Archive for the ‘Al Sharpton’ Category

It’s reckless for the left to selectively cry racism – New York Post

In the aftermath of George Floyds death last year, employers offered black workers time off to deal with the news, and UCLA suspended a professor who refused to grade his supposedly traumatized black students more leniently than their nonblack peers.

Such gestures may have been well-meaning, but they were also nonsensical and reeked of condescension. Are black psyches really this fragile, and are blacks so starved for exemplars that miscreants must be treated like martyrs? Should Floyds death matter more to them than the huge number of black homicides that dont involve police? And why would people who arent black be any less disturbed by a video showing a police officer kneeling on the neck of a defenseless suspect for nine minutes?

The protests that followed Floyds death rested on two assumptions. The first is that Floyd, a career criminal and drug addict, was somehow representative of black America, which is not only false but deeply insulting. The second is that police acted out of racial animus, which has never been proven. This is what happens when racial identity becomes the centerpiece of politics and public life in a multiracial society.

The political left often pretends to pine for a postracial America, but thats the last thing it really wants. I recall a guy who ran for president a little while back after talking about how theres no black America or white America or Asian America, just a United States of America. And then he became president and stopped talking like that. Instead, he started talking about racist policing and black voter suppression, and he embraced divisive racial provocateurs like Al Sharpton. All the colorblind talk went out the window.

People who are interested in a postracial America dont name their organization Black Lives Matter or welcome racial propaganda like the 1619 Project into elementary schools. They dont advocate racial preferences in college admissions or racial quotas in hiring. And they dont call for white people who were never slaveholders to pay reparations to black people who were never slaves.

The Biden administration has picked up where the Obama administration left off. The unwarranted racialization of the Kyle Rittenhouse saga, which concerned one white man shooting three other whites, was a clumsy attempt by President Biden and his allies to further a narrative about bias in the criminal justice system. To their credit, jurors stuck to the facts of the case and Rittenhouse was acquitted, but liberals and their friends in the media are playing a dangerous game when they selectively invoke race to advance a political agenda.

The same press outlets that portrayed Rittenhouse as a white supremacist have had remarkably little to say about the racial identity of Darrell Brooks, the black suspect in Wisconsin who is accused of plowing his car through an annual Christmas parade last month and killing six people, including an 8-year-old boy, all of whom were white. Given the suspects history of posting messages on social media that called for violence against white people and praised Hitler for killing Jews, youd think that his race and the race of his victims would be relevant to reporters. Race is all anyone would be talking about if a white man had slammed his vehicle into a parade full of black people. Yet suddenly the left has gone colorblind.

Liberals want us to believe that racial disparities in police shootings and incarceration rates stem from a biased system and have little to do with racial disparities in criminality. They want to talk about so-called hate crimes that involve white assailants and black victims, but not those involving black assailants and white or Asian victims. They want headlines to read White Cop Shoots Black Suspect, even when theres no evidence that the encounter was racially motivated. This is playing with fire.

Once we go down this road and get into the habit of racializing such events, we may not be able to contain that racialization, said Brown University economist Glenn Loury in a recent speech for the Manhattan Institute. Soon enough, we may find ourselves in a world of instances where black thugs killing white citizens come to be seen though a racial lens as well. This is a world no thoughtful person should welcome since there are a great many such instances.

The political lefts hyperconsciousness about race might help Democrats turn out their base, but at a steep cost. National cohesion in a country as large and ethnically diverse as this one has always depended on our ability to focus not on our superficial differences but instead on what unites us as Americans. The sooner we start choosing political leaders who understand this and punishing the ones who dont the better off well be.

From The Wall Street Journal

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It's reckless for the left to selectively cry racism - New York Post

The McMichael/Arbery Trial: Al Sharpton in the Courtroom …

On Wednesday, November 11, Reverend Al Sharpton and attorney Ben Crump spoke outside the courthouse in Brunswick, Georgia, where Gregory and Travis McMichael and William Roddie Bryan are on trial for killing Ahmaud Arbery. Mr. Sharpton called Arberys death a lynching in the 21st century, and claimed that Arbery was shot for jogging. Mr. Sharpton told the crowd in front of the courthouse, You still cant jog through Brunswick, Georgia, without being shot down, like you are a suspect, only because of the color of your skin.

