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Sandra Bland's Only Offense 'Driving While Black' By Jesse Jackson Sr.

August 3, 2015

Sandra Bland's Only Offense 'Driving While Black'
By Jesse Jackson Sr.

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - On July 9, Sandra Bland drove to Prairie View, Texas from Chicago, eager for a job interview at Prairie View A&M, the historically black college that was her alma mater. The 28-year-old woman, described as smart and generous, had expressed solidarity with BlackLivesMatter and the growing movement against mass incarceration and racially biased policing. Then she took a big risk: she was driving while black. Four days later, she was found dead in a county jail cell.

She was pulled over on July 10 by a white police officer, officially for failing to signal a lane change. She asked why he had pulled her over. He told her to put out her cigarette. When she questioned why, he demanded she get out of the car, threatened her with a stun gun, reached in to pull her out of the car and handcuffed her, pushing her down to the ground when she resisted and complained. She was driven to the county jail in Hempstead, a jail run by Sheriff R. Glenn Smith. A decade ago, the New York Times reports, Smith was sued by the only full-time black officer on the force for dismissing him after he complained about his supervisor’s racial slurs. He was suspended in 2007 for pushing a black man he said had spit on him. He was fired in 2008 after complaints about intrusive searches of African Americans in public. He was elected sheriff months later.
Pulled over for not signaling a lane change, Bland was charged with a felony for assaulting a police officer and hit with a $5,000 bond. She spent three days in jail, finally arranging the money needed for a bondsman. She was found dead in her cell. Her death was ruled a suicide, a finding that her family disputes. How could a young woman, excited by the prospect of a new job, finally arranging to get out of that cell, choose to hang herself?
Waller County, an hour out of Houston, has an infamous history of racism. The Times reports on a study by the Equal Justice Initiative that found blacks were lynched after Reconstruction more frequently than in almost any other county in the state.
No official is defending the trooper’s behavior when he pulled Sandra Bland over. He has been placed on administrative leave with pay while an inquiry goes forth. The Hempstead mayor says he was “very, very upset” with what he saw on the videotape of the incident that was captured by a camera in the trooper’s car.
U.S. Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch noted that Sandra Bland’s death highlights the fears of African Americans when they come into contact with the police. “Many minority communities,” she said, “for so long have felt that law enforcement was coming in to essentially enforce laws against them, not to protect them.” Over 300,000 have signed a national petition calling on an independent Justice Department investigation of Sandra Bland’s death.
The fears Lynch alluded to are well founded. Sandra Bland’s is only the latest death. Across the country, more than two dozen others have died in police custody this year. As of July 26, police have killed, according to the Guardian, 657 people this year in the U.S. Nearly six of 10 (58 percent) were people of color. As William Boardman notes, U.S. police killed 59 people in the first 24 days of 2015, compared to the police of England and Wales, who killed 55 people in the last 24 years. Texas trails only California for the number of police killings.
We don’t simply need new cameras on police; we need a fundamental change of culture. Police forces should look like the communities they patrol. Police officers should live in those communities. Training must not only instruct police in the use of firearms, but in the mores of the community. And police cannot not be put in the position of an occupying force in desperately impoverished neighborhoods with massive unemployment and little hope.
Sandra Bland changed lanes without signaling. But that wasn’t her crime. Her crime was driving while black. The institutionalized prejudices and distorted practices that led to her death are unacceptable in a nation of equal justice under the law. Unacceptable and unaccepted.

Samuel, Sandra, and Cecil By Dr. E. Faye Williams, Esq.

August 3, 2015

Samuel, Sandra, and Cecil
By Dr. E. Faye Williams, Esq.

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) – We cannot deny that the United States is an animal loving country.  Through the miracle of commercial television, almost any time, one can witness the deplorable conditions under which many animals are maintained. The television commercials that portray this misery are often accompanied by a melancholy musical score that, when combined with the innocent and pitiful stares of the mistreated animals, tears at the human heart and pulls at every ounce of compassion in the soul of the viewer.

Celebrities from every genre lend their support for more enlightened treatment of animals.  Many well-known actors and actresses have posed in ads that deplore the use of animal fur.  Many other celebrities who are well-known vegans will even protest the raising of animals for human consumption.  There’s no doubt that organizations like the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) and People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) have established their niche in the national consciousness.

In the spirit of full disclosure, I admit that I grew up in the south where hunting is a way of life.  It is an integral part of the regional lifestyle and many still depend upon hunting to prevent hunger.  It’s not uncommon for many families to supplement their diets with game harvested from the woods and waters.  With that, it may surprise you to learn that I was thoroughly upset to learn of the assassination of Cecil, the Zimbabwean lion.

