Archive for the ‘Black Lives Matter’ Category

Minnesota man gets 15 years for shooting 5 Black Lives Matter protesters – CBS News

MINNEAPOLIS The man who shot five Black Lives Matter protesters in 2015 has been sentenced to 15 years in prison, reports CBS Minnesota.

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The decision not to charge two white Minneapolis police officers in the shooting death of Jamar Clark sparked protests and questions about the ca...

Allen Scarsella, 25, and some friends got into an argument with some protesters who were demonstrating outside Minneapolis' 4th Precinct police station after the shooting death of Jamar Clark by one of their officers. He was convicted in February of a dozen felony counts of assault and riot.

The station reports that Hennepin County prosecutors asked the judge for the maximum sentence, while the defense maintained Scarsella has remorse for his actions, and was acting in self-defense.

Defense attorney Laura Heinrich argued Scarsella was "nave" at the time of the shooting, didn't know what life was like for black people on the north side of Minneapolis, and that his brain may not have fully developed, because he was around 22 years old at the time he put on a mask, went to the Fourth Precinct to live stream, and eventually shot five people.

Scarsella, who has been in county jail for nearly 18 months, addressed Judge Hilary Lindell Caligiuri and asked for probation.

"The fact that others were injured because of something I did weighs heavily on my heart every day," Scarsella said. "The incident touched so many lives and everybody who was involved is now worse off for it."

The judge agreed with prosecutors, who said Scarsella was deeply racist as evidenced by months of racist messages he had sent to friends leading up to the shooting, and gave him 15 years in prison out of a possible 20-year maximum.

One of the shooting victims, Cameron Clark, who is the cousin of the late Jamar Clark, said he is still dealing with physical and emotional pain from the shooting.

"I can't do a lot of things with my kids anymore, I can't work," Clark said. "I'm going to be living with this for the rest of my life."

Cameron Clark said he believes initial charges brought forth by the county against Scarsella should have been more severe, but Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman said on Wednesday that first-degree assault was the highest charge he could bring, given the evidence the county had.

"All of that was lies and he was just trying to make the judge have some sympathy for him," he Clark.

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Minnesota man gets 15 years for shooting 5 Black Lives Matter protesters - CBS News

Reframing ‘Black Lives Matter’ – Chronicle of Higher Education (subscription)

Christopher J. Lebron seeks to set the movement on firmer conceptual ground

I n June of 1966, Stokely Carmichael exhilarated a rally in Greenwood, Mississippi, with two words that declared a more militant phase in the struggle for racial justice: "Black Power." If anyone wanted to know what Carmichael (later Kwame Ture) meant by that slogan, they could turn to a book he published the following year. Black Power: The Politics of Liberation (Random House), co-written with a political scientist, Charles V. Hamilton, was both a treatise on institutional racism in America and a blueprint for change.

Nearly 50 years later, three black activists Opal Tometi, Patrisse Cullors, and Alicia Garza coined a hashtag that has come to define what some see as the most significant black social-justice movement since the mid-60s: #BlackLivesMatter. But if you want to know what that movement is about, you wont find a Black Power-like treatise on its philosophical foundations. Youd have to cobble it together from various sources.

I don't put people on streets. I put books on shelves.

"The movement isnt about just ending police violence," Lebron says. "What the movement is about is respect for black lives in all senses. Insofar as I can get to a younger generation and give them a systematic grounding as to what that is, Im hoping to do my small part to make the movement endure more."

Lebron, 42, does not have the persona of a crusader. A tall and introverted video-game enthusiast, the black Latino philosopher labors behind the wrought-iron gates of Yales department of African American studies, where, in a small second-floor office with a brick fireplace, he researches the morality of racial inequality. He writes with a combination of emotional rawness and stylistic austerity that evokes one of his books subjects, James Baldwin.

Black Lives Matter has spawned an expanding shelf of books since it emerged in 2013 after George Zimmermans acquittal in the fatal shooting of the unarmed 17-year-old Trayvon Martin. Authors who have already published books related to it (or have announced plans to do so) include Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, an African-American-studies scholar at Princeton University; Wesley Lowery, a journalist at The Washington Post; and Barbara Ransby, a historian at the University of Illinois at Chicago. The May issue of the New Republic carries a cover story on "Why Black Lives Matter Still Matters" by Peniel E. Joseph, a historian at the University of Texas at Austin.

T o appreciate what distinguishes Lebrons approach, start with the speech that first exposed his writing to a mass audience. It was January of 2015, and Lebron was invited to commemorate Martin Luther King Day at a YWCA in the affluent New York City suburb of Greenwich, Conn. Michael Brown had been shot dead in Ferguson, Mo., the previous August. In subsequent testimony, the police officer who killed Brown, Darren Wilson, portrayed the 18-year-old in quasi-bestial terms as a hulking, wild-eyed "demon." The month before Lebrons talk, a New York City grand jury declined to indict the police officer who had choked to death another unarmed black man, Eric Garner.

