Showing posts with label Anti-black racism in the United States. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anti-black racism in the United States. Show all posts

Sunday, September 17, 2017

Protesters Smash Windows, Throw Bricks At Cops In Second Night Of St. Louis Violence

For the second consecutive night, peaceful daytime protests descended into late-night violence with broken windows and thrown rocks, water bottles and garbage can lids following Friday"s acquittal of a white former police officer in the shooting death of a black suspect. A small group of demonstrators refused to disperse, breaking windows at dozens of businesses and throwing objects at police, who moved in with hundreds of officers in riot gear to make arrests.



According to the Asociated Press, the confrontation took place late Saturday night in the Delmar Loop area of University City, a suburb about 10 miles (16 kilometers) west of St. Louis near Washington University. The area is known for concert venues, restaurants, shops and bars, and includes the Blueberry Hill club where rock legend Chuck Berry played for many years.


A pocket of protesters threw bricks, rocks and projectiles with paint at police as officers tried to disperse the crowds. Nine people were arrested Saturday night during the protests, two police departments in the area said.


Shortly before 11 p.m. at Leland and Delmar, a small group of protesters threw chunks of concrete at police and broke windows at numerous Delmar Loop businesses. A chair was thrown through the window of a Starbucks.



One protester was seen hitting a police SUV with a hammer. Police made more than a half-dozen arrests witnessed by reporters, including a protester who was carried away by officers by his arms and legs.



Earlier in the day, hundreds of protesters marched through the Delmar Loop near nightfall Saturday, as Mayor Lyda Krewson appealed to residents for calm and normalcy going into the second night of protests.


"These are not the images we want to see of our city," Krewson told reporters at an early evening news conference, referring to violence in the Central West End the night before that included damage to her house. "We have some work to do here."


She implored residents to "go about their lives" amid canceled events and uncertainty about how long the unrest would continue. "I know our small-business owners would appreciate seeing you again," she said. "Of course, go to work, of course go out to eat. We shouldn"t be so fearful here."



By shortly after 7 p.m. Saturday, more than a thousand protesters carrying "Black Lives Matter" signs and chanting things like "No Justice, No Profits" were blocking the major intersection at Skinker and Forest Park Parkway near Washington University. Police later closed Delmar for the marchers, who were relatively peaceful going into the evening. Some yelled "F--- the police!" while others shook officers" hands.



As the chaos escalated, scores of police officers in riot gear pushed forward against the demonstrators just after 11 p.m. — about two hours after daytime protest organizers had congratulated their followers on keeping their demonstrations peaceful. By 11:30, about 200 police officers had pushed most of the protesters out of the area and the violence and vandalism appeared to be dissipating. The sidewalks along the vibrant area of restaurants and shops were strewn with glass from broken windows.


University City had been the scene of a peaceful march earlier in the evening to protest the previously discussed ruling on Friday which cleared ex-officer Jason Stockley of first-degree murder in the 2011 shooting of 24-year-old Anthony Lamar Smith. That march ended with organizers calling for people to leave and reconvene Sunday afternoon.


But a few dozen protesters refused to go. Police ordered them to disperse, saying the protest was illegal. Hundreds of police in riot gear eventually moved in with armored vehicles. The demonstrators retreated down a street, breaking windows with trash cans and throwing objects at police.


Among property damage Friday night, police said in a statement, were broken windows and thrown red paint at Krewson"s home near Lake and Waterman; shattered windows at various locations in the area including a Subway sandwich shop, a Walgreen"s, the St. Louis Public Library"s Schlafly Branch, and several local businesses; broken vehicle windows including those on two police vehicles; and 18 fires.


Among numerous canceled St. Louis events for the weekend were planned concerts by U2 and Ed Sheeran, because police couldn"t guarantee security.


* * *


Cori Bush, a social worker and activist who is running for Congress in Missouri"s St. Louis-based 1st District, helped lead the marchers early Saturday evening. At the intersection of Skinker and Delmar boulevards, she called for a six-minute "die-in" for the six years since the fatal police shooting of Anthony Lamar Smith. Bush said city officials and media focused too much on the vandalism in the Central West End late Friday night.


"None of it could"ve happened at all, had there not been a dead body, had there not been a police officer who did something absolutely horrendous," she said on loud speaker to the crowd. "The message is simple: stop killing us," she said. "Black folks say, stop killing us."


* * *


Several protesters were seen in handcuffs, and city and county police later tweeted that they had arrested at least nine people. Police were seen carrying one handcuffed man away from the scene upside down. At least one demonstrator was treated after he was hit with pepper spray.


After the burst of violence ended, a reporter for The Associated Press found at least half of the businesses on one side of the street with broken windows along a two block area.


