Archive for the ‘Black Lives Matter’ Category

[Exclusive] What Does Wonder Woman Think of Black Lives Matter? – BET

Wonder Woman is back, fighting for justice and spreading love around the world one theater at a time. She'sthe hero we need in these troubled times, but what does she think about the most pressing struggle in America today: the fight for justice for Black folks?

We askedWonder WomanstarGal Gadotand directorPatty Jenkinshow the iconic superhero would feel about Black Lives Matter and their answers may surprise you.

For Jenkins, it's not as simple as "love conquers all."

"Her message is that only love is only ever going to stop this, but she will fight for what is not right as well," Jenkins tells us in our exclusive interview. "That's the wonderful balance of Wonder Woman, she knows enough to understand that mankind that the more we don't become the hero within ourselves and that means everyone, to become kinder and more responsible for what they are bringing to the world. But until that happens, she would be right there fighting."

She adds, "I believe in standing up for oneself, and defending oneself, and defending what's right in the world...so I think that she would be completely supportive and understanding of that."

Gadot had thoughts of her own, taking a softer approach. "I think what's so amazing about Wonder Woman is that she's so inclusive, and she does not pay attention to any gender, race. And she's all about love and acceptance."

See our interview with Gal Gadot and Patty Jenkins, above, and see Wonder Woman in theaters everywhere this Friday, June 2.

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[Exclusive] What Does Wonder Woman Think of Black Lives Matter? - BET

‘Black Lives Matter’ professor blasts Fox News for death threats, speech cancellations – TheBlaze.com

Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, assistant professor of African American Studies at Princeton University, excoriated Fox News on Thursday, saying that the mob-like mentality of its fringe audience caused her to cancel her upcoming public appearances over fear of grievous injury.

After giving the commencement speech at Hampshire College where she called President Donald Trump a racist and sexist megalomaniac Taylor said that Fox News aired footage of her speech and as a result was inundated with threats.

In a statement released on Thursday, Taylor said:

It is with great regret that I have decided to cancel my public lectures scheduled at Seattles Town Hall and at the University of California, San Diego this week. I am canceling my appearances for fear of my safety and my familys safety.

Since last Friday, I have received more than fifty hate-filled and threatening emails. Some of these emails have contained specific threats of violence, including murder.

Earlier this month, I delivered the commencement address at Hampshire Colleges graduation ceremony. My speech at Hampshire was applauded but Fox News did not like it. Last week, the network ran a story on my speech, describing it as an anti-POTUS tirade. Fox ran an online story about my speech and created a separate video of excerpts of my speech, which included my warning to graduates about the world they were graduating into. I argued that Donald Trump, the most powerful politician in the world, is a racist and sexist megalomaniac, who poses a threat to their future.

Shortly after the Fox story and video were published, my work email was inundated with vile and violent statements. I have been repeatedly called n*****, b***h, c**t, d**e, she-male, and c**n a clear reminder that racial violence is closely aligned with gender and sexual violence. I have been threatened with lynching and having the bullet from a .44 Magnum put in my head.

I am not a newsworthy person. Fox did not run this story because it was news, but to incite and unleash the mob-like mentality of its fringe audience, anticipating that they would respond with a deluge of hate-filled emails or worse. The threat of violence, whether it is implied or acted on, is intended to intimidate and to silence. In some sense, then, they have been successful.

In the last few weeks, white racists have committed heinous acts of violence. On May 20, a white alt-Right sympathizer, Sean Urbanski, murdered an African-American Bowie State University student, Richard Collins III, on the campus of the University of Maryland. Urbanski was a member of a Facebook group called Alt-Reich: Nation. And just this past weekend, a white supremacist in Portland, Oregon, murdered two men and attempted to murder another, when all three stepped in to stop an Islamophobic and racist attack on two young women riding public transit.

President Donald Trump finally decided to release a half-hearted and subdued tweet to oppose the murders in Portland, but with not nearly the same vigor he has used to incite his base against immigrants, while also whipping up anti-Muslim hysteria. The lethargy of the Departments of Justice and Homeland Security in responding to the actual threat of white supremacist, terrorist violence encourages the development of its networks and organizations across the country.

The cancelation of my speaking events is a concession to the violent intimidation that was, in my opinion, provoked by Fox News. But I am releasing this statement to say that I will not be silent. Their side uses the threat of violence and intimidation because they cannot compete in the field of politics, ideas, and organizing. The true strength of our side has not yet been expressed in its size and breadth, and so they believe they are winning. We have to change this dynamic and begin to build a massive movement against racism, sexism, and bigotry in this country. I remain undaunted in my commitment to that project.