Lebron decided that the best way to honor King was to question the character of his mostly white audience. He did so by borrowing a page from Frederick Douglass. In one of Douglasss most famous speeches, "What, to the Slave, Is the Fourth of July?" the slave-turned-abolitionist shamed whites for celebrating their freedoms while sustaining slavery. Lebron, like Douglass, opened his remarks by stressing the distance between the world of his audience and his own origins in a Puerto Rican family from the Lower East Side of Manhattan a personal trajectory that, at various points, exposed him to welfare, food stamps, and unemployment. And, again like Douglass, he shamed his listeners for celebrating Kings achievements while blacks continued to suffer police brutality, job discrimination, and the segregation of schools and neighborhoods.

The persistence of these ills "indicates the eagerness with which white Americans have adopted the idea that securing racial justice was a matter of the passing of a law and the martyrdom of a great man," he later wrote in a column based on the speech that appeared in The Stone, a philosophy series in The New York Times. "But this clearly will not do."

That Times piece whetted the publisher interest that led to Lebrons slim but ambitious new book. The studys premise is that the sentiment "Black Lives Matter" represents a desire for civic equality and human respect as old as the push to end slavery. It pivots around a question: How can earlier black struggles for acknowledgment inform that same fight today?

Lebron answers that by extracting a collection of "radical lessons" from eight black thinkers. Through Douglass and Ida B. Wells, an anti-lynching crusader, he highlights the power of forcing Americans to face the gulf between their stated ideals and their brutal treatment of blacks (lesson: shameful publicity). He analyzes how Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston changed perceptions of African-Americans through literature that revealed the richness of black culture (lesson: countercolonization of the white imagination). To get at issues of gender and sexuality, he focuses on Anna Julia Cooper, a civic and educational leader who saw the improved position of black women as central to the betterment of her race, and Audre Lorde, a lesbian poet who stressed the importance of embracing ones full identity (lesson: unconditional self-possession).

"Whether they say it or not, what they really want to do is induce a sense of, Oh man, I guess Im on welfare because it really is all my fault that there are no more jobs in the neighborhood," Lebron says. "No, its not your fault. We didnt build the ghettos. We didnt build housing segregation. The fact that white schools, being in certain tax districts, are almost as good as private schools, while other public schools are in the dump we didnt choose that."

Lebrons unlikely journey from Lower East Side to Ivy League was set in motion by the interest one English professor took in him at the City University of New Yorks Baruch College: Elaine M. Kauvar. She steered him toward a fellowship program aimed at getting minorities into graduate school. At that point in his life, though, Lebron had no interest in becoming, as he puts it, "that black guy doing race." He shifted to the subject in part because of his difficult experience as one of the only brown people in his political-science doctoral program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Lebron is just beginning to talk about those days when his cellphone blares an unusual ringtone. "Cracking the whip!" a female voice says. "Cracking the whip!" The caller is his wife, Vesla M. Weaver, a political scientist at Yale who also studies racial inequality. He answers with a laugh.

After he hangs up, Lebron explains that "cracking the whip" is the phrase Weaver jokingly uses to rally him and their son, Lennox, out the door in the morning. Since she was leaving town for a talk, Lebron had recorded her saying it as his ringtone. That way the boy would hear it when Weaver called home.

I ask Lennoxs age, remembering an article Lebron had written about the intergenerational inheritance of racial anger and sadness. It opens with a question that Lebrons son, sensing his fathers disaffection, asks on a regular basis: "Daddy, are you happy?"

Lebron sighs. "Hes 5 and some change now." He says Lennoxs birth shaped his decision to start writing publicly, a role he never anticipated. He wanted to do what he could to improve the world his son would inhabit. He also writes to cope with his emotions. If Lennox could sense his anger at so young an age, he worries, what will it be like when the boy is 10? Or 17?

Lebron points out how his book ends: with a meditation on Kings and Baldwins beliefs about the role of love in race relations.

"Im trying to figure out how I can maintain something like hope."

Marc Parry is a senior reporter at The Chronicle.

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Reframing 'Black Lives Matter' - Chronicle of Higher Education (subscription)

Black Lives Matter Week Two: BSU leads peaceful protest – Northern Star Online

DeKALB Students gathered Tuesday for the beginning of the second Black Lives Matter week at NIU, organized by the Black Student Unions civil disobedience committee.

