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Media Duplicity as Usual by James Clingman

May 31, 2015

Blackonomics

Media Duplicity as Usual    
By James Clingman   

clingman

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Discussions in the news media (I’d rather call it the “Views Media”) regarding the use of the word, “Thug,” are intriguing to say the least.  The Mayor of Baltimore, the President, and some in the media used the term during the unrest that followed the killing of Freddie Gray.  Less pejorative words, or no description at all, were used for those who committed similar acts of violence in Lexington, Kentucky, after their basketball team lost, those who fought the cops during the May Day riots in Seattle, and now the motorcycle gangs in Waco, Texas, even after nine men were killed in what some “views” people called a “melee.”

Remember post-Katrina New Orleans?  The media described Whites as “finding” food in stores; Blacks were said to have “looted” food.

It is interesting how media folks use different words to portray groups of people; but history is replete with examples of this duplicitous media response to criminal events by Black people versus White people.

A glaring example is the following observation by Frank W. Quillan in 1910: “When a Negro commits a crime the newspapers always emphasize his race connection by such headlines as ‘A Big Black Burly Brute of a Negro’ does such and such, and the whole race gets a share of the blame; while if the crime is committed by a white man, race is not mentioned, and the individual gets the blame.”  Little has changed in over 100 years.

Another more contemporary juxtaposition appeared on CNN during the weekend of May 23, 2015.   A judge in Cleveland, Ohio, ruled that a police officer who jumped on the hood of the car, in which a Black couple had already been fired upon 122 times by 12 officers, was justified when he fired 15 additional bullets into the car.  In the same news show, Poppy Harlow reported on a White female police officer in Omaha, Nebraska, who was shot and killed in the line of duty.

After hearing the relatives of the Black male victim say how great a person he was, how compassionate he was, how he was not carrying a gun and would never do that, and how he helped so many other people in his daily walk, Harlow never said a positive word about him in her response.

On the contrary, when she interviewed the friends of the female officer, after they described her in much the same manner as the Black man was described, one person even saying she was an

“angel,” Harlow responded by saying, “She even looks angelic.”  First of all, Harlow literally described how an “angel” looks (I don’t know how she knows that), and then she ascribed her characterization to the White female.

This is no surprise to anyone who watches any of the “views” shows, but it also speaks to the pervasive disregard and lack of even a modicum of compassion for Black victims—even when they were fired upon 137 times by 12 police officers.  It didn’t matter to Harlow what the Black victim’s relatives said.  He was certainly not referred to as looking “angelic.”

Now, allow me to segue into the Cleveland case more specifically.   Having recently written about the Tamir Rice case and the Mayor of Cleveland saying Rice “caused his own death,” my outrage has been heightened by the judge’s conclusion in the killing of the two Black victims.  He said the cop was justified in firing 15 more shots into the victims because it was “reasonable” to believe the threat had not been abated by the previous 122 shots.  He also agreed that the cop was justified in believing his life was still in danger.

One officer involved in the car chase got on the radio and told the pursuing cops that the victims no gun.  Yet the officer on trial said he was “scared to death,” in fear for his life.  Does it make sense that his extreme level of fear would cause him to expose himself to persons he thought were trying to kill him?  He should have taken cover rather than jump on the hood of the victims’ car.  It’s that “Gorillas in the mist,” scenario, that “super human strength” contention, and that “running from the police” thing again.  These two victims were doomed from the start of that car chase.  Unlike the numerous “angelic-looking” Whites that police pursue for miles, only to arrest them when they finally pull over, this Black couple gets 122 bullets fired at them and then 15 more for good measure.

Duplicitous utterances by folks in the media and the courts suggest that they think we are the stupidest people on earth.  One last thought: Why do we chant “No Justice, No Peace,” and then brag about how “peaceful” the march was, despite not having received justice?

Climate Change Disproportionately Impacts African American and Low Income Communities By Dr. E. Faye Williams, Esq.

May 31, 2015

Climate Change Disproportionately Impacts African American and Low Income Communities
By Dr. E. Faye Williams, Esq.
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(TriceEdneyWire.com)-Sometimes in the Black community, we’re so concerned about feeding our families, paying the rent and figuring out other essential things that we don’t take the time to think about the environment and how it impacts us—but we must begin not only thinking about it, but acting to change it.  Climate change is one of the greatest public health challenges of our time. Breathing dirty, carbon-polluted air that causes climate change contributes to thousands of asthma attacks, hospital visits, and premature deaths every year.   It affects some communities more than others. African American and lower-income communities are often hit the hardest by climate change in the United States.

That’s why it is important for us to support the Environmental Protection Agency’s Clean Power Plan, which is expected to be finalized this summer. This proposal sets the first ever federal limits on carbon pollution from existing power plants, invests in clean, renewable energy, and boosts cost-saving energy efficiency.

