Archive for the ‘Tim Wise’ Category

University Of Wisconsin – Green Bay: Keep The Conversation Going With Tim Wise, Nov. 3 At 7 P.M. – Patch.com

University of Wisconsin-Green Bay Multi-Ethnic Student Affairs (MESA) is pleased to present Keep the Conversation Going with: Tim Wise on Wednesday, Nov. 3, 2021 at 7 p.m. at the Weidner Center as part of our Keep the Conversation Going Series inspired by The Bias Inside Us. This event is free and open to the public. Reservations are strongly encouraged.

Please RSVP.

Tim Wise is one the nation's most prominent anti-racist writer and educators. Wise has spent over two decades speaking to audiences on over 1,500 college and high school campuses in all 50 states, and hundreds of academic and professional conferences. He is the author of nine books, his latest being Dispatches from the Race War.

Wise is the host of the podcast, Speak Out with Tim Wise, and is regularly featured on CNN and MSNBC discussing race. Keep the Conversation Going with Tim Wise Wednesday, November 3, 2021 at 7:00 pm Cofrin Family Hall | Weidner Center for the Performing Arts Admission is free Please fill out this Reservation Form to reserve your in-person seats.

This speaking engagement is one of many programs included in the Keep the Conversation Going series inspired by The Bias Inside Us traveling exhibition and community engagement project coming to the Weidner Center January 15 February 22, 2022. Created by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Services (SITES), The Bias Inside Us invites visitors to explore the foundational blocks of bias and the psychology behind how it influences our behaviors. For more information on The Bias Inside Us and for a full list of Keep the Conversation Going events, visit WeidnerCenter.com.

This press release was produced by University of Wisconsin - Green Bay. The views expressed here are the author's own.

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University Of Wisconsin - Green Bay: Keep The Conversation Going With Tim Wise, Nov. 3 At 7 P.M. - Patch.com

Rival bands pitch in for flood relief | Flood Coverage | themountaineer.com – The Mountaineer

In the sports world, Tuscola and Pisgah make up as passionate a rivalry as there is at the high school level. But as fellow community members, the two schools have each others backs, especially in the face of disaster.

On game night, were trying to beat them and theyre trying to beat us, but the rest of the week, we go to church together, we live together, were the same communities, longtime Tuscola band director Tim Wise said, whos been at the school since 1993. When something like this happens, they would have our back just like weve got theirs.

Since tropical storm Fred devastated many parts of Haywood County Tuesday, including the outdoor athletic facilities at Pisgah, support and donations have poured in from numerous outlets. Tuscola band students wanted to pitch in too, so they organized a drop off location at their band room.

We noticed that our community needs a lot of help and I feel like, as a band member, we have to thank the community a lot because theyre the ones that support us a ton, Tuscola baritone player Jonah Ottie said. We want to help give back, so Im hoping a lot of this food, water and clothes will go to help a lot of people.

Wise said his band members contacted him Wednesday asking if it would be okay to use the band room to accept donations to take over to Pisgah. The students got the word out on social media and Wise sent an email to band parents and posted on Facebook to help spread the word.

The kids have been here all day and its just been a steady stream of donations, food, water, clothing, cleaning supplies, whatever people need, Wise said.

In a matter of hours, the Tuscola band room was overtaken by piles of donations from the community. Those donations then go to Pisgahs band room, which is even more packed than Tuscolas, and from there are taken out to distribution sites like churches in the most heavily affected parts of the county.

Weve just sort of been like the hub of gathering stuff and now were just trying to find the people who can get it out, Pisgah band director Matt Sanders said.

Sanders said along with the Band of Bears, Pisgahs student council and JROTC helped organize the donations. Sanders said that at first, his plan was just to donate band hoodies and shirts leftover from last school year and extra food leftover from band camp. But with the food and clothes donations drive organized by the student council, the operation quickly grew bigger and bigger.

We have things for infants and toddlers all the way up to adult 3XL, Sanders said. Anybody whos been devastated by tropical storm Fred can really come here and get anything that they need and sorta kinda have a fresh start.

Seeing the hard work multiple parts of the community came together to put in to take care of each other made Sanders proud to be part of it.

Its great to belong to a program that has the admiration and love of its community, he said.

At Tuscola, the band members were surprised at how quickly their room filled up. Drum major Doris Thomas said she expected a big turnout, but was impressed at just how big the turnout actually was.