Sam Thomas, who was helping his friend clean up the glass from the shattered windows of his clothing and accessories boutique, OSO, said he understood why people were angry. The U.S. justice system is broken and needs to be fixed, Thomas said.


"I"m not saying this is the right way to fix it," he said of the damage. "The window isn"t murdered. Nobody is going to have a funeral for the window. We can replace it."


As reported yesterday, on Friday night, nearly three-dozen people were arrested and 11 police officers suffered injuries, including a broken jaw and dislocated shoulder. Five officers were taken to hospitals. Police said 10 businesses were damaged that night, and protesters broke a window and spattered red paint on the home of St. Louis Mayor Lyda Krewson.


Saturday night"s violence also capped a day of noisy but peaceful demonstrations at suburban shopping malls.


Protesters shouted slogans such as "no justice, no profits", "black lives matter" and "it is our duty to fight for our freedom" as they marched through West County Center mall in the suburb of Des Peres, west of St. Louis.



A group also demonstrated at another suburban shopping center, the Chesterfield Mall, and at a regional food festival. Organizers hoped to spread the impact of the protests beyond predominantly black neighborhoods to those that are mainly white.




Organizers Saturday night said they planned a "die in" on Sunday at 3 p.m. near St. Louis Police headquarters on Olive Street.



* * *


Smith"s death is just one of several high-profile U.S. cases in recent years in which a white officer killed a black suspect, including the 2014 killing of Michael Brown in nearby Ferguson that sparked months of angry and sometimes violent protests.


Stockley wasn"t charged until May of last year, which was three years after he left the force a moved to Houston and more than four years after his December 2011 confrontation with Smith. The former police officer shot Smith after Smith fled from Stockley and his partner, who were trying to arrest him for a suspected drug deal. Stockley, 36, testified that he felt he was in danger because he saw Smith holding a silver revolver when Smith backed his car toward the officers and sped away.

Saturday, June 3, 2017

And The 2017 Global Peace Prize Goes To... Black Lives Matter (No, Seriously)

Authored by Mac Slavo via SHTFplan.com,


Every year the Sydney Peace Foundation bestows their Global Peace Prize on extraordinary people who advocate for “true and lasting peace” by ending “war and violent conflict” through addressing “deep injustices and structural inequality.”


Previous years have seen such individuals as Noam Chomsky, Hans Blix and Archbishop Desmond Tutu receive the esteemed prize.


But this year the award is taking a different direction, and rather than being given to a single person, it is being awarded to an entire movement for the first time.


And the winner of the 2017 Global Peace Prize goes to…


Drum roll…


Black Lives Matter.






Black Lives Matter, the movement against racial inequality and police violence in the US which began as a powerful hashtag and became a global rallying cry, will be the 2017 recipient of the Sydney Peace Prize – the first time the often-controversial award has gone to a movement and not an individual.



The prize recognises the work of the amorphous racial justice movement that exists under the catch-all moniker, but has nevertheless managed to unite activists from around the world, including in Australia.



...



The Sydney Peace Prize jury’s citation for this year’s winners applauded the movement “for building a powerful movement for racial equality, courageously reigniting a global conversation around state violence and racism. And for harnessing the potential of new platforms and power of people to inspire a bold movement for change at a time when peace is threatened by growing inequality and injustice.”



Via Sydney Peace Foundation



But as Louder With Crowder points out, peace is not exactly how one would describe the activities engaged in and supported by Black Lives Matter:





It’s like people don’t have internet access. Memories. Basic motor functions. If they did, they’d be able to use the digits sticking out of their hands to peck a few letters into The Google. Just to verify if Black Lives Matter is worthy of an award bestowment. Like a kind of “vetting” process, if you will. Since the Sydney Peace Foundation lacks finger privilege, I did the search for them.


If this is what the Sydney Peace Foundation considers champions of peace, I’d hate to see what they think war is.



In a world where former U.S. President Barrack Obama is awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2009 for doing absolutely nothing and then subsequently orchestrating campaigns that have led to the slaughter of hundreds of thousands of people across the world it would make perfect sense for the Sydney Peace Foundation to award a similar prize to an organization whose immediate membership and loosely based offshoots advocate for racial segregation, violent protest, and the killing of police officers.


In the eyes of some, peace is war.

Thursday, February 9, 2017

Senate Confirms Jeff Sessions As U.S. Attorney General In 52-47 Vote

The Senate has voted to confirm Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) as attorney general in a 52-47 vote that went along party lines, following days of rigorous discussion and capping a vicious debate that left Democrats and Republicans seething, and Elizabeth Warren barred from speaking.



Sen. Joe Manchin was the only Democrat to break party rank and vote to back Sessions. Independent Senators Angus King of Maine and Bernie Sanders of Vermont voted alongside 45 Democrats in opposition to the nominee.