It’s astounding that these standards don’t yet exist when we already have public health safeguards against mercury, arsenic, and soot from power plants. Unrestricted carbon pollution is accelerating the rate of climate change and threatening our most vulnerable communities, making public health worse with each passing day.

The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) found that people of color account for a near 40 percent of the six million Americans living in close proximity to a coal-fired power plant.  More than 20 million people with incomes meeting the federal poverty definition live in counties that received failing grades for at least one pollutant. Almost 3.5 million people in poverty live in counties that fail all three pollutant tests for ozone and other particles, as reported by the American Lung Association.

This environmental injustice stems from basic market forces. Lower income families are forced by land costs and housing market dynamics to live closer than others to the biggest sources of carbon pollution. These sources include power plants, busy roadways, and factories. Companies often choose to build their factories in low-income neighborhoods to take advantage of lower property values, leaving the residents of these communities literally struggling to breathe.

According to the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, African Americans make emergency room visits for asthma-related issues nearly 350 percent more than the average rate for whites. And compared to adults, children of color living in low-income communities are even more susceptible to air pollution as they already tend to have higher asthma rates.

The Clean Power Plan means significant cuts to carbon pollution that is causing climate change and contributing to increased rates of asthma attacks and other illnesses in our communities. The proposal reduces carbon pollution 30 percent below 2005 levels by 2030.

It’s projected that the plan could help prevent up to 150,000 asthma attacks in children and up to 6,600 premature deaths annually by 2030, in addition to preventing over 3,000 heart attacks and up to 2,800 hospital admissions. It’s expected to provide up to $93 billion in total climate and public health benefits, proving that we never have to choose health over our economy.

This is a plan that we need to help keep all of our communities safe and healthy. It’s not right that any of us have to live with dirty air that makes us sick. It’s especially unfair that our least fortunate and most vulnerable communities – our children and those living in poverty and with lower incomes – have to suffer even more than the rest. The EPA must move forward with its plan to take meaningful action to reduce carbon pollution and combat the climate change that is hurting our public health. Our lives depend upon this action!

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

U. S. Colored Troop Reenactors Honor Black Civil War Soldiers

 

May 31, 215

U. S. Colored Troop Reenactors Honor Black Civil War Soldiers

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(C) Roy Lewis  2015

Commemorating 150 years since the ending of the Civil War, reenactors march in a Grand Review Parade May 16, portraying the members of the United States Colored Troops. In 1865, the Black soldiers were not allowed to march in the celebratory parade in Washington, DC. Therefore, the May 16, 2015 reenactment was intended to bring justice to the omission. According to organizer Dr. Frank Smith, founder and director of the African American Civil War Museum and Memorial, more than 209,145 Black soldiers - many former slaves - fought for the Union Army during the Civil War. Thousands came out to witness the event, which marked the final celebration of the ses·qui·cen·ten·ni·al. The reenactment was sponsored by the African American Civil War Memorial Freedom Foundation, the office of Washington DC Mayor Muriel Bowser, and the United States Colored Troops Living History Association. PHOTO: Roy Lewis/Trice Edney News Wire 

Better Pay Comes When We Demand It By Rev. Jesse Jackson

May 31, 2015

Better Pay Comes When We Demand It
By Rev. Jesse Jackson
Jesse3
(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Los Angeles just voted to raise its minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2020. The nation’s second-biggest city joins Seattle, San Francisco and little Emeryville, Calif., in forging the way to a decent minimum.

Similar measures are now being considered in New York City, Kansas City, Mo., and Washington, D.C., the nation’s capital. Facebook is now paying its workers a $15 minimum and joins Apple and Microsoft in demanding that its contractors pay a $15 minimum and offer paid leave days.

These victories are a product of the demonstrations and protests of fast food and other low-wage workers. They risked their jobs to demand decency. They put a human face on workers who labor full time but can’t lift their families out of poverty. They exposed the lie that these were transitory jobs for the young while they went to college or high school. Their demonstrations — organized under the hashtag slogan #FightFor15 — drew national press attention. Their struggles touched the hearts of citizens of conscience. They built the coalition that forced the politicians to respond.

Dr. Martin Luther King taught us that “freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be demanded by the oppressed.” There are three ways to respond to repression, he told us. The first is acquiescence, adjusting quietly to injustice and becoming conditioned to it. “Been down so long it feels like up to me.” Acquiescence, he warned, turns people into part of the problem.

The second way to respond is with physical violence and corrosive hatred. But violence never solves problems; it simply creates more difficult and complicated problems. An eye for an eye, he warned, would leave us all blinded.

The third way is nonviolent resistance. Nonviolence rejects acquiescence and violence. It confronts the oppressor, gives voice to the oppressed, and exposes the injustice. It starts always against the odds, so it requires faith. “Faith,” Dr. King wrote, “is taking the first step even when you don’t see the whole staircase.”
The #FightFor15 workers had faith. They chose to resist, not accept their poverty wages. They demonstrated for decency. And they have created a movement that surely will spread across the country.

