Archive for the ‘Black Lives Matter’ Category

Eagles’ Malcolm Jenkins is committed to teaching others about Black Lives Matter The NFL player joined the Caucus of … – The Undefeated


The Undefeated
Eagles' Malcolm Jenkins is committed to teaching others about Black Lives Matter The NFL player joined the Caucus of ...
The Undefeated
Continuing the conversation toward healing in the community and moving forward with the Black Lives Matter movement is a major priority for Philadelphia Eagles safety Malcolm Jenkins. So it was no big surprise when Jenkins joined members of the Caucus ...

Go here to see the original:

Eagles' Malcolm Jenkins is committed to teaching others about Black Lives Matter The NFL player joined the Caucus of ... - The Undefeated

They Can’t Kill Us All: The Story of Black Lives Matter by Wesley Lowery review – The Guardian

Protesters in Ferguson, Missouri, following the shooting of Michael Brown in August 2014. Photograph: Scott Olson/Getty Images

There are no stories in the riots, just the ghosts of other stories. So says a voiceover in Handsworth Songs, the Black Audio Film Collectives dense and resonant response to the 1985 riots in Birmingham. Its a notion that infuriated Salman Rushdie, who wrote a strident essay for the Guardian in which he claimed the film-makers, too wedded to avant-garde hermeticism, had spurned the opportunity to offer a loudspeaker to marginalised immigrants. He was on the side of a dominant style of journalism in which reporters race to burning neighbourhoods to track down and interview locals who can explain, preferably in outraged sentences, why people are angry, who is to blame for the mess, and what will happen if things dont change.

They Cant Kill Us All is Wesley Lowerys memoir, compiled from the Washington Post reporters messy notes, which aspires to tell the story of Ferguson, Missouri where, in August 2014, weeks of protest and rioting broke out in the aftermath of the shooting of an unarmed black American, Michael Brown, by white police officer Darren Wilson. Its author came to public attention when he became the first journalist to be imprisoned albeit for barely 20 minutes for covering the arrest. He later played a key role in the Posts Pulitzer prize-winning fatal force project, a database that, in the absence of comprehensive federal government data, assembled information on police shootings in 2015.

He excels in his evocation of story gathering in the digital age , where a hashtag can be as galvanising as a photograph

What was Ferguson? Its a name, a kind of brand, a fuzzy signifier. For Lowery, there are no isolated incidents, yet the medias focus on the victim and the officer inadvertently erases the context of the nations history as it relates race, policing, and training for law enforcements. While conservative pundits, often with barely suppressed glee, used it as a byword for dysfunction, many black men and women hauled it into a much longer history of racial terror within America. Did it give birth to the social movement Black Lives Matter? If it didnt kickstart, it certainly intensified a national and perhaps even international debate about whether Barack Obamas presidency had really ushered in a post-racial era.

The people Lowery encounters come across as soundbite sources rather than fully fleshed-out individuals. Although he spends more time hanging out in the communities hes reporting on than many of his colleagues, the character and texture of those neighbourhoods are missing. His medium-roast prose Knowing that a police officer is responsible causes a special, deep pain for the families of those who killed cant compare with the lyricism of Jesmyn Wards Men We Reaped (2014) or the caustic heft of Gary Younges Another Day in the Death of America (2016).

Where he excels is in his evocation of story gathering in the digital age. His Ferguson is viral, logged and distributed by online activists and citizen reporters, a hybrid newsfeed, broadcasting platform and ongoing group therapy space. A hashtag can be as galvanising as a photograph or an eyewitness account. Journalists are cameramen, podcasters, format-neutral.

Lowery, committed but exhausted, says that since Ferguson more or less my job has been to bear witness to pain and trauma. Its worse for his subjects. A protester promises him: One day, one month, one year from now, after you leave, its still going to be fucked up in Ferguson.

They Cant Kill Us All by Wesley Lowery is published by Penguin (9.99). To order a copy for 8.49 go to bookshop.theguardian.com or call 0330 333 6846. Free UK p&p over 10, online orders only. Phone orders min p&p of 1.99

See original here:

They Can't Kill Us All: The Story of Black Lives Matter by Wesley Lowery review - The Guardian

Danielle Brooks Says Black Lives Matter, No Matter – ELLE.com

Danielle Brooks is really worried about the future of our countryespecially when it comes to young black men.

"When it comes to Black Lives Matter, I feel like it's very important," the Orange is the New Black actress told ELLE.com at the SAG awards in Los Angeles on Sunday. "Now our president is talking about more law and order. It made me nervous."

