Archive for the ‘Black Lives Matter’ Category

Who First Showed Us That Black Lives Matter? – The New …

The most significant manifestation of this kind since the civil rights movement is Black Lives Matter. Widely credited to Patrisse Cullors, Opal Tometi and Alicia Garza in response to Trayvon Martins death on February 26, 2012, at the hands of George Zimmerman, and to Zimmermans subsequent acquittal. As America began to pay more attention to police shootings of unarmed blacks, the movements power grew. That power was derived from its simple, bold and irrefutably true proposition that black lives do not exist for pleasurable disposal in a society still mired in its white supremacist history.

Yet, despite the obvious truth of that statement, we may wonder: What are the moral and political arguments that underwrite the claim that black lives matter? While there is no way to articulate the full scope of those arguments in a single essay, its worth considering the philosophical contributions of some of the forerunners of the movement that is our most urgent manifestation of black thought today.

The end of the Civil War and the subsequent ratification of the 13th Amendment in 1865 legally abolished slavery, but blacks quickly became subject to a displaced form of violence at the hands of white supremacists across the nation who typically used false accusations of sexual assault to justify lynching black men. Police turned a blind eye to these murders, and sometimes actively facilitated them.

Ida B. Wells, a leading black thinker and journalist in the late-19th and early 20th centuries, and a co-founder of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, built a public career documenting lynchings and calling America to account for them. Her arguments extended and amplified those made by Frederick Douglass before her. Douglasss central claim in his seminal The Meaning of July Fourth for the Negro was that Americans should feel shame for slavery, given their countrys foundational commitment to liberty and the pursuit of happiness. We were failing our own ideals.

Wells pointed to the rise of lynching after the fall of slavery as not merely a legal matter to be rectified with new laws. Having fled her hometown to escape threats of her own lynching, Wells used the press to make her moral arguments. She described a nation in the grip of a dark remorse for freeing black Americans from slavery, and condemned white Americans for cruelties that violated their own commitment to the democratic project.

The horrors that Wells described were a factor in the Great Migration of blacks to the North, which fed the flourishing of black thought and cultural life that gave rise to the Harlem Renaissance. An indication that the Harlem Renaissance was always meant to be a period of radical black philosophy and social change was the name originally coined for the movement: The New Negro. Alain Locke, the Harvard-educated black intellectual who became known as the father of the Harlem Renaissance, envisioned a philosophical position that reinvigorated blacks relationship to their culture and that would in turn solidify their status as equal co-participants in our democracy.

A strong theme among some of the luminaries of the time focused on the will of blacks to assert their humanity against racism and to insist on their status as persons owed respect. Among those stars, the poet Langston Hughes was one of the brightest. His I Too is a quiet yet insistent poem depicting a black man employed by a white one and his struggle with invisibility. The protagonist resolves to sit at the table with the white folks the next day and show people how beautiful he is and that he, too, is America. The writer Zora Neale Hurston had an equally persistent but at times more playful take on the matter. In her essay How It Feels to Be Colored Me, she wrote, Sometimes, I feel discriminated against, but it does not make me angry. It merely astonishes me. How can any deny themselves the pleasure of my company! Its beyond me.

Thinkers like Hughes and Hurston were involved in the Harlem Renaissance project of presenting a vision of black cultural vitality and worth that would rework the image of black Americans that whites typically relied upon. That stream of thought runs directly into the heart of Black Lives Matter.

Another valuable and necessary development to come out of the Black Lives Matter movement is the de-emphasizing of black patriarchy and the equal acknowledgment of the suffering of black women and the black L.G.T.B.Q. community. Though sexuality was an avenue of inquiry during the Harlem Renaissance, it was perhaps the mid- to late-20th century poet and theorist Audre Lorde who did the most to make black womens sexuality a focal point of political and social philosophy.

While today intersectionality is bandied about as the cutting edge of social research, it was Lorde who in her writing insisted on complicating our view of personal identity by claiming that each of us belongs to multiple identity communities, all of which contribute to our sense of self and our purposes.

She also showed the broad reach of white supremacy and its effects on black Americans as they located themselves in more nuanced ways in the tapestry of American culture. For her, the primary form taken by resistance to racism was the denial of blunt categories imposed on black Americans, which stifled the possibility of an individuals full flourishing. Lorde, then, called for a radical form of self-possession whose boundaries were not open to negotiation with a white society.

When people think of Black Lives Matter, they often think of anger feeding forceful protests. Anger is a reasonable response to racial injustice. To be certain, groups like the Black Panthers and thinkers like Malcolm X advised black Americans to get angry and take the doctrine of armed self-defense seriously. Though anger and love are not mutually exclusive emotions, James Baldwin and Martin Luther King Jr. affirmed a view of civic love to pre-empt the need for violence.