The fight over Sessions" nomination infamously escalated last night, when Sen. Elizabeth Warren read a letter that Coretta Scott King had written in 1986 that accused Sessions, a U.S. attorney at the time, of using the power of his office to prevent blacks from voting.  As we reported last night, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell objected to Warren’s speech, saying she had impugned another member of the Senate. Then, in a 49-43 vote, the Senate agreed, blocking Warren from speaking on the Senate floor on Wednesday.


Angry Democrats accused McConnell of silencing a woman on the floor, and Warren went on a media blitz against the Republican senators and Sessions. The tensions were on full display during the debate over Sessions’s nomination. “We all know our colleague from Alabama. He’s honest," McConnell said. “He’s fair. He’s been a friend to many of us, on both sides of the aisle.”


Democrats defended their criticism of Sessions’s record on issues of race and civil rights.  “When we make a big issue of the position of Alabama Senator Jeff Sessions on the Voting Rights Act, it"s with good cause. It is historically an issue which has haunted the United States since the Civil War,” Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) — the No. 2 Senate Democrat — said ahead of the vote. 


“Senator Sessions is not a man apart from this agenda. He is not independent of [Trump"s] agenda,” said Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), the top Democrat on the Judiciary Committee.


Republicans meanwhile decried the Democratic tactics, arguing they were going to new lows to smear Sessions. Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) — a long-serving Senate traditionalist — said Democrats are treating Sessions like a “terrible person,” urging his colleagues on Tuesday night to think of Sessions’s wife.


As The Hill points out, the fiery words in the last days of the debate over Sessions were somewhat surprising.





While the issue of race had always hung over the debate, Sessions is well-liked personally by many senators. That made the stinging words all the more noteworthy — and raises questions about the ability of lawmakers to work together going forward. 



Sessions will now take over the Justice Department’s defense of Trump’s controversial order barring people from seven mostly Muslim countries from entering the United States. A former aide to Sessions was instrumental in the order’s writing, and Democrats argued the Alabama senator would not be a firm defender of an independent Justice Department.

Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Black Lives Matter Activist: ‘White People Give Your Money, Your House, Your Property’ For Social Change

It"s hard to describe the person featured in this leaked periscope video as anything but unhinged. Whether or not she"s representative of the majority of anti-Trump, Black Lives Matter activists isn"t quantifiable at this time. It is, however, ridiculous to see people supporting this brand of hatred, designed to disrupt the very fabric of western civilization.
 
That being said, whatever happened to dignity and grace? Are those qualities no longer important to the left?
 
In this clip, a Black Lives Matter activist demanded that white people hand over their homes, money and property to pay reparations to black and indigenous people.
 
"The White House must die".
 

 
I find it hard to believe any "normal" democrat wants this sordid brand of activism representing their interests. For the republican party, this is like a gift that keeps on giving. The further entrenched the leftist media and activist organizations become, the more Americans become disgusted by them. Say what you want about the popular vote during the elections, the fact remains -- republicans have been making strident gains over the past 8 years in every facet of government, both national and local -- netting more than 1,000 legislative positions since 2010.
 
In my estimation, the behavior of the left is the result of decades of social engineering, which taught children that everyone was a winner and to avoid dangerous objects, like see-saws or playing dodgeball. They seem to be unable to deal with adversity; and instead of coping with defeat, like any normal well-adjusted person after an appropriate period of mourning, they become unhinged and resort to primeval animalistic behavior.




Content originally generated at iBankCoin.com

Tuesday, January 10, 2017

Screaming Protesters Kicked Out Of Sessions' Hearing: "You Can't Arrest Me, I'm White"

With opening comments barely underway, several protesters have already been escorted out of Senator Jeff Sessions" confirmation hearing. 


The first interruption came from these lovely gentemen who, dressed in KKK garb, shouted "White people don"t get arrested...white people own this country" as they were quickly escorted by police off the premises.





"You can"t arrest me, I"m white.  White people don"t get arrested.  What do we have to do, wait for the inauguration?"



"You can not take me out of here.  White people own this country."





And here is another angle of the madness, where one protester attributes his interruption to the Black Lives Matter movement.





"Senator Sessions is a racist and he will only continue racist policies.  We need to listen to Black Lives Matter."





Meanwhile, this young lady insists that you just "say no to the Trump fascist regime."





"Say no to the Trump fascist regime.  We have to stop these motherfucking pigs from getting into power."



"You"re a pig!  Stop these fascist pigs from getting into power."





And here is another compilation of the madness so far:


Sessions Will Recuse Himself Of Any Probe Into Hillary Clinton, Does Not Support A Ban On Muslims

As the Jeff Sessions confirmation hearing continues, Trump"s nominee for attorney general said that he would recuse himself from any potential future investigations or probes involving Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server while working as secretary of state, as well as any questions about her family’s philanthropic foundation.


