Archive for the ‘Al Sharpton’ Category

TSU Students Excited About Historical Knowledge Rev. Al Sharpton Will Bring as Guest Lecturer – tntribune.com

Rev. Al Sharpton

By Lucas Johnson

NASHVILLE, TN (TSU News Service) It is rare to be able to interact with a living historical figure. But thats what students and faculty at Tennessee State University experienced on Feb. 3 when the Rev. Al Sharpton, one of the nations most renowned civil rights leaders and activists, began as a Distinguished Guest Lecturer for the semester.

Sharpton will be a featured lecturer in the area of political science grounded in social justice. His lectures will be via Zoom each Wednesday through April.

Not only does the Rev. Al Sharpton, a civil rights icon, know American history and the role African Americans have played to shape that history, he has been an intricate piece of it as well, said TSU President Glenda Glover. This will be an amazing opportunity for our students to learn from an individual who comes from the pages of the history books they are reading, and to gain knowledge directly from the source.

Sharpton, a community leader, politician, and minister, serves as the host of PoliticsNation on MSNBC. With more than 40 years of experience as an advocate, he has held such notable positions as the youth director of New Yorks Operation Breadbasket, director of ministers for the Rainbow PUSH Coalition, and founder of his own broad-based progressive civil rights organization, the National Action Network.

His activism allowed him to walk among other civil rights icons, like Jesse Jackson and A. Phillip Randolph. He also brought attention to high profile cases in New York, such as the Howard Beach incident in December 1986 in which three African-American men were assaulted in the Howard Beach neighborhood of Queens by a mob of white men. Later that month, Sharpton led 1,200 demonstrators on a march through the streets of Howard Beach. His role in the case helped propel him to national prominence.

Sophomore Alexus Dockery is a political science major from Memphis, Tennessee. She said its only fitting that Sharpton should be at TSU because of the universitys rich history in the fight against racial injustice, such as students participation in the Freedom Rides and sit-ins during the civil rights movement. In 2008, the university honored 14 TSU alums who were beaten and arrested during the Freedom Rides with honorary degrees.

TSU students embody the meaning of call to action, which is demonstrated through our motto, Think. Work. Serve, said Dockery. Rev. Sharpton understands the importance of this, and the importance of HBCUs contributing to society for the advancement of Black people.

Gelanni Jones is a junior majoring in biology at TSU. However, he said Sharpton, because of his historical significance, should appeal to all students, regardless of their major.

The statement that he makes by just being himself, is exciting to have at TSU, said Jones, a Cincinnati, Ohio, resident. Hes a civil rights icon at an HBCU that I attend.

Sharpton is no stranger to TSU. He gave the keynote address last year at the universitys spring graduate commencement ceremony, where he was given an honorary degree in recognition of his body of work and societal impact.

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TSU Students Excited About Historical Knowledge Rev. Al Sharpton Will Bring as Guest Lecturer - tntribune.com

Rev. Al Sharpton: Why the city of San Diego should not switch to Falck for its ambulance services – The San Diego Union-Tribune

Sharpton is a reverend and civil rights leader and the founder and president of the National Action Network.

2020 will undoubtedly be remembered as one of the most consequential years of our time. Our country confronted a devastating pandemic, experienced a national reckoning with racism and endured one of the most bitter presidential elections in American history.

Now, with Inauguration Day behind us and a new administration in place, Americans are yearning for a year of healing and real progress around race and inequity. For many of us, the political shift in 2021 represents an opportunity to reassess whats important to us as individuals and as a broader more unified community.

San Diego has a place in my heart and I have been supportive of the grassroots work being done by local leaders. I am confident that the new mayor and San Diego City Council are poised to begin this reassessment. New leadership gives the city an opportunity to reconsider how it conducts the peoples business, learning from past mistakes to better the lives of its citizens.

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However, San Diegos leaders appear to be careening toward a massive debacle with their controversial selection of a new 911 emergency ambulance provider, Falck. The Denmark-based company has been accused of inequitable service and unjust practices in the United States, and there is great concern that the move could undermine San Diegos commitment to racial equality.

This becomes clear by examining Falcks history. The company only recently began providing contracted 911 paramedic advanced life support services in California, and there have been plenty of problems. Since beginning service in Alameda County less than two years ago, the company has been fined hundreds of thousands of dollars for not meeting ambulance response time requirements. And sadly, its slowest response times have been in communities of color.

Given communities of color continue to be disproportionately impacted by the pandemic and are therefore more likely to be in need of emergency care related to COVID-19 this practice is alarming.

Of equal concern, Falck was also the emergency medical services (EMS) provider that supplied ketamine in Aurora, Colorado, which was used to sedate Elijah McClain when he was unjustly arrested and died in 2019. To say this is extremely worrisome is an understatement. McClains case is one of the countless, horrifying examples of brutality inflicted against the Black community in this country.