California is one of eight states that ban the subminimum wage that is inflicted on so-called “tipped workers,” the wait staff and service workers that serve our food, clear our plates or carry our bags. California also voted to start publishing the names of companies that have more than 100 workers on Medicaid and the costs that they force on the states. Informed customers may well prefer to do business with high-road employers rather than those profiting from a low road.

Most of our news coverage follows the frozen partisan politics of Washington. There, Republican leaders in Congress won’t even allow a vote on a modest Democratic proposal for a $12-an-hour minimum wage. The only time Congress seems to act is when the corporate community wants a tax break or a trade deal passed, or when the Pentagon demands more money to waste.

But across the country, people are beginning to stir. Blacks and whites are joining together to demonstrate that #BlackLivesMatter. Latinos are demanding immigration reforms that will bring millions out of the shadow economy. Gays and lesbians are demanding equal rights. Women are demanding equal pay, and men and women are insisting that the decision to have a child has to be one that they and not politicians make. Change will come, but only when people demand it and force their politicians to salute.

NAACP Applauds Baltimore Grand Jury Indictments in Freddie Gray Case By Hazel Trice Edney

May 26, 2015

NAACP Applauds Baltimore Grand Jury Indictments in Freddie Gray Case
By Hazel Trice Edney

baltimore - indicted officers

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Following major protests after grand juries refused to indict police officers who killed unarmed Eric Garner in New York and Ferguson's Michael Brown, the NAACP is applauding the grand jury indictments of six Baltimore police officers in the death of Freddie Gray.

“The grand jury’s decision to indict the six officers involved in the arrest and subsequent death of Freddie Gray is emblematic of the type of action we need to see in cases where unarmed citizens are met with excessive and oftentimes fatal force,” said NAACP President/CEO Cornell William Brooks in a statement. “While this indictment is encouraging, it is only a first step in what will likely be a long judicial process and the NAACP will be closely monitoring the proceedings as we continue to seek justice for Freddie Gray and his family.”

Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby announced the indictments May 21. The grand jury indictments are slightly different than the original charges announced May 1. Mosby said in a press conference that charges were altered based on the discovery of  “additional information”. However, the indictments still serve to underscore the continuation of justice that she promised when first announcing that the police officers had been arrested and charged.

The most significant change was the drop of the charge of false imprisonment. A debate over the legality of a knife Gray was carrying appeared to make the legality of the arrest debatable. Police chased Gray after he ran from them after looking their way. The knife, the only charge that police mentioned against Gray, was discovered during the arrest. Gray died a week later from a severed spine now believed to have occurred either during the arrest or in the police paddy wagon where he lay handcuffed, but not secured. Some of the charges are also related to the officers' refusal to seek medical help for Gray as he obviously suffered and pleaded for help. Mosby apparently decided a false imprisonment charge was not needed in order to prove charges related to Gray’s death.

All six officers, three Black and three White, are set for arraignment July 2. According to Mosby’s office, the charges and maximum sentences are as follows:

  • Officer Caesar R. Goodson, Jr. (Black): Second degree depraved heart murder (30 yrs.); involuntary manslaughter (10 yrs.); second degree assault, (10 yrs.); manslaughter by vehicle (gross negligence) (10 yrs.); manslaughter by vehicle (criminal negligence) (3 yrs.); misconduct in office (departmental discipline); reckless endangerment (5 yrs.).
  • Officer William G. Porter (Black): Involuntary manslaughter (10 yrs.); second degree assault (10 yrs.); misconduct in office (departmental discipline); reckless endangerment (5 yrs.)
  • Lt. Brian W. Rice (White): Manslaughter (involuntary) (10 yrs.); second degree assault (10 yrs.); two charges of misconduct in office (departmental discipline); reckless endangerment (5 yrs.).
  • Officer Edward M. Nero (White): Second degree assault (10 yrs.); two charges of misconduct in office (departmental discipline); Reckless endangerment (5 yrs.).
  • Officer Garrett E. Miller (White): Second degree assault (10 yrs.); two charges of misconduct in officer (departmental discipline); Reckless endangerment (5 yrs.).
  • Sgt. Alicia D. White (Black): Involuntary manslaughter (10 yrs.); second degree assault (10 yrs.); misconduct in office (departmental discipline); reckless endangerment (5 yrs.).

The charges and indictments drew additional relief from civil rights leaders, protestors and citizens in general. Before charges were announced May 1, uprisings led to the burning and destruction of property that officials say could take up to $23 million to replace.

“We commend the leadership of Baltimore State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby as well as the grand jury's careful deliberation and determination in holding these six officers accountable for the death of Freddie Gray,” says Brooks. “We look forward to the cessation nationwide of police misconduct and to the swift passage of the End Racial Profiling Act.”



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