It was really tragic when it happened, so its really cool seeing everyone come together and really help the community, Thomas said.

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Rival bands pitch in for flood relief | Flood Coverage | themountaineer.com - The Mountaineer

Queensland mother committed to stand trial over deaths of daughters in hot car – 9News

A Queensland mother has been committed to stand trial over the deaths of her two young daughters after they were found dead in her sweltering parked car.

Kerri-Ann Conley was charged with two counts of murder under a new definition in Queensland which includes reckless indifference to human life that came into effect in 2019, just weeks before the incident.

It's alleged Ms Conley put her two young daughters, Darcey, two, and Chloe-Ann, one, in her black Mazda sedan after leaving a friend's house before 5am.

When Ms Conley arrived home to her Waterford West address, it is alleged she left the two young girls inside the car before going inside and falling asleep.

Police allege the girls remained in the car for several hours as temperatures rose to over 30C but were not discovered until after 1pm.

The father of Darcey, Peter Jackson, told the Beenleigh Court that he routinely saw his daughter and her sister on Saturdays, but was unable to get in contact with Ms Conley on the morning of the incident.

Mr Jackson said he attempted to contact Ms Conley more than a dozen times but received no response until around the time paramedics were called to the property just before 1.30pm.

Police prosecutor Tim Wise told the court that they had collected more than 140 statements that will be tendered as evidence.

Magistrate Michael O'Driscoll ordered Ms Conley to stand trial, with a date yet to be set.

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Queensland mother committed to stand trial over deaths of daughters in hot car - 9News

Juneteenth Declared National Holiday, Amidst Progress, Upheaval – bctv.org

Juneteenth National Independence Day is now an official holiday, after President Joe Biden signed a bill Thursday, approved by both the US Senate and House of Representatives.

Also known as Black Emancipation Day, Liberation Day and Jubilee Day, its celebrated on June 19, which marks the anniversary of an historical celebration of emancipation which started in Galveston, Texas when news that enslaved people had been freed by President Abraham Lincoln reached the Black community, almost two years and a half years after the Emancipation Proclamation.

Many states have already designated the holiday, and momentum for the legislation followed the Black Lives Matter protests sparked by the police killing of George Floyd last year.

Enforcement of the liberation of Black people was slow, and accompanied the advance of Union troops. The Proclamation only outlawed human slavery in the Confederate states, it took the 13th Amendment to the Constitution to end enslavement elsewhere.

Akilah Wallace, member of the Black Southern Womens Leadership Project and executive director of Faith in Texas, said true liberation for Black Americans has yet to be achieved.

When were still faced with mass incarceration, police brutality, white supremacy within every system and fiber of this nation, we still have a fight to take on, Wallace asserted.

This year, multiple states have approved bills that limit voting opportunities in Black communities, and passed legislation prohibiting schools from teaching about the countrys legacy of racism.

Kevin Matthews II, founder of BuildingBread, said in an interview with YES! Media, he shared those concerns. Matthews is an author and an expert on the Tulsa massacre of what was then called Black Wall Street. Hes also a former financial advisor.

Any time that people of color in this country have significant progress, there is almost always a swift reaction from those who are still in power or those who benefited from oppressing others, Matthews observed.

Tim Wise also spoke with YES! Media. An author and anti-racism educator, Wise wrote White Like Me, and Dispatches from the Race War. He said his own family tree revealed slave owners, who handed down documents that showed their lack of compassion when writing about the buying and selling of enslaved people.

And I think we need to grapple with that, because we may not literally pass down human beings anymore, thank God, but we pass down the mentality that made the selling of human beings possible, Wise contended.

President Joe Bidens approval makes Juneteenth the first federal holiday established since Martin Luther King, Junior Day in 1983.

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Juneteenth Declared National Holiday, Amidst Progress, Upheaval - bctv.org

In Reply to Tim Wise: America’s Past on Race Should Not Be …

(Jon Chase)

The toxic consequences of drawing a crude line between Americas past and the state of our modern institutions cannot be understated.

In a blog post this past summer on Medium, progressive activist Tim Wise compared the supposedly self-evident existence of systemic racism in the United States to Isaac Newtons First Law of Motion, which asserts thatevery object will remain at rest or in uniform motion in a straight line unless compelled to change its state by the action of an external force. Wise suggests that since historical events and patterns leave legacies, the United States legacy of racism has a sort of inertia of its own.