The citys selection of Falck only becomes more troubling when looking into exactly how Falck was chosen over the citys current provider, American Medical Response.

As expressed by many others, including the San Diego County Medical Society, the five-member selection committee lacked the comprehensive health care expertise we should expect from a panel tasked with evaluating a prospective providers experience and readiness to serve San Diego.

For example, there was no representation from homeless service providers, or from any of the local base hospitals that receive patients and work closely with emergency ambulance providers 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Instead, the committee was composed mostly of fire personnel all White males, incidentally who lack the diverse experience needed to thoroughly evaluate the bids on behalf of San Diegans.

Read another view on ambulances in San Diego:

Addressing racial justice and equity must be a priority in health care and public safety decisions, that should be non-negotiable. I find it unacceptable that a woman or a person of color was not included in this important decision this is systemic racism.

Given this flawed selection process and Falcks record, it is unclear how or why the public should have any confidence in the citys choice. And in the midst of a pandemic, nothing is more critical than having reliable 911 emergency medical services, especially for communities of color, which have been hit harder than most.

Right now, all indications are that the city of San Diego is rushing into a bad, unequitable decision. However, it is not too late to change course, and prioritize racial justice and equality as we begin this new chapter.

By putting the citys EMS contract back out to bid, Mayor Todd Gloria and the City Council can ensure that a proper and fair selection process is conducted by a committee that truly reflects the diversity of San Diego.

The people of this great city deserve nothing less.

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Rev. Al Sharpton: Why the city of San Diego should not switch to Falck for its ambulance services - The San Diego Union-Tribune

‘QAnon Shaman’ rioter will eat organic food, while most prisons and jails have reputation for serving food that is unhealthy – WDJT

By Nicole Chavez and Christina Carrega, CNN

(CNN) -- As trays with bologna sandwiches and canned fruit are being served to millions of people in America's prisons and jails, US Capitol rioter and so-called "QAnon Shaman" Jacob Chansley is only eating organic food while he awaits trial.

Last week, a federal judge ordered that Chansley should be given organic food after several requests and an apparent hunger strike, claiming non-organic food was against his religion and sickened him. Chansley's demand and the subsequent judge's decision exuded privilege in a system that has a reputation of serving inmates bland and sometimes unsafe meals, advocates say.

"The fact that this man is given this kind of preference shows the double standard in the criminal justice system, and in the detention system," said Rev. Al Sharpton, an iconic civil rights activist and founder of the National Action Network.

Chansley, the man seen in photos dressed in horns, fur headdress and face paint inside the US Capitol during the January 6 riot, was first detained at the Federal Correctional Institution Phoenix in Arizona, where he had been fed organic food, according to court documents. When Chansley was moved to the nation's capital to face his charges, the DC Jail denied his request to eat only organic food because the jail's contracted food providers did not offer those type of meals.

Following the judge's order, Chansley was transferred last Thursday to William G. Truesdale Adult Detention Center in Alexandria, Virginia. He was moved there after Aramark, one of the largest food service providers in the country and the contracted food service by the jail, said it could meet the court's requirements and provide organic food meals, said Amy Bertsch, spokeswoman with the Alexandria Sheriff's Office.

His attorneys have argued in court documents that he requires an organic diet because of his faith of Shamanism, an ideology that is "centered on the belief in supernatural phenomenon such as the world of gods, demons, and ancestral spirits."

DC District Court Judge Royce Lamberth decided the accommodations could be made for Chansley because he had been fed organic food in detention in Arizona, and arguments about his adherence to Shamanism were enough to also convince the judge.

"There is no doubt that Shamanism is a religion and that defendant requests a dietary accommodation based on that religion," Lamberth wrote, explaining his decision.

The Department of Corrections didn't dispute that Shamanism is a religion.

The judge also explained that the "defendant's willingness to go without food for more than a week is strong evidence of his sincerity in his religious beliefs."

Sharpton, who has been arrested and in the custody of state and federal facilities more than 30 times after protesting injustices, said some prisons may respect an inmate's request especially if its a religious-based diet. But "sometimes that's not likely."

"In the state jails, you eat what they give you or you starve ... it is absolute punishment and punitive beyond the regardless for human rights and dignity," Sharpton said. "In federal, they have different protocols, and they ask if you have any dietary or religious preferences."

William G. Truesdale Adult Detention Center -- where former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort and other high-profile defendants have been held before -- is not a federal prison.

But if convicted and sentenced, Chansley, who is a federal defendant, will likely be transferred to a federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) facility.

Inmates in federal custody are given a variety of breakfast items, including hot oatmeal, bread, jelly and fruit, according to a copy of the prison bureau's 2020 national menu, which was shared with CNN. For lunch and dinner, there's a rotating five-week menu that includes beef or soy tacos, tuna salad or hummus and pepper steak or lentils, the menu says.