Yara Shahidi Speaks Out Against Muslim Ban

The 13 Most Political Moments of the SAG Awards

'Stranger Things' Cast Delivers Powerful Speech

Advertisement - Continue Reading Below

Brooks, who shared in OITNB's award for best cast in a TV comedy, is concerned about new presidential crackdowns that could lie ahead. "When it came to Ferguson, when it came to Eric Garnerwe as the cast of Orange Is the New Black marched for Eric Garnerit makes me nervous that if something else was to happen in this country, what would happen? What would the actions be? So I just want to make sure that our young black men feel supported and that they feel worth being on this earth, and being in the U.S."

As for other causes championed by Brooks, she says standing for women's rights is an obvious choice. "I went to the Women's March in D.C., so I definitely stand for women's rights. I am a woman. Why wouldn't I?"

Despite her concerns, Brooks is determinedly optimistic that telling diverse stories will bring positive change. "How do I stay hopeful? I would have to say through the artsbeing on a show like Orange, where we get to actually talk about so many topics that are important to our country, and people are listening. Our former president, President Obama, did a wonderful thing where he allowed 500 people that have been incarcerated to have a second chance, and I'm not saying that's solely because of Orange Is the New Black, but I do feel like he's a person who's watched it. I feel like they're listening. So I think with telling stories like Orange, telling stories like Moonlight, telling stories like This Is Us, things will start to happen."

Excerpt from:

Danielle Brooks Says Black Lives Matter, No Matter - ELLE.com

Black Lives Matter Fight With Police While Protesting Immigration Ban – LawOfficer.com

Photo Courtesy:Nick De La Canal / WFAE

Black Lives Matter (BLM) activists protested President Donald Trumps temporary immigration ban at a North Carolina airport Saturday.

BLM, joined by social justice group Charlotte Uprising, rallied at the Charlotte-Douglas International Airport in reaction to Trumps executive order concerning refugees from seven Middle Easterncountries, reports WFAE.

Approximately 60 protesters stood by the baggage claim and shouted No hate. No fear. Immigrants are welcome here.

Trump issued an executive order Friday that put a temporary halt to refugee entrance for 120 days. Syrian refugees have been banned indefinitely, while people from Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sudan, Libya, Somalia and Yemen cant enter the U.S. for the next 90 days.

Exceptions can be made on a case by case basis and Christian refugees have been prioritized.

The protest turned tense when the activists began yelling profanities at the police and demanding justice for the 2016police shooting of a black man, Keith Lamont Scott. A small squabble broke out, with police eventually arresting six people for trespassing and resisting.

Police eventually got the remaining crowd to leave by 10:30 p.m.

Read More

Blu Armor ENERGY beats all others hands down!

Lead with Courage with Law Officer Editor & Trainer of the Year, Travis Yates.

Read more from the original source:

Black Lives Matter Fight With Police While Protesting Immigration Ban - LawOfficer.com

#BlackLivesMatter Activists Make Hillary Clinton … – TIME.com

Former Gov. Martin O'Malley (D-MD) (R), and moderator Jose Antonio Vargas (R), listen to Tia Oso, the National Coordinator for the Black Immigration Network, during an interruption to O'Malley's speech, at the Netroots Nation 2015 Presidential Town Hall with at the Phoenix Convention Center on July 18, 2015 in Phoenix.Charlie LeightGetty Images

When Black Lives Matter protestors stormed a room at a meeting in Phoenix and demanded that the 2016 presidential candidates say the names of black people killed by the police, the response was swift: Bernie Sanders did it the next day.

I wish that in the year 2015, I could tell you we have eliminated racism in this country, but you all know that is not true, said Sanders, to a crowd of more than 11,000 in Houston on Sunday, and then listed the names: Sandra Bland, Eric Garner, Tamir Rice, Freddie Gray and many, many others."

Its a testament to the influence Black Lives Matter activists are already having on the 2016 presidential race. Since the raucous protest of a few dozen mostly African-American activists brought the biggest meeting of progressives in the country to a screeching halt, Hillary Clinton repeated her calls for body cameras and improved early childhood education, and wrote Black lives matter in a Facebook post. Martin OMalley promised to roll out a comprehensive plan to reform the criminal justice system, and Sanders has repeatedly brought up race on the campaign trail.

Now, Black Lives Matter leaders are preparing an agenda of policy demands and requirements designed to push Clinton, Sanders and OMalley to embrace broad reforms to address systemic racism head-on. Activists foresee a series of demonstrations to call attention to racial injustice in the United States.

What does the Democratic camp have to say about our society? We are in a crisis, said Opal Tometi, cofounder of the Black Lives Matter movement. If they want our vote, theyre going to have to speak to the death of black people at the hands of law enforcement, and create a racial justice agenda that cuts across all major issues.