Roddie Bryans defense attorney, Kevin Gough, saw Al Sharpton sitting inside the courtroom, toward the back, and had something to say about it when addressing the judge the next day:

As I was cross-examining Investigator Lowry yesterday, the Reverend Al Sharpton managed to find his way into the back of the courtroom. Im guessing he was somehow there at the invitation of the victims family in this case, and, I have nothing personal against Mr. Sharpton. My concern is that its one thing for the family to be present, its another thing to ask for the lawyers to be present, but if were going to start a precedent, starting yesterday, where were going to bring high-profile members of the African-American community into the courtroom, to sit with the family during the trial, in front of the jury, I believe thats intimidating and its an attempt to pressure. It could be, consciously or unconsciously, an attempt to pressure and influence the jury.

The idea that were going to be serially bringing these people in with the victims family, one after the other, obviously, theres only so many pastors they can have. They have Al Sharpton right now, but then, thats it. We dont want any black pastors coming in here, Jesse Jackson or whoever was in here earlier this week, sitting with the family trying to influence the jury in this case. I think the court can understand my concern with bringing people in who dont have any ties to this case other than political interest. We want to keep politics out of this case. So Im asking the court to take appropriate steps to make sure that the gallery, which is already limited in this case, isnt being utilized for a purpose that could be viewed as improper.

Judge Walmsley said, What is it a motion to do?

Franklin Hogue, who represents Greg McMichael, said, Its not a motion, its a reminder of the courts previous instructions to keep outside influences outside the courtroom.

When the judge gave prosecutor Linda Dunikoski a turn to comment, she said, Its a public courtroom. . . . The State had no part in that whatsoever.

Mr. Gough cross-asked, If a bunch of people came in here dressed as Colonel Sanders with white masks sitting in the back . . . ?

The judge cut him off. He said that he knew that Mr. Sharpton would be speaking outside the courthouse, and he was asked if Mr. Sharpton could take a seat in the part of the gallery reserved for the Arbery family. My comment to that was simply as long as things are not disruptive and its not a distraction to the jury and theres nothing else going on in the courtroom, so be it, Judge Walmsley said, but if it violates the courts rules with regard to the conduct of the trial or violates my orders with how people are to conduct themselves in this courtroom, I will take it up with whomever I need to take it up with. . . . I am not going to blanketly exclude members of the public from this courtroom.

Judge Walmsley added that there is a barrier in the room and he wasnt sure that the jurors could even see Mr. Sharpton.

Mr. Gough thought jurors would be able to see that part of the gallery. We have 12 jurors who are trying to maintain their anonymity here, some of whom expressed concern about it, he said. When we allow people in this courtroom who are not part of the case, but they have an interest in it, and the jurors can eyeball them and its people they know from TV, then that is intimidating.

He said he wouldnt make a motion yet, but he might in the future, because he thought this could be a problem for the defense.

Rev. Sharpton was quiet inside the courtroom, but the jury is not sequestered, and he certainly sounded like he was in the mood for disruption. We show up because thats what we do, Rev. Sharpton said in front of the courthouse. We show up. We show up to help blow it up. . . . [A] lot of local county people will say, well let it blow over, well they know today, its not going to blow over!

I could not find any record that Jesse Jackson has been in the courtroom; Mr. Gough may have been mistaken. It was reported that Mr. Jackson intended to be there on November 4 or 5. Its also possible Mr. Gough was referring to Lee Merritt, the lawyer who is representing Ahmaud Arberys mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones, in a civil lawsuit. Mr. Merritt sat with Mrs. Cooper-Jones during opening statements on November 5th.

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Al Sharpton: Ahmaud Arbery case had ‘most racist statements in a court of law that I’ve heard’ – 11Alive.com WXIA

The reverend spoke outside the Glynn County courthouse on Wednesday alongside Ahmaud Arbery's mother as the jury continued deliberations.