I must also admit that I’m not a vegan, but I do eat fish or fowl.  I don’t have any four-legged house guests (pets); yet, I abhor any mistreatment of animals or, for that matter, human beings!  Although not quite as committed as Saint Francis of Assisi, and others who rigidly embrace his philosophy, I respect the sanctity of all life.

Considering the facts as initially reported I can only qualify the demise of Cecil as a murder.  All who protest in righteous outrage and indignation are justified.  Although justified, I wonder whether comparable outrage exists about the murder of Samuel Dubose or the death of Sandra Bland.  If it does exist, have the media and the late night talk show hosts demonstrated similar disgust as they did for Cecil?

Until the Cincinnati prosecutor, Joseph Deters, held a press conference announcing an indictment of murder against University of Cincinnati Police Officer (Ray Tensing), information about the Dubose murder seemed to fly under the radar of public awareness.  We’ve now learned that the traffic stop that precipitated the murder of Mr. Dubose was based on a missing front license plate!

Inquiry into the death of Ms. Bland seems to generate more questions than it clears up.  There’s a great deal that we don’t know about her death, but we can speculate, with a fair degree of certainty, that if she had not been stopped by an aggressive police officer for a petty infraction, she would be alive today.

Although the Black community and those who’re sensitive to and aware of the daily injustice experienced by our community have  raised a ruckus about Dubose and Bland, the outrage concerning Cecil seems to grasp a larger portion of the general population.

There lies the problem.  Until the greater population can attach more significance to the death of a Black male or female than it does to the death or mistreatment of an animal, race relations in this country will continue to be as distorted as it has been for almost four hundred years. We can’t fix the problem until we face it!

It is unfortunate that Cecil was a victim of unscrupulous hunters, but the greater tragedy lies in the senseless deaths of Black men and women.  Why do Black lives seem to matter less than Cecil’s?

(Dr. E. Faye Williams is President of the National Congress of Black Women. www.nationalcongressbw.org.  202/678-6788)

Patience Exhausted, Obama Seeks August Deadline for End to South Sudan War

July 27, 2015

Patience Exhausted, Obama Seeks August Deadline for End to South Sudan War

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Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from Global Information Network


(TriceEdneyWire.com) – President Barack Obama, in a meeting with regional African leaders, threatened new sanctions for the warring factions in South Sudan if a peace deal is not be reached by Aug. 17.

"The possibilities of renewed conflict … is something that requires urgent attention from all of us," Obama said. "We don't have a lot of time to wait."

Pres. Obama outlined the options at a meeting Monday in Addis Ababa with leaders of Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia, the chair of the African Union and the foreign minister of Sudan.  “Liberating” South Sudan, with support from the U.S., Britain and Norway, was supposed to be the high point of Obama’s Africa policy. Four years after independence, the nation is a humanitarian disaster.

In fighting showing no signs of letting up, thousands of people have been killed and more than 2.2 million displaced, since violence erupted in December 2013, according to the UN. Human rights abuses and indiscriminate killings have been carried out by both sides – namely the South Sudanese government led by President Salva Kiir, a Dinka, and forces loyal to former Vice President Riek Machar, an ethnic Nuer.

At the session of leaders, Obama set an Aug. 17 deadline for a peace agreement signed by all combatants although no consensus was reached on Monday on what to do if the deadline comes and goes. Numerous sanctions were floated – an arms embargo and the freezing of assets and ability to travel - backed by the international community. Obama expressed his preference for sanctions over intervention, as proposed by one of the leaders.

Western diplomats have pushed countries in the region to withdraw support for the South Sudanese combatants in order to make peace. Uganda, for example, openly supports the South Sudan government. Sudan supports Machar’s rebels.

Those at the talks included Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta, Sudanese Foreign Minister Ibarahim Ghandour and the chair of the African Union Commission, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma.

In a press briefing, a senior administration official told reporters that “venal leaders” had squandered a huge opportunity which the international community had helped them win. “So we can’t undo this for them,” he said, referring to the crisis. “They’ve got to fix this (themselves).”

Fighting has been fiercest in the Upper Nile and Unity States, where the nation’s two major oil fields are found. With the onset of the rainy season, an already dire situation has grown worse.

“Tens of thousands of people are cut off from aid and medical care as fighting intensifies in South Sudan’s Upper Nile State,” Doctors Without Borders, the international medical humanitarian organization, said in a statement last week.

Meanwhile, rebel spokesman James Gatdet welcomed Obama's comments, saying "peace is possible". But a spokesman for South Sudan rejected the plan and accused the international community of “jeopardizing the chances of the people of South Sudan.”