Black Lives Matter activists meeting in Cleveland this weekend will formulate a long list of policy demands for candidates, Tometi said, intended to shape the 2016 presidential race and help form the basis for candidates' talking points.

Some of the agenda will likely include anti-bias police hiring, the demilitarization of police forces and external reviews of police practices, activists told TIME. But leaders are also calling for more sweeping reforms that include a package of progressive packages intended to help poor blacks, including lifting the minimum wage, aggressive education reform, housing protections, protecting access to the ballot box and ending mass incarceration.

A number of racial justice groups including the Black Youth Project, Million Hoodies Movement for Justice, the Dream Defenders and others are expected to be in Cleveland.

Body cameras and dash cameras are clearly not enough, because Sandra Bland still ended up dead, said Alicia Garza, a second cofounder of the Black Lives Matter movement, referring to a civil rights activist who was found dead in a jail cell in Texas, in what authorities have called a suicide. Many observers have called her arrest violent and excessive.

I want to see from all these candidates is program for how theyre going to aggressively work to ensure that black lives matter, Garza continued. Not just in relation to policing: we have to dive into questions of economics and democracy.

Black Lives Matter grew out of the death of Trayvon Martin in 2012 and the violence last year in Ferguson, when Michael Brown, an unarmed black man was killed by the police. Over the past year, the organizationally diffuse movement has mounted large protests against police violence and incarceration policies. The movement is fueled by a widespread anger over police violence against black citizens.

Of the Democratic candidates, Clinton has perhaps addressed race in the most detail since launching her campaign. She has called for automatic voter registration and protecting the rights of black Americans at the ballot box, body cameras on police officers, early childhood education directed at low-income families and overhauling the criminal justice system. She has called for greater gun control and raising the minimum wage, and spoken specifically to the persistence of racism.

Our problem is not all kooks and Klansman, Clinton said in a speech in June. It's also in the cruel joke that goes unchallenged. It's in the off-hand comments about not wanting those people in the neighborhood.

Sanders led anti-segregation efforts in Chicago in the 1960s and participated in the Million Man March, but does not frequently talk about racism on the campaign trail. He has become increasingly vocal about racism, particularly since Saturday, calling for more accountability among police and larger steps to address prison reform. O'Malley has called for better funding of independent external review boards and reducing penalties for nonviolent criminals.

The spectacle on Saturday at the Netroots Nation conference in Phoenix, Arizona began during former Maryland Governor Martin OMalleys presidential town hall question-and-answer session, when several dozen Black Lives Matter protestors marched into the conference room, chanting, What side are you on black people, what side are you on! and chanted Say her name! OMalley was silenced for some ten minutes before finally addressing the protestors and calling for broader criminal justice reforms. Sanders nearly left the stage in frustration as the chanting continued.

Read more: Sanders and O'Malley Stumble During Black Lives Matter Protest

Folks who are tired of whats happening in communities of color are ready to see real change," said Tia Oso, a Black Lives Matter activist who mounted the stage at Netroots and took a microphone to directly address the audience in the middle of OMalleys session. This type of direct confrontation is a strategy that we must employ.

Immediately following the protest on Saturday, O'Malley tweeted the hashtag #blacklivesmatter, and Sanders tweeted the names of black people killed by the police.

Clinton, too named Sandra Bland in the days after the protest, saying in a statement, "My heart breaks at seeing another young African American life lost too soon. Sandra Bland had a bright future ahead of her and it is particularly tragic that she lost her life just as she was to start her new career."

Theres an electoral realism that all the candidates will have to grapple with, too: Black voters are a crucial voting bloc, particularly black women. They have turned out in higher numbers than any other demographic in the past two presidential elections, and galvanizing them will be key for the Democratic nominee. They are among the most prominent leaders of the Black Lives Matter movement.

Activists say theyll be listening closely to what the candidates say in the coming months.

Theyre the community Democrats need to win the election, black women in particular," said Rashad Robinson, executive director of Color of Change. And thats who was taking over the stage.

Clinton was not at the convention in Phoenix, but she was quickly drawn in to addressing the protestors. In a Facebook question and answer session on Monday, a journalist asked Clinton how she would have responded to the protestors at Netroots Nation. Black lives matter, Clinton wrote back. "Everyone in this country should stand firmly behind that. Black people across America still experience racism every day. The campaign posted her response on Twitter on Wednesday.

During a stop in Detroit on Tuesday, Clinton again told a local activist that black lives matter and repeated her call for overhauling the criminal justice system.

None of the Democrats, however, have so far satisfied the activists, who say the protests will continue.

"They should be ready for anything," said Oso.

Read the original here:

#BlackLivesMatter Activists Make Hillary Clinton ... - TIME.com