GLYNN COUNTY, Ga. Rev. Al Sharpton gave a stinging assessment of the trial in the killing of Ahmaud Arbery on Wednesday morning outside the Glynn County courthouse, saying it had featured "some of the most racist statements in a court of law that I've heard."

Sharpton spoke alongside Arbery's mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones, and his father, Marcus Arbery Sr., as the jury continued deliberations into a second day.

The reverend was referenced by name in one of the most incendiary moments of the trial, when one defense attorney, Kevin Gough, said he didn't want "any more Black pastors coming in here" because he felt they would intimidate the jury.

"I've never heard ministers that were praying called a lynch mob. I've never heard an attorney blatantly say 'I dont want more Black pastors' - not pastors, Black pastors in the courtroom," Sharpton said. "This has been the most racist-language court case that I've witnessed."

Gough's comments inspired an organized response from hundreds of Black pastors. He made repeated motions for mistrial, citing the political environment outside the courtroom, with prosecutors arguing it was his own comments that created that environment. The mistrial motions were all denied.

After the trial, he made more conciliatory statements and said he "feels" for the Arbery family.

Sharpton also rebuked the comments of defense attorney Laura Hogue, who attempted to criminalize Arbery in her closing argument.

"Turning Ahmaud Arbery into a victim after the choices that he made does not reflect the reality of what brought Ahmaud Arbery to Satilla Shores in his khaki shorts, with no socks, to cover his long dirty toenails," Hogue said.

Sharpton said Wednesday he had "never sat in a courtroom where a victim was akin to an animal - talking about dirty toenails, like he was not even a human, but an animal."

"I cannot tell you how much I admire Wanda having to take this - the fact that they mentioned she cried. I don't see how she didn't break down more hearing the characterizations of a child she brought in this world. I dont see how Marcus contained his anger," Sharpton said. "They act like we're not human."

Adding that "we don't treat peoples' family like that, we don't call peoples' kids names like that, we don't call preachers names like that," Sharpton said he and the family "hope that God will bring us justice."

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Al Sharpton: Ahmaud Arbery case had 'most racist statements in a court of law that I've heard' - 11Alive.com WXIA

Al Sharpton speaks at Dover rally on changes to Law Enforcement Officers’ Bill of Rights – The News Journal

Al Sharpton speaks at Dover rally

Rev. Al Sharpton spoke Monday afternoon during a press conference for police reform.

Jerry Habraken, Delaware News Journal

The Rev. Al Sharpton spoke at a rally in Dover on Monday afternoon, calling on lawmakers to open police up to public scrutiny via the controversial Law Enforcement Officers' Bill of Rights and lambasting the state for its handling of officer-involved shootings.

"Itseemed to me ironic,if not insulting, as I was coming inthat you have the nerve to name a street after Martin Luther King while the people of Dr. King are being abused by police, and you will not hold them accountable," Sharpton said from a podium on the Green outside Legislative Hall.

"You should take the signdown if you're not going to live up to the principles of Martin Luther King."

Sharpton spoke alongside police reform activists Lakeisha Nix, sister of Lymond Moses, who was shot and killed by New Castle County police earlier this year; andKeandra McDole, sister ofJeremy McDole, a Black man in a wheelchair who was shot and killed by Wilmington police in 2015; and Blaine Hackett, a pastor at St. John African Methodist ChurchInc.

"When the session comes back in January, we will bring people around the country to stand with these two families," Sharpton said about Nix's and McDole's families, alluding to the next legislative session that runs from January to June.

Sharpton and the local activists criticized the state for upholding the decades-old Bill of Rights law that lets policedecide how to discipline bad-acting officers and limits how much the public can know about any punishment. Thanks to the law, internal investigations into complaints against police are kept secret.

"It's been 10 months and nine days, and we still don't have any clear answers as to what punishment, if any, these officers will face for their wrongdoing," Nix said, alluding to the shooting of her brother.