King espoused a form of Kantian regard that prioritized conceiving of every human, racist or not, as owed a kind of love that is grounded in the ideal of universal respect. Baldwin held a slightly different view. He felt black Americans ought to see whites as democratic kin or family, as people with whom blacks would have serious quarrels but also people whom it would be worth keeping close in order to strengthen and bring integrity to the bonds of shared democratic life. These two views of love eschewed violence yet insisted on militancy. While forgiveness and acceptance were hallmarks of Kings and Baldwins views, so was an unyielding commitment to self-respect and the demand for social change to institutionalize the idea that blacks were co-creators of the American kingdom.

Thinkers like Wells, Hughes, Hurston, Lorde and Baldwin not only anticipated the current Black Lives Matter movement but provided an intellectual blueprint to give depth and integrity to that slogan, so that its meaning transcends the demand to stop police brutality. It is a demand for whites to extend their historical imagination and recognize that the ills of racism are not the result of a few bad police officers or a few out-and-out racists in some far-off corner of America. The problem, rather, is a kind of complicity one partaking in the false comfort that America has somehow escaped the trajectory of its racially murderous history. It is necessary that we to see our society today as continuous with that history and not anomalous to it.

Black thoughts primary contribution to the academy and to American society is the richness and precision with which it describes our worst demons to us, while offering a vision of how we might each save our democracy from the ruin of irrational fear and hatred.

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Who First Showed Us That Black Lives Matter? - The New ...

Black Lives Matter leader shot dead | New York Post

The Black Lives Matter leader known for diving over a barrier to snatch a Confederate flag from a protester on live TV last year was shot dead in New Orleans, police said.

Muhiyidin Elamin Moye, who went by Muhiyidin dBaha, was found dead Tuesday morning after being shot in the thigh while riding his bicycle, the Advocate reported.

New Orleans police spokesman Beau Tidwell said no information about a potential motive or suspects was immediately available.

DBaha, 32, moved to South Carolina from Poughkeepsie, NY, when he was 13 and was in the Big Easy on a personal trip, his niece Camille Weaver told the Post and Courier.

He loved Charleston and loved fighting for whats right, she said. Ive never met anyone more committed and hardworking than him. He was an asset to the Charleston community and will be greatly missed.

The activist drew national attention last February when he was arrested for jumping over a barricade in an attempt to grab a Confederate flag away from a demonstrator at the College of Charleston.

Members of the South Carolina Secessionist Party had gathered to protest a lecture by activist Bree Newsome, who famously climbed the South Carolina capitol flagpole to remove its Confederate flag in 2015.

DBaha was slapped with disorderly conduct charges as a result of the incident, which was caught on air.

Not another generation of people are going to be intimidated by this flag, he told the Washington Post after the incident, adding hed tried to wrestle the flag away to help them understand what it is to meet a real resistance, to meet people that arent scared.

In the hopes of bringing dBahas body back to Charleston for a funeral, his niece started a GoFundMe drive that had raised almost double its $7,500 goal by Wednesday.

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Black Lives Matter leader shot dead | New York Post

the ones that divided Black Lives Matter – NPR.org

A protester holds her hands up in front of a police car in Ferguson, Mo., on November 25, 2014. Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

A protester holds her hands up in front of a police car in Ferguson, Mo., on November 25, 2014.

Black leaders have condemned the Russian efforts in the 2016 election cycle that apparently sought to divide African-Americans both from whites and from each other, but nothing about those efforts is new.

Russian and Soviet influence-mongers have spent decades pressing as hard as they can on the most painful areas of the American body politic, from the days of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to the current era of the Black Lives Matter movement.

Some of the details about the latest chapter in the story have become clear, but much about it remains either unknown or under wraps. Americans may learn more when the House and Senate Intelligence Committees and a Senate Judiciary subcommittee convene a trio of hearings they've scheduled for Oct. 31 and Nov. 1 with three big technology platforms.

Facebook, Google and Twitter which have said they'll send their top lawyers to testify have discovered they sold ads to agents of influence as part of the Russian attack on the 2016 election. Agents also used the services to interfere in other ways, from amplifying controversy within the U.S. to organizing real-life events such as political rallies.

"We can't conclusively say these actions impacted the outcome of the election," Rep. Cedric Richmond, D-La., chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus, said in an Oct. 10 statement. "But we can say that these ads caused harm and additional resentment to young people who unselfishly fight for justice and equality for African Americans and other marginalized communities."

The work, known by intelligence officers as active measures, apparently continues. In the racially charged national debate over mostly black NFL players protesting by kneeling during the national anthem, Twitter accounts linked to the Russian 2016 influence campaign have tried to turn up the volume both on pro-player and anti-player accounts.