The first Black Lives Matter week happened last semester during the week of Oct. 11. The BSU drew in chalk on sidewalks around campus and organized peaceful protests in order to raise awareness of police brutality.

This semesters event had a similar message and used previous techniques of peaceful protest and chalking. In addition to addressing police brutality, demonstrators addressed other issues of racism on campus and in general.

Freshman psychology major Alyson Godbolt became a part of the Black Lives Matter movement at NIU last semester during the first Black Lives Matter week. She said when they organize these demonstrations, they discuss issues they notice on campus and all over the country in order to decide how they want to protest.

We find demonstrations that will raise awareness, that will start conversation on race equality and the mistreatment of black people in America, Godbolt said.

Friday, the BSU put an announcement on Twitter from the civil disobedience committee that the second Black Lives Matter week would happen Tuesday through Thursday.

Participants met Tuesday morning in Neptune Central to organize before they walked outside to begin the demonstration.

Signs were passed out for demonstrators to wear around their necks, which had statements such as, Give me justice or give me nothing, No more racism and No justice, no peace written across them.

At noon, demonstrators walked outside to the brick circle on the ground near the east side of the Founders Memorial Library. The students stood in a circle in this area to participate in the demonstration, which included chanting, singing and demonstrators speaking.

Darius Parker, senior journalism major and director of civil disobedience for the BSU, read off 30 names of individuals who have died at the hands of police. Names on the list included Michael Brown, Laquan McDonald and Philando Castile.

While Parker read the names, he asked demonstrators to raise their fists in the air and observe a moment of silence in memory of those who have died.

At the conclusion of the protest, Parker asked people to join him in taking a vow of silence for the rest of the day in remembrance of those who lost their lives. Demonstrators who wished to participate in this vow received a piece of tape to wear over their mouths.

Other passers-by stopped to observe the demonstration.

Freshman psychology major Rasean Mitchell was with freshman marketing major Kyle Reynolds at a de-stressing event at Cole Hall when he heard the group chanting, so the two walked over to observe.

Mitchell hadnt seen the Black Lives Matter demonstrations last semester except for the chalking around campus. He said he supports the movement and thinks its good for people to fight for what they believe in.

Im not really a big fan of the, you know, the chanting and shouting and stuff, but I think its right to bring attention to everybody else about whats going on, Mitchell said.

Reynolds said he felt the demonstration and the Black Lives Matter movement shouldnt only acknowledge one race.

I dont not support it, but I understand it. Reynolds said. And I believe that, in my opinion, all lives matter, and we shouldnt be sticking [to or] singling [out] one race. I mean, its a good thing that they all come together, but Should you single out one race? is the question we should be asking.

Passers-by had various reactions to the demonstration. Some of those who passed by expressed their dislike of the demonstration. One instance happened while the group was still in Neptune Central.

We literally just had an incident inside of Neptune Central, Parker said to the crowd once outside. This is probably the most non-violent demonstration weve ever done, and the fact that he was upset that we are united as people of color and black students is a problem. Especially on this campus.

When another passer-by lashed out, Parker calmed the crowds reaction and reminded them to be mindful of what you give your energy to.

Godbolt said that this hate is nothing new. When people express hate, the group tries to keep in mind that it comes from a place of misunderstanding, but its still hurtful.

She said to help this lack of understanding, people should ask questions so they can learn about the movement.

If you dont understand us, if you dont understand why were so angry, if you have questions, if youre not understanding anything, come talk to one of us. Come to one of our demonstrations and come to us respectfully, please, Godbolt said. If you have a question about something, just ask, Hey, Im not quite understanding why this is this ... I dont want to upset you I just want to understand. I want to better understand. And if you dont want to understand, just dont talk.

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Black Lives Matter Week Two: BSU leads peaceful protest - Northern Star Online

Solange Knowles poses with Jesse Williams, Black Lives Matter activists after her first Vancouver show – Straight.com

Following a sold-out show in Vancouver last night (April 27), Grammy Awardwinning artist Solange Knowles took time to meet with members of Black Lives Matter (BLM) chapters from Vancouver and the U.S.

The Dont Touch My Hairsinger, whose most recent album, A Seat at the Table, explores themes of blackness, prejudice, and womanhood, posed with a group of local black activists after her show at Chinatowns Rennie Museum. The image was shared on Instagram by American actor Jesse Williams and prominent civil rights activist and BLM member DeRay Mckesson, both of whom were also in attendance.

Knowles presented Scales, a performance-art project examining protest as meditation through movement and experimentation of unique compositions and arrangements fromA Seat at the Table.Williams called the show phenomenal while Mckesson stated, She [Knowles] is truly incredible live.

