themselves with knowledge and employ the simple art of persuasion to win people to their side. Its not my job to educate you, I have been told by some righteous activists in a form of intellectual snobbery that is bound to lead to failure.

Indeed, a lot of people find it easier to call for dialogue than to actually engage in one. Thats changing. Some Black Lives Matter activists have organized a formal agenda and leadership development programs, just for starters. Leaders matter. Whether things go right or wrong, somebody has to be where the buck stops.

(E-mail Clarence Page at cpage@chicagotribune.com.)

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Can Black Lives Matter move up in the age of Trump? - The Daily News Online

Richfield educators fear possible retaliation for Black Lives Matter shirts – KMSP-TV

RICHFIELD, Minn. (KMSP) - A family outreach worker at a Richfield elementary school believes she was suspended after planning to wear a Black Lives Matter shirt to school as part of a planned protest.

Jessi Martinez wanted to wear the t-shirt to Richfield STEM Elementary, along with several other educators at the school, on the Friday before Martin Luther King Jr. Day. She never got the chance to wear the shirt, claiming the district banned the protest.

Two days prior to the planned protest, a group of 13 educators informed the principal of their plans to wear the shirts as a simple way to stand with students of color, or so they thought.

From there, the district office got involved. In a statement, the superintendent says administration shared the viewpoint that not including the entire staff could result in the division of staff. The statement goes on to say the following week Richfield Public Schools organized a district wide equity event that was an inclusive opportunity for all staff, adding throughout this process no discipline of staff was ever discussed or taken.

The full statement is posted on the districts website.

Fast forward to this week and Martinez says she was suspended on Monday.

The group Social Justice Education Movement says this is a pattern they've seen the district take against teachers speaking out. The group claims four teachers also planning to wear the BLM shirts have had their positions cut, and other staff feel intimated. Martinez, who has been the family outreach worker for the school for five years, believes she's the latest target.

The full statement from Social Justice Education Movement is posted here.

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Richfield educators fear possible retaliation for Black Lives Matter shirts - KMSP-TV