Unfortunately for those such as Wise, the dubious notion that modern racial inequalities are intrinsically tied to a larger historical narrative of endless racism turns out to be at odds with reality.

Of course, the clearest error in thinking is apparent from the very beginning: Why would anyone believe that systemic racism behaves in the same way as a law of physics? Not only is the social reality of American life more complex (and infused with endlessly more variables) than a cosmic principle, there is also extensive evidence to suggest that a variety of institutions have taken steps to eradicate racial bias. Some examples include:

I could go on; however, the main point is crystal clear: Why would a system designed to threaten the well-being of racial minorities also take such concrete and extensive steps to help them?

Furthermore, what is to be said about racial disparities in which black individuals outpace their white counterparts, such as when black applicants for medical schools are accepted at higher rates than white applicants? Does this serve as evidence that such systems were designed to be unfair to whites? Just as it would be absurd to make that claim, it is equally preposterous to deduce that every system in the United States is racist simply because of a. the existence of disparities and b. various historical facts about the country.

On the subject of history, a detailed examination of various American systems and their origins might be of use to those who assert that racisms inertia continues to metastasize in our current institutions. Perhaps the most easily identifiable example is the founding of the United States itself, which, according to many on the Left, ingrained systemic racism into the very fabric of our society. While it should come as no shock that there are explicitly racist clauses within many of our countrys early documents, various other texts were written to prevent the spread of racist practices. Take, for example, the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, which was purposefully designed to stop the spread of slavery to western territories. As Larry Schweikart and Michael Allen explain in their book, A Patriots History of the United States:

When the individual initiative [to free enslaved people] did not suffice, Northerners employed the law. The Northwest Ordinance of 1787, the first large-scale prohibition of slavery by a major nation in history, would forbid slavery above the Ohio Rivervirtually all these men [the founders] believed that slavery would some day end

A preponderance of historical evidence suggests that the very men who designed allegedly racist systems in the United States eventually established policies that gave way to the end of slavery, despite living at a time in which slavery was commonly practiced around the world. The fact that the Founders laid the foundation for future abolitionists such as President Abraham Lincoln speaks volumes about the competing intentions of the United States founding. Such facts fly in the face of the racist inertia argument. The origins of Americas institutions are simply too complex to have moved in a singular direction, with such quantifiable and longitudinal consequences.

Additionally, claiming that entire institutions are sinister by design disincentivizes people from using those same institutions to their advantage. This becomes clear when examining the history of relations between ethnic minorities and the police, an institution often accused of being forever inextricably linked to its allegedly racist roots. As Thomas Sowell notes in his book Ethnic America, many ethnic minorities did not make sizable gains until they cooperated with police to lower crime in their towns and neighborhoods. Regarding Chinese Americans in the early 1900s and their interactions with the criminal group known as the tongs, Sowell writes:

The[c]ompanies ordered their member merchants to refuse to pay more protection money to the tongs. Chinatown residents began to cooperate with police in apprehending and prosecuting criminalsChinese festivals and parades received police protection and became civic events attracting large crowds of non-Chinese.

Sowell goes on to explain that the protection of Chinese communities by the police led to greater investments in education, which, in turn, increased the net worth of these individuals in the years that followed. Simply put, if the racist origins of American policing carried some sort of inertia with it, why did low-income Chinese immigrants with little educational background benefit so overwhelmingly from police presence in their communities?

The toxic consequences of drawing a crude line between Americas past and the state of our modern institutions cannot be understated. It is precisely this kind of pseudo-historical logic that legitimizes radical ideas such as the head startmyth, which claims that all white people are the beneficiaries of historical privilege, invoking the image of an unfair foot race between black and white people to make the point. Similar to the inertia argument, this myth falls apart once one realizes just how complex our nations history (or any nations) truly is. To be clear, many white privileges failed to benefit said people and often only exacerbated poverty. A prime example is the Homestead Act of 1862, a land grant that resulted in thousands of white farmers losing intergenerational wealth after failing to produce crops in the West.

When all is said and done, taking time to research the actual particulars of American history reveals something much more profound than a simple story of malignant design. The United States history tells the story of a nations struggle to uphold its own exceptional ideals, while, along the way, confronting evil institutions such as slavery, black codes, and Jim Crow laws. It should be abundantly clear that the burden of proof belongs to those making the claim that the United States is systemically racistand not to those arguing that American history is far too complex to make such broad generalizations.

J. Edward Britton is a composer and essayist. He is a graduate of Oberlin College.

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