For the 2019 fiscal year's budget, the BOP estimated it will serve about 175 million meals to over 184,000 federal inmates.The BOP also estimated that over $401,000 would be dedicated for food services for the 122 institutions and other facilities. That's about 4% of the agency's budget for salaries and expenses appropriations.

Justin Long, a spokesman with the BOP, said fresh fruit and vegetables are served daily, and "inmates have the option to select from a regular, heart healthy, or no flesh entree for every meal, including vegan-friendly options."

"The quality of the food served to our inmate population is a priority of the Bureau of Prisons," Long said. He couldn't confirm whether the food served in BOP facilities is organic.

The BOP has a protocol in place to ensure its food supply is safe and does not always document or communicate vendor quality issues, according to a report by the Justice Department's inspector general.

In recent years, vendors have been accused of providing adulterated food to BOP. Last year, two meat packing plant executives were sentenced to 46 and 42 months in prison after being accused of providing $1 million of adulterated meat, including whole cow hearts labeled as "ground beef," to 32 BOP institutions, the report said.

Last month, the owners of a food company that supplied South Carolina prisons agreed to pay $250,000 after authorities claimed the company diluted spices that "were substantially comprised of filler agent" from 2011 to 2018, the Justice Department said in a news release.

"Contractors that are selected and paid by the government to supply food to inmates are expected to comply with contractual and other standards," said Kenneth R. Dieffenbach, Special Agent in Charge of the Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General Fraud Detection Office.

"When they provide adulterated products, as the defendants allegedly did here, the government is cheated and the health and safety of inmates are placed at risk."

Leslie Soble, a research fellow at Impact Justice, a non-profit that advocates for criminal justice reform, said that feeding organic food to detainees at US correctional facilities is "completely unheard of."

"Millions of other incarcerated people, most often from Black and brown people from low income communities are being served terrible food day after day, year after year," said Soble, the lead author of "Eating Behind Bars: Ending the Hidden Punishment of Food in Prison," a report exploring the quality and impact of food in America's prisons.

"Chansley is a glaring example of White privilege and racial injustice," she said, referring to his ability to get such food and also move facilities to do so.

The report, based on responses from nearly 500 formerly incarcerated people and family members, found that in many instances, the food served is not safe, is not appealing and has a low nutritional value.

"Someone told us that the only time that they would get chocolate milk was when the milk was spoiled," Soble, who has done extensive research on food served in prison, said.

About 75% of the respondents reported being served rotten or spoiled food while they were incarcerated, the report says, and numerous people who were assigned to work in their prison's kitchen said they were asked to serve chicken or beef from packages marked as "not for human consumption."

While most facilities require that meals include vegetables and fruits, Soble says, what is being served ranges from a spoonful of applesauce, chunks of canned fruits, and canned green beans. In most states, Soble estimates that prisons spend between $2.50 to $3 per person in meals per day.

When asked about the food served at the Alexandria jail, a spokesman for Aramark told CNN that all correctional facility menus are designed by "registered dietitians to meet the nutritional requirements" specified by each individual facility and the guidelines set by the American Correctional Association.

Sharpton said he believes that there should be a federal law to address the nutriment of inmates since not all people in jail are convicted of a crime.

Some just can't post bail yet, he said, and "they are treated as less than human there's no consideration for their health. There's no consideration for their dietary preferences."

"It should be a law in the United States that we do not incarcerate people and force them to eat food to survive on sustenance that is provided by the state that is contrary to whatever their health needs, religious needs or dietary preferences are," he said.

Soble has seen how the decision to grant Chansley's request for organic food has drawn criticism, and hopes it leads to more people questioning why having poor quality prison food has become a norm.

"Why is it acceptable to use food as punishment for people who are incarcerated?" Soble said.

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'QAnon Shaman' rioter will eat organic food, while most prisons and jails have reputation for serving food that is unhealthy - WDJT

How Oprah picked the title for PBS documentary on the Black church in America – USA TODAY

Church leaders say they are organizing caravans for absentee ballot drop-offs and in-person early voting, amid concerns over possible voter intimidation. (Oct 12) AP Domestic

When Henry Louis Gates Jr. was naminghis upcoming PBS documentary on the Black churchin America, he and series producer/director Stacey Holman quibbled over the title.

Gates, host of"Finding Your Roots," favored lyrics from the 1873 hymn"Blessed Assurance," while Holman championed "How I Got Over," a 1951 hymn performed by Mahalia Jackson and Aretha Franklin.

His earthly solution? Ask Oprah Winfrey.

"I emailed Oprah. I said, 'Stacey and I are arguing about this. What do you think?' One morning, I wake up. Iturn my cellphone on and there'sa message. It'sOprah. AndI played it and it was, 'This is our story, This is our song,' " the Harvard professor and authorsaid, imitating Oprah singing the slightly altered "Blessed Assurance" lyricsduring a Television Critics Association panel Friday. "And that was it. The vote had been cast."