After learning of Knowless surprise performances at the Chinatown gallerya venue owned by local real-estate magnate Bob RennieBLM Vancouver published a statement on its Facebook page, expressing concern over the artists choice to perform in an area that has undergone significant gentrification at the hands of developers and marketers. The collective also called for increased access to the shows for black folks, a group Knowless work speaks to specifically.

In addition, a petition was launched by local activist organization the Anti-Oppression Network, urging Knowles to cancel her shows.

Although the performances went on at the Rennie Museum as planned, BLM Vancouver shared yesterday (April 27) that Rennie had offered members of the citys black community complimentary tickets to Knowless shows. The group states that they, along with another local collective, Black in Vancouver, decided to distribute them to marginalized black youth, black musicians, black artists, and black organizers in the city.

We see this as a positive gesture and were happy wecan agree on one point: access for black folks to music written for us is crucial, BLM Vancouver wrote. We also recognize the importance of uplifting and centering black people. Solange is a powerful black voice and she needs to speak to a black community.

Knowles is performing two more shows at the Rennie Museum at 12 p.m. and 2 p.m. today (April 28). Both performances are sold out with all ticket proceeds benefiting theAtira Womens Resource Society, a DTESbased nonprofit that provides safe housing and support for women and children affected by violence.

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Solange Knowles poses with Jesse Williams, Black Lives Matter activists after her first Vancouver show - Straight.com

Meet the Teen Who Rocked ‘Black Lives Matter’ Dress to Prom – EBONY.com

Its been nearly a week since Milan Bolden-Morris had the interwebs buzzing after debuting her Black Lives Matter prom dress, which was designed by Terrence Torrence. Although the Florida native admits she was merely a vessel for this act of fashionable social activism, she is very concerned about the increasing acts of police brutality and the families of the victims. After recently celebrating her 18th birthday, Bolden-Harris was nice enough to speak with EBONY.com about her life post-prom dress, personal passions and future plans.

EBONY.com: Prom is a special event and rite of passage for teenage girls. What made you decide to make a political statement instead of taking the traditional glitz-and-glamour route?

Bolden-Morris: I was honestly just the model for the dress; it was all my designer, Terrence Torrences, idea. To convey the message, he asked if I wanted to help and, of course, I did; the purpose was never about me or how I looked. When someone loses a mother, father or child by unnecessary circumstances, it should not be overlooked. These issues should be handled.

EBONY.com: What were the reactions from some of your peers about the dress?

Bolden-Morris: For the most part, I got a lot of positive feedback. They were so supportive of me and my actions, and they acknowledged my bravery and the courage that was expressed through wearing the dress. They were also surprised that I was getting this much attention. Every time I was on a Instagram page of someone famous, they would let me know and be so excited for me. Especially when I was on the Buzzfeed Snapchat story.

EBONY.com: Although you plan to attend Boston College in the fall on a full-ride basketball scholarship, do you have any other passions youd like to explore in college?

Bolden-Morris: I do. I aspire to be an orthopedic surgeon. All my life, Ive been around sports, and to pursue a career that would allow me to still be involved with sports would be a dream for me. I love to help others, so I feel being a surgeon would allow me to do that and help find methods to help [patients] perform at their fullest potential with a faster recovery. I also hope to continue to inspire others and help them be courageous and strong in [their beliefs]. I believe God is using me for something bigger than me, so I pray that He continues to be with me.

EBONY.com: How has your life changed after the dress went viral? Has anyone reached out to you for any further opportunities for social change?

Bolden-Morris: My life essentially is the same, but I feel Ive definitely used the dress to inspire others and to not only touch the lives of the families who were affected but also anyone who has been subjected to feeling unwanted. God says to love, and that love conquers over all sin. So to show that peaceful measures should be taken over violence is primarily what I want to illuminate. Only Trayvon Martins mother, Mrs. Sybrina Fulton, has reached out to me [so far], and that was to help her with an event in May in Miami. I hope many more people will reach out; I want to continue emphasizing love and change the world socially because these issues are so important.

EBONY.com: Do you have any plans to use your clothing to raise awareness about police brutality?

Bolden-Morris: I would love to continue to convey messages of peace through clothing, not just in the Black community, but in general. Everyone needs to express love and be loved as God loves us, so whatever I can do to help bring awareness to these issues, Ill do. Also, whatever Terrence wants me to do, Ill do. Im his model, so whatever idea he has in mind, Im willing and honored to do. Hes honestly a genius when it comes to expressing ideas and making statements through fashion.

Teryn Payne is an Editorial Assistant to the Editor-in-Chief. Shes obsessed with lip gloss,nail polish and all things olive. Follow her on Twitter and Instagram@Teryn_Denice.

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Meet the Teen Who Rocked 'Black Lives Matter' Dress to Prom - EBONY.com