Colin Kaepernick, right, and Eric Reid of the San Francisco 49ers kneel in protest during the national anthem prior to playing the Los Angeles Rams in their NFL game on September 12, 2016. Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images hide caption

Colin Kaepernick, right, and Eric Reid of the San Francisco 49ers kneel in protest during the national anthem prior to playing the Los Angeles Rams in their NFL game on September 12, 2016.

Before that, there were the ads on Facebook. And the account called "Blacktivist" led calls to action for African-Americans to "wake up" and fight "mass incarceration and death of black men." And before that, Facebook users using fake accounts paid personal trainers to lead self-defense classes aimed at black activists, arguing that the activists needed to "protect your rights."

And before that the thread goes back decades. Soviet intelligence officers concocted the story that HIV and AIDS were developed by the CIA as a bio-weapon as a way to keep down nonwhites.

In 1984, ahead of the Summer Olympics, Soviet intelligence forged what looked like threatening letters from the Ku Klux Klan to African and Asian nations to try to scare them from sending their teams to the games in Los Angeles. Historian Christopher Andrew and former KGB officer Vasili Mitrokhin described the scheme in their 1999 book The Sword and the Shield.

"The Olympics for the whites only," the letters said. "African monkeys! A grand reception awaits you in Los Angeles! We are preparing for the Olympic games by shooting at black moving targets."

When then-Attorney General William French Smith denounced the messages as Soviet forgeries, Andrew and Mitrokhin write, "Moscow predictably feigned righteous indication at Washington's anti-Soviet slanders."

There were many other such Russian schemes, according to now-declassified materials in the public record.

A "leaked" presidential memorandum in 1980 yielded this headline in a black newspaper in San Francisco: "Carter's Secret Plan To Keep Black Africans and Black Americans at Odds," Robert Wallace, H. Keith Melton and Henry Robert Schlesinger wrote in their CIA history Spycraft.

In another scheme, Soviet intelligence officers sought to pit black activists in New York against Zionist Jewish groups.

But what makes the targeting of African-Americans especially ugly is that they also have been subject to active measures by their own government.

The FBI under then-Director J. Edgar Hoover ran a campaign to hound King in 1964, including with listening devices in his hotel and letters threatening to ruin him. Meanwhile, the KGB was eager to exploit King as an internal political insurgent against Washington, D.C. When he wouldn't be used that way, the KGB also tried to undermine him.

Civil rights leader Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and his wife Coretta Scott King lead a black voting rights march from Selma, Ala., to the state capital in Montgomery in 1965. William Lovelace/Getty Images hide caption

Civil rights leader Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and his wife Coretta Scott King lead a black voting rights march from Selma, Ala., to the state capital in Montgomery in 1965.

"King was probably the only prominent American to be the target of active measures by both the FBI and the KGB," wrote Andrew and Mitrokhin in The Sword and the Shield.

Distrust endures to this day between black leaders and the FBI. Richmond, the chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus, and other members including Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., and Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., cited the Bureau's ugly legacy in a recent complaint to the FBI about its investigations into "black identity extremists."

"The assessment and the analyses upon which it is based are flawed because it conflates black political activists with dangerous domestic terrorist organizations that pose actual threats to law enforcement," they wrote.

"As you are no doubt aware," the black lawmakers also wrote to FBI Director Christopher Wray, "the FBI has a troubling history of utilizing its broad investigatory powers to target black citizens ... . Given this history, and given several concerning actions this Administration has taken on racial issues, Members of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) are justifiably concerned about this FBI Assessment."

This deep distrust underscores what intelligence officers warned about active measures during the Cold War and continue to see now: Foreign governments don't need to invent controversy in Western democracies. It's already there. What they want is to make the disputes angrier and the debate louder.

Members of Congress and intelligence leaders concluded during the Soviet era that they needed to call out forgeries like the one Smith complained about. And now, some lawmakers also want to mandate more disclosure on the part of digital platforms about the ads they sell. That is expected to be a big focus of the Oct. 31 and Nov. 1 hearings.

Facebook and Twitter want to get out ahead of any action by Congress. The companies have announced on their own that they plan to reveal who buys certain ads, the content of the ads they're running and other information.

Senate Intelligence Committee members, however, have complained that they're not getting all the answers they want from the online platforms, and they've also acknowledged they could uncover more evidence of ads sales or other use by Russian influence-mongers.

One leader in the Black Lives Matter movement, DeRay McKesson, told NPR that about the only thing that has been firmly established so far is how little confidence black or white Americans can have that they're able to see the complete picture.

"This is just a reminder of how we probably don't even know how deep it goes," McKesson said.