Responding to senator Chuck Grassley if he could approach issues involving Trump’s presidential challenger impartially and objectively, Sessions said "I believe that could place my objectivity in question," Sessions said. "I believe the proper thing would be for me to recuse myself." He added the politically charged comments he made about the Clintons during the contentious campaign would give the appearance that he isn"t impartial.


Trump has called into question Clinton’s use of a private email server while serving as secretary of state during the campaign, and questioned whether her family’s solicitation of donations for the foundation could pose a conflict of interest. During the hearing, Grassley noted that Sessions – who supported Trump – had also made comments critical of her handling of sensitive emails and certain actions of the Clinton Foundation.


During the hearing, Sessions also denied accusations or racism. Calling it a “caricature,” Sessions denied the charges brought against him in his hearing for a federal judgeship in 1986 accusing him of being a racist.  "I do not harbor those kinds of animosities and race-based ideas I was accused of," Sessions said under questioning from Feinstein.


The comment followed his opening remarks, in which Sessions addressed allegations that he is racist and that as a U.S. attorney he wrongly pursued a voting rates case against black civil rights activists. "I was accused, amazingly of harboring sensibilities for the KKK. These are false allegations...I abhor the klan and what it represents and its hateful ideology."


Sessions defended the case of voter fraud he brought against the black activists, saying the case was proposed by African Americans who said their ballots had been stolen and altered. He also touted a hate crime he prosecuted against a member of the Ku Klux Klan that resulted in an execution.


"I never declared the NAACP un-American or a civil rights attorney a disgrace to his race," he said. "There is nothing I"m more proud of than my 14 years in the Department of Justice."


The AG candidate also said he still believes Roe v. Wade is the worst Supreme Court decision of all time but it"s the law of the land and deserves respect.  "It’s the law of the land, established and settled for a long time. It deserves respect and I would respect and follow it."


Finally, in another highlight of what has transpired so far, Sessions said he does not support President-elect Trump’s campaign proposal to temporarily ban all Muslims from entering the country. Instead, he said he supports Trump"s proposed "extreme vetting" of immigrants coming from dangerous regions.


However, Sessions said a person"s religion could be a factor if they"re, for example, an extremist whose religion includes harming Americans.

Wednesday, December 28, 2016

Largest Police Union In U.S. Demands Amazon Pull Black Lives Matter Shirts

Submitted by Joseph Jankowski via PlanetFreeWill.com,



The largest police union inside the United States is demanding that Amazon.com pull Black Lives Matter shirts from its inventory because the apparel is “offensive.”


Fraternal Order of Police president, Chuck Canterbury, wrote to Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos in an open letter to ask the online retailer to “prohibit the use of the Amazon name and website for the retail” of shirts and sweatshirts with slogans “Bulletproof”, “Black Lives Matter” and “Hands Up, Don’t Shoot,” which Canterbury described as “offensive” and the spread of “urban myths.”



While demanding the apparel be shunned from the popular online retailer, the FOP president applauded the company for “demonstrating the reality of the American dream” and its philanthropic work and expressed his hope that it shares “FOP’s goal of increasing the bonds of trust between the men and women of law enforcement and the communities they serve.”





“I wanted to let you know that my members are very upset that you and Amazon are complicit in the sale of this offensive merchandise,” Canterbury added, cautioning that the sale of the apparel could “damage your company’s good name amongst FOP members and other active and retired law enforcement officers.”



Canterbury, who has served as the FOP president since 2003, went on to express sadness over the fact that some “third party sellers are making money by exploiting racial divisions” in the US.


Neither Amazon or Black Lives Matter have responded to the FOP’s open letter and the “offensive” apparel still remains available for purchase on the Bezos run platform.



Just last week, the FOP sent a letter to Walmart asking the retail giant to pull similar Black Lives Matter apparel. On the same day the letter was received, Walmart said it would remove the shirts which say “Bulletproof,” but not the “Black Lives Matter” shirts.


Since its inception, Black Lives Matter has openly expressed disdain for law enforcement and has even been connected in the murder of police officers across the United States.


Black Lives Matter was founded by militant feminists Alicia Garza, Patrisse Cullors and Opel Tometi, who cite Marxist revolutionary and convicted cop killer, Assata Shakur, as one of the groups most influential figures.


The movement’s supporters famously celebrated the sniper attack in Dallas earlier in the year which killed 5 police officers.


A BLM leader was caught on tape back in July calling for supporters to shoot police and run them over.





Members of the Black Lives Matter movement have been connected in the murder of 11 police officers since its inception in 2014.