Viewing guide: Black History Month TV guide: 10 shows that'll teach you a thing or two about the Black experience

Henry Louis Gates Jr. talks to music star John Legend, a fellow executive producer on Gates' PBS documentary, "The Black Church: This Is Our Story, This Is Our Song."(Photo: McGee Media)

Winfrey is one of many luminaries from the church, politics and entertainment featured in the four-hour documentary,"The Black Church: This Is Our Story, This Is Our Song" (Feb. 16-17, 9 EST/PST, check local listings). Others include John Legend, Jennifer Hudson, Yolanda Adams, BeBe Winans, Bishop Michael Curry, Rev. Al Sharpton and Rev. Raphael Warnock, the newly elected U.S. senator from Georgia.

"The Black Church"explores a bedrock religious institution with cultural and political influence far beyond church walls, dating back toreligious roots in Africa that contributed to what Gates called "a big religious foundational stew."

Oprah Winfrey, who participates in PBS' "The Black Church: This Is Our Story, This Is Our Song," played a decisive role in the naming of Henry Louis Gates Jr.'s four-hour documentary.(Photo: Jamie McCarthy, Getty Images for Global Citizen)

Legend, who joined Gates, Adams and Holman on the panel and is an executive producer, connected the message and power of the Black church with what its congregants have endured over centuries in America.

"So much of the way we'veinterpreted the Bible and so much of the way we'veembraced it has been about the struggle," said Legend, whose family was deeply involved in the church and its music during his upbringing in Ohio. "Inthe Old Testament, a lot of the doctrine that we hold onto is that that idea of the Exodus, going to the Promised Land, Moses leading his people to freedom and 'Let my people go' these were the mantras thatwere part ofthe freedom movement, both freedom from slavery and freedom from Jim Crow."

Henry Louis Gates Jr., seen in Atlanta's historic Ebenezer Baptist Church, is the executive producer, writer and host of PBS' "The Black Church: This Is Our Story, This Is Our Song."(Photo: McGee Media)

The documentary, which delves deeply into music,notes flaws in the church, including a male-dominated leadership presiding over a largely female membershipand a history of homophobia, Gates said. However, the projectmostly celebrates an institution that remains relevant, he said, describing his experiences at a chapel on Martha's Vineyard as "a circle of warmth."

Such religious gatherings are "a celebration of our culture, our history, of who we are, of how we got over, how we survivedthe claustrophobic madness of hundredsof years of slavery and then a century of Jim Crow andthen anti-Black racism that we saw manifest itself at the capital in the last four years underDonald Trump andin the Capitol on January 6," he said. "It'sthatthat I wanted to celebrate in an honest way."

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Hate is a two-way street | Opinion | sent-trib.com – Sentinel-Tribune

I wish Dr. Ben Carson was my family doctor. I wish Condoleezza Rice was my next-door neighbor. I wish I could vote again for Ronald Reagan. I wish I could have Clarence Thomass autograph. I wish I could have voted for Elizabeth Dole somewhere along the way. I wish I lived in San Diego (at least for a short period of time) so that I could be a member of Dr. David Jeremiahs church. I wish I could have met Rosa Parks obviously, a woman of great courage.

Conversely, I could never vote for Ted Kennedy nor Barack Obama, nor Richard Nixon. And, I could never attend a church where Pastors Jeremiah Wright, Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson were spiritual leaders likewise for Jim Bakker and Jim Jones of Peoples Temple infamy.

I believe most Americans today make their choices in politics and religion not with regard to race or gender, but based on their perceived notions about where individuals stand with regard to character, biblical beliefs and patriotism. Do these people believe what I believe? Would I want to live next door to them? Do they have the best interest of this nation in mind when they represent us in elected office?

In the world of sports, Lebron James is not one of my heroes same for Barry Bonds, Pete Rose and Roger Clemons. Count me in for Larry Doby, Hank Aaron, Lou Gerig, Sandy Koufax, Bobby Richardson and, more recently, Kurt Warner, Tim Tebow and Curt Schilling.

Having said all that, I am concerned about hate in America today. In this day and age, there are many accusing others of being haters just because they dont agree with whatever these folks believe. Some want to rid our nation to cancel out anyone that doesnt agree with them. Free speech is ridiculed, condemned, disparaged.

The First Amendment of our Constitution is under attack. Yes, I suspect we are all guilty at one time or another of saying something wed like to take back, but we all need to take care caring for one another and honoring the right to speak freely on any matter. Hate is a two-way street lets all take care.

And a final thought: Just because I dont agree with you doesnt mean I hate you. Conversely, dont hate me if I disagree with your views.

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