The rally,hosted by the quasi-grassroots advocacy companyCitizens for a Pro-Business Delaware, wasspecifically in favor of Senate Bill 149, which would amend the Officers' Bill of Rights byopening up internal affairs records to the public and striking out certain provisions about how officers are allowed to be investigated.

Thebill by Sen. Tizzy Lockman, a Democrat from Wilmington, would also allow state and local governments to create civilian review boards, made up of non-officers, to hear and have a say in police discipline.

Lockman did not attend the event.

Citizens for a Pro-Business Delaware, which is funded by employees of the global translation services company TransPerfect, once said itsadvocacy was on behalf of TransPerfect but has more recently calleditself a defender of good governance amongjudiciaries.

Citizens for a Pro-Business Delaware did not respond to an inquiry about whether Sharpton waspaid for the event

The rally was originally scheduled one week agobut was postponed.

The American Civil Liberties Union wasoriginally scheduled to co-host the rally but did not appear to be hosting the newly scheduled one on Monday. The ACLU did not respond to an inquiry about why it appeared to drop out of organizing the event.

Lawmakers introduced thebill in the spring but failed to pass it by their June deadline because of police disapproval of the measure.

Democrats say they plan instead to amend the bill to appease opponents. But it's unclear what those amendments will look like and how much they will water down the current bill, which supporters say is the only way to truly hold police accountable in the state.

Lawmakers are holding one more meetingwith police and other stakeholders on Dec. 3 before presenting any amendments, according to Lockman. The last meeting was on Nov. 19.

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Sarah Gamard covers government and politics for Delaware Online/The News Journal. Reach her at (302) 324-2281 or sgamard@delawareonline.com. Follow her on Twitter @SarahGamard.

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Al Sharpton speaks at Dover rally on changes to Law Enforcement Officers' Bill of Rights - The News Journal

Al Sharpton calls out ‘latte liberals’ for bigotry of low expectations toward people of color – Colorado Springs Gazette

Some liberals have lowered the standards of people of color to a point where "vile behavior" and "beastly acts" are acceptable, said Rev. Al Sharpton.

Real racism is expecting people in a "certain community" not to "do any better" because of lowered expectations, he said in an interview Tuesday referring to the uptick in looting, especially along the West Coast.

"You want criminal justice to be criminal justice, but you do not want to have this kind of bedlam and lawlessness," Sharpton said. "First of all, no one has fought for giving people reforms in terms of how they're sentenced to bail more than I have, but a guy or a lady stealing a Louis Vuitton bag is not somebody that needs social uplifting. This is somebody that is really causing us more of a problem."

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He blamed this bigotry of low expectations on "latte liberals."

"These latte liberals that justify this this has nothing to do with poverty, this has nothing to do with you couldn't get a job," Sharpton said. "These are people that can go back in the neighborhoods where a Louis Vuitton bag is not unusual, and they can just fit in many of it for a gag, and they hurt the cause of those who want criminal justice reform. So, at one level, they hurt the store owner. At another level, they hurt us that are trying to get a break in the criminal justice system."

There is a difference between accommodating community needs and "having a standard that's fair for everybody," he said.

"There is nothing progressive about acting like this kind of vile behavior is normal," he added. "To normalize it is to act like certain people of certain communities or certain races, 'We don't expect you to do no better. Oh, you try to run your wife down or your lady down. That's what y'all do. Let them go.' Rather than having a standard there that's fair for everybody, but that if you break what's criminal or not criminal, you pay a price because you victimized that lady and you victimized that community and those children."

From high-end retail stores such as Nordstrom to neighborhood shops such as Target and Walgreens, stores on the West Coast have experienced higher crime rates. San Francisco Mayor London Breed has promised to reform what critics call lax penalties on looting.

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Police violence must still be curtailed, the reverend continued.

"At the same time, that does not give police the right to come and shoot you down like a dog, but you cannot act in a way you feel no matter what I do will be excused because they don't expect me to do any better because I am not able to do any better," he said. "That is real racism when you expect people in a certain community in a certain background not to be able to behave other than somebody that is out of control and doesn't have the mentality to do anything other than beastly acts."

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