In Kenya: Obama Weighs in on Gay Rights, Ignoring Local Taboo

July 27, 2015

 

In Kenya: Obama Weighs in on Gay Rights, Ignoring Local Taboo

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Presidents Obama and Kenyatta

 

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from Global Information Network

(TriceEdneyWire.com) – Despite dire warnings that he faced expulsion from Kenya’s Parliament if he raised the subject of gay rights, President Barack Obama replied to a reporter’s question on the subject with a very personal response.

“As an African-American in the United States I am painfully aware of what happens when people are treated differently under the law,” Obama said.

“When you start treating people differently – because they’re different – that’s the path whereby freedoms begin to erode, and bad things happen,” said Obama, adding that treating people differently “because of who they love is wrong, full stop.”

“I’ve been consistent all across Africa on this,” said Obama, who previously spoke in support of gay rights during a visit to Senegal in 2013.

On Saturday, President Uhuru Kenyatta repeated his argument that for Kenyans, gay rights is “really a non-issue”. He said it was an area of disagreement for Kenya and the US.

“There are some things we don’t share, that our society, our culture, don’t accept,” the Kenyan president said.

In Kenya, gay sex is punishable by up to 14 years in prison and gay people in the country regularly talk about violent harassment.

In his speech at the stadium, the president also took a stand on women’s rights, condemning female genital circumcision and other “bad traditions” including domestic violence and lack of job opportunities.

“Every country and every culture has traditions that are unique and help make that country what it is,” he said, “but just because something is part of your past doesn’t make it right; it doesn’t mean it defines your future.”

He cited the recent debate in America over the Confederate flag.

“Around the world there is a tradition of oppressing women and treating them differently and not giving them the same opportunities, and husbands beating their wives, and children not being sent to school. Those are traditions.

Treating women and girls as second-class citizens. Those are bad traditions. They need to change.”

His comments brought an outpouring of applause from the 4,500 Kenyans who filled a sports arena in Nairobi.

He reminded the young people in the crowd of his grandfather’s service as a cook for the British during the colonial era. “A young, ambitious Kenyan today should not have to do what my grandfather did and serve a foreign master,” he said. “You don’t need to do what my father did and leave your home to get a good education and access to opportunity. Because of Kenya’s progress, because of your potential, you can build your future right here, right now.”

On the way to Kenyatta airport, thousands of people lined the route in the hope of glimpsing the presidential convoy. As he boarded Air Force One, Obama turned to the crowd with a wide smile and an extended farewell wave.

Bobbi Kristina Brown, Daughter of Whitney Houston, Dies After Bathtub Incident

July 27, 2015

Bobbi Kristina Brown, Daughter of Whitney Houston, Dies After Bathtub Incident

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Bobbi Kristina Brown, the 22-year-old daughter of the late superstar singer Whitney Houston, has died.

Brown, the only daughter of singers Houston and Bobby Brown, died Sunday, July 26, nearly six months after she was found unresponsive in a bathtub of her home, according to widespread reports.

Herself an aspiring singer, Brown had remained unresponsive in hospitals and in a hospice since Jan. 31, the day she was found submerged in a bathtub at her Roswell, Ga. home. Her family said she had suffered irreversible brain damage and was never revived.

Her mother, Whitney Houston's death was ruled a drug overdose that led to an accidental drowning. She was found sitting in a bathtub at the Beverly Hilton Hotel.

In a statement, Bobbi Kristina's family said, "She is finally at peace in the arms of God…We want to again thank everyone for their tremendous amount of love and support during these last few months."

It is still not clear exactly what happened Jan. 31, just short of three years since the death of her mother in Feb. 2012. No criminal charges have yet been filed. An autopsy will be performed.

Mystery shrouds the final days of Bobbi Kristina. Her court-appointed conservator, Bedelia C. Hargrove, last month sued Nick Gordon, known as her boyfriend or husband, reportedly accusing him of physically abusing Bobbi Kristina.

“I filed this lawsuit to pursue justice on behalf of Bobbi Kristina Brown. No human being, male or female, should endure what Bobbi Kristina endured,” Bedelia C. Hargrove reportedly told People Magazine in a statement.

Whitney Houston never formerly adopted Gordon, but allowed him to live in the home with her and Bobby Kristina since he was 12. Houston and Brown had divorced. Hargrove also accused Gordon of making fraudulent claims that he and Bobbi Kristina had married. Gordon was reportedly banned from Bobbi Kristina's rooms at the hospital and hospice.

Funeral arrangements had not been announced by press time this week.

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