The Washington Times reported on Thursday that Taylor, in her speech, told the students that the world in which they would soon become a larger part of is increasingly dangerous, and noted that Trumps campaign consisted of racism, corporatism, and militarism.

A spokesperson for Princeton confirmed with HigherEd that Taylor is currently on sabbatical and is aware of the threats she has received as a result of her commencement speech.

See her commencement speech in the video below.

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'Black Lives Matter' professor blasts Fox News for death threats, speech cancellations - TheBlaze.com

Philosophy journal apologizes for symposium on Black Lives Matter written without black people – Inside Higher Ed


Inside Higher Ed
Philosophy journal apologizes for symposium on Black Lives Matter written without black people
Inside Higher Ed
Christopher Lebron, assistant professor of African-American studies and philosophy at Yale University, started one letter by noting key facts about Black Lives Matter. "The idea 'black lives matter' is an ethical demand calling for an end to the ...

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Philosophy journal apologizes for symposium on Black Lives Matter written without black people - Inside Higher Ed

Weather postpones Black Lives Matter rally one week – Cincinnati.com

Christina Brown, a leader of the local Black Lives Matter organization, marches against police brutality in 2016.(Photo: Enquirer file)Buy Photo

The Black Lives Rally: Cincinnati rally planned for Wednesday night at Inwood Park is postponed for one week.

Protesters calling for the conviction of Ray Tensing will meet instead May 31 at 6 p.m. at the park on Vine Street in MountAuburn.

A largergroup is operating under the name the Countdown to Conviction Coalition, which has six member organizations, including the local Black Lives Matter.

Citing the forecast of thunderstorms, Black Lives Matterannounced the postponement Wednesdayvia email and on its Facebook page.

The coalition said it will rally at noon Thursdayoutside of the Hamilton County Courthouse on what is scheduled to be the first day of Tensing's retrial. The former University of Cincinnati police officer faces murder and manslaughter charges for the shooting death of unarmed black motorist Sam DuBose on July 19, 2015.

Tensing pulled over DuBose for a missing front license plateonly blocks from Inwood Park, where the coalition rallied before Tensing's first trial last fall. The trial ended Nov. 12 in a hung jury.

The Countdown to Conviction Coalition said it will hold a "speak-out program" at noon, regardless of weather.

Inside the courthouse Thursday, 200 prospective jurors will be filling out questionnaires.

The other five coalition member organizations are Peaslee Neighborhood Center, McMicken Free Space, Students for Survivors, Cincinnati Socialist Students and Cincinnati Socialist Alternative.

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Weather postpones Black Lives Matter rally one week - Cincinnati.com

Black Lives Matter movement awarded Sydney Peace Prize – The Independent

Black Lives Matter, the movement for racial equality that swept the globe after starting out as a hashtag, has been awarded a major peace prize.

The campaign will receive this year's Sydney Peace Prize, whose judges chose it for "courageously reigniting a global conversation around state violence and racism" and inspiring "a bold movement for change".

It is the first time organisers have given the award to a movement rather than an individual. Previous recipients include Desmond Tutu and Noam Chomsky.

Black Lives Matter first emerged in the aftermath of the acquittal of George Zimmerman, who shot dead unarmed Florida 17-year-old Trayvon Martin in 2013.

The hashtag "BlackLivesMatter" was first used in a Facebook post by activist Alicia Garza, and gained prominence as protests erupted the next year after two unarmed black men - Michael Brown in Ferguson and Eric Garner in New York - died at the hands of police.

The phrase later became the name of a human rights campaign group founded by Ms Garza and fellow black female activists Patrisse Cullors and Opal Tometi.

Ms Cullors said: "Black Lives Matter is our call to action. It is about replacing narratives of black criminality with black humanity. It is a tool to reimagine a world where black people are free to exist, free to live, and a tool for our allies to show up for us."

The three founders will collect the award in November on behalf of the movement, which grew steadily into a nationwide and then international political network andnow has 39 chapters across the globe.

The Sydney Peace Foundation, which awards the prize, said the global phenomenon had been chosen "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."

Ms Tometti, who is also anexecutive director of Black Alliance for Just Immigration, said the award "is an affirmation and reminds us that we are on a righteous path".

She added: "Accepting this award is about our people on the ground striving for justice every single day. Its truly meaningful to be recognised in this way. Well continue to push forward until structural racism is dismantled and every black life matters."

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Black Lives Matter movement awarded Sydney Peace Prize - The Independent