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the ones that divided Black Lives Matter - NPR.org

Black Lives Matter – Toronto – Home | Facebook

PLEASE READ AND SHARE WIDELY!The review of the Peel Regional Police's School Resources Officer (SRO) program conducted by professors Linda Duxbury and Craig Be...nnell is NOT an independent review. In addition, the review NOT equitable, it perpetuates anti-Black racism, is unethical and misleading. Check out a few points below:

Global NewsCBC NewsCBC Toronto CTV NewsCTV Toronto1) This report lacks an equitable lens, whereas the review recently conducted by the TDSB of their SRO program took an equitable stance, by centring the voices and lived experiences of students most vulnerable, marginalized and negatively impacted by SROs in schools, this review of Peel's SRO program takes a majority approach. The report treats the issue of armed police officers in schools and the reports of them harming students as a popularity contest and fails to consider that the voices of students silenced by fear matter and should be actively pursued and supported by researchers in their praxis. Instead, the report treats this issue wiith skewed and very basic structure.

2) This report perpetuates anti-Black racism, and is contrary to what the Peel School Board indicates as important to student well-being in their "We Rise Together" plan. SROs in schools among many other issues, creates a school-to-prison pipeline and negatively impacts our undocumented, Black, Indigenous and racialized students due to racist racial profiling.

3) Please be aware that this report IS NOT INDEPENDENT!In fact, in the Peel Regional Police Report titled, Annual Report 2016: A Safer Community Together, both Dr. Linda Duxbury and Dr. Craig Bennell (Carleton University) are directly quoted stating, ...I know that we are certainly proud to be your partner in evaluation of this program... (pg. 38) They are speaking to being proud of their monetary, profitable relationship with the Peel police. How can they conduct an independent review when they are dependent on the police for their livelihoods? This misrepresentation is very concerning for various reasons and confirms that this is not an independent review. Link to cited report: https://www.peelpolice.ca//P/2016AnnualReport-INTERNET.pdf

4) Furthermore, we also have to question why these two people were chosen as Lead Researchers when their professional profiles reveal that their education and interests of study do not align with an equity and social justice lens. For example, Duxbury is a graduate from Management Sciences, and Chemical Engineering and Bennells education also has nothing to do with equity. Why are local academics with international accolades, who work from an equity and anti-racist lens, overlooked?

Professors with extensive professional experience in these areas have actively questioned racist and discriminatory practices within education.

For example, Dr. George J. Sefa Dei, Professor of Social Justice Education and Director of the Centre for Integrative Anti-Racism Studies at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto (OISE/UT) has even provided a letter of support for the removal of the program.Dr. Carl James of York University has worked very hard to address the dangers faced by Black students in education. Knowing that the institution of policing has deeply embedded anti-Black and anti-Indigenous racism, why would anyone except highly knowledgeable and experienced researchers guided by equity polices and praxis, be selected for this role?

We have to question the connections that these particular academics have to police and how this impacts their work. For instance, on Bennells faculty profile, it states thatthey are an, ... incoming President of the Society for Police and Criminal Psychology as well that they are the Director of the Police Research Lab, which Duxbury has also worked on. It is very disappointing that after so much work by so many people, #PeelDistrictSchoolBoard. #PDSB would choose to ignore the warning signs and allow for unethical research to take place on their watch.----#TDSB Leads the way in establishing caring, healthy and equitable schools. All school boards should follow their lead and remove the SRO program.

Andrea Vsquez Jimnez and Silvia Argentina ArauzCo-Chairs of Latinx, Afro-Latin-America, Abya Yala Education Network (LAEN)

Feel free to contact us at: laentoronto@gmail.com

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Black Lives Matter - Toronto - Home | Facebook

Black Lives Matter: The Rise of the "DINDU" – YouTube

Michael Brown was a man, who robbed a liquor store and at the same time assaulted its clerk. He then went on to attack a police officer and attempted to hijack his weapon and was shot in the ensuing scuffle. And to top it all off, Black Lives Matter (BLM) got its start and first martyr. Also many in his community and then nationwide tried to claim him to be an innocent "gentle giant."

The term "dindu," became popular in the aftermath of Michael Brown's death and the Ferguson, Missouri riots to describe a certain class of criminal. The term is a pejorative for criminals and gang members (and their families) who feign innocence and never take responsibility for their actions (when caught in the commission of a crime by the police). It is used, in the title to explain the rise of criminals and their supporters who believe they are not required to be responsible for their actions and now have movements like BLM who will support them against "the system" no matter what they do.

The media / government and those that fund them: The corporations. The well funded (George Soros) along with academia is pushing to divide peoples everywhere. They use events like this to enrage people. Resist with knowledge.

This whole video was inspired by someone who sent me the article on the former Marine being assaulted by BLM supporters. -- Hat tip to Ted. T.

For material used, please see here. https://plus.google.com/+BlackPigeonS...

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Black Lives Matter: The Rise of the "DINDU" - YouTube