Archive for the ‘Black Lives Matter’ Category

Black Lives Matter Tie Costs A. Edmond His Job – blackmattersus.com (blog)

Every share makes Black Voice louder!

Alton Edmon took to social media to claim that the firing was due to his choice to wear a Black Lives Matter tie to the Brevard County publicdefenders office.

It is accurate to say he was fired. But it was an accumulation of things the tie had no significance in his firing,his boss tried to explain. People can talk about politics, of course. But theres a big difference about talking politics and wearing politics on your tie.

This was my way of representing a struggle. Its very personal to me,Edmond claimed in return.

Its upsetting to know that even people supposed to protect the law tend to misunderstand the basic ideas of the movement. A real public defense attorney should be proud to have an assistant wearing a Black Lives Matter tie as a symbol of promoting justice.

Originally posted here:
Black Lives Matter Tie Costs A. Edmond His Job - blackmattersus.com (blog)

Minnesota man who shot 5 Black Lives Matter protesters found guilty – CBS News

MINNEAPOLIS - A jury on Wednesday convicted a Minnesota man of assault for opening fire and wounding five mendemonstrating against the fatal shooting of a black man by Minneapolis police officers.

Allen Scarsella, 24, of Bloomington, was found guilty on all charges of assault and riot. Scarsella showed no emotion as the Hennepin County jurys verdict was read.CBS Minnesota reports that the jury deliberated for seven hours.

Scarsella was accused of shooting and injuring the five African-American men at a Black Lives Matter protest after the police shootingdeath of Jamar Clark in 2015.

Scarsella and three other men, all wearing face masks, went into an encampment outside a police station in north Minneapolis to livestream Black Lives Matter protests that had closed down a city block. Scarsella, who has a permit to carry a concealed weapon, brought a .45-caliber handgun and fired at demonstrators in what his attorneys say was self-defense.

CBS Minnesota reports that jurors saw numerous text messages Scarsella sent friends, including one saying, Cool the gun Im getting is proven to kill black guys in a single shot.

Prosecutors argued that the shootings were racially-motivated. The station reports that Scarsella was identified in a video taken the night of the shootings waving a handgun and making racially-charged statements about the Black Lives Matter protesters. In one video that was shot in a car while Scarsella and a friend were driving to an earlier protest, Scarsella is heard saying he is on a mission and locked and loaded while holding a gun.

Prosecutors accused the men of being white supremacists and trying to disrupt the protest. Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman said his office will seek the stiffest possible sentence for Scarsella. He is scheduled to be sentenced on March 10 and could face up to 19 years in prison.

Scarsella, who is white, testified he was afraid of being attacked while filming the protest on the night of Nov. 23, 2015. He said a group of protesters accused him of being in the Ku Klux Klan and that someone had already punched him in the face. Scarsella said he and his friends tried to leave the protest but a group of men followed them and one pulled out what appeared to be a weapon, prompting Scarsella to open fire.

Only one of the five victims attended the trial. Cameron Clark, 26, Jamar Clarks cousin, was shot by Scarsella in the right leg. Clark said he remembers Scarsella provoking protesters with racial slurs and luring a group of black men up the street where he turned and shot at them.

Clark attended parts of Scarsellas testimony and said he had butterflies in his stomach before the verdict was read Wednesday afternoon.

I was kind of really thinking that (the jurors) were going to be on his side and they were going to let him go because he was claiming self-defense, Clark said afterward.

Clark and another victim - Tevin King - sustained bullet wounds near major arteries. Hennepin County Assistant Attorney Judith Hawley said King was shot in the abdomen and that the bullet is too close to his arteries to be removed. Injuries ranged from leg, arm and foot to stomach and back wounds.

The three other Minnesota men with Scarsella at the time - Daniel Macey of Pine City, Nathan Gustavsson of Hermantown and Joseph Backman of Eagan - are charged with second-degree riot and aiding an offender. All three have pleaded not guilty and await trial. In December, attorneys for the three men denied that their clients are racist. Macey is Asian, the others are white.

2017 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Visit link:
Minnesota man who shot 5 Black Lives Matter protesters found guilty - CBS News

Minnesota Man Allen Scarsella Found Guilty of Shooting Black Lives Matter Protesters – TIME

A jury convicted Allen Scarsella on Feb. 1, 2017, of assault for opening fire and wounding five men demonstrating against the fatal shooting of a black man by Minneapolis police officersHennepin County Jail/AP

A jury on Wednesday convicted a Minnesota man of shooting five Black Lives Matter protesters in 2015, the Associated Press reports.

Allen Scarsella, of Bloomington, was found guilty of all charges, which ranged from assault to rioting. The 24-year-old was accused of shooting and injuring five black men who were protesting against the death of Jamar Clark , another black man who was killed by a police officer in 2015, according to AP.

Prosecutors argued that Scarsellas shootings were racially motivated. He and three other men were arrested after the incident, according to WCCO, a local CBS affiliate.

A video from the night of the shootings showed Scarsella waiving a gun and making racially charged statements about the protesters, WCCO reported. Other evidence included text messages saying Scarsella wanted to shoot black people and a second video in which he said he was on a mission and locked and loaded.

His sentencing will take place March 10, and Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman told WCCO that Scarsella could face up to 19 years in prison.

Mr. Scarsellas conduct was truly outrageous, Freeman said. Racist language, his conduct is simply not acceptable.

Follow this link:
Minnesota Man Allen Scarsella Found Guilty of Shooting Black Lives Matter Protesters - TIME

Activists face backlash after announcing Friday’s Black Lives Matter march in Orlando – WFTV Orlando

by: Ty Russell Updated: Feb 2, 2017 - 11:24 PM

ORLANDO, Fla. - Community activists are hoping to see hundreds of people show up for a Black Lives Matter protest march in downtown Orlando Friday.

Some people on the other side of the issue, though, already have.

The Orange County Sheriffs Office is investigating a possible hate crime after organizer Stetia Allen reported someone had slashed her tires and left a racist note on her car.

Its disgusting, she said. Its absolutely disgusting that people are still hateful.

Allen isnt going to let the incident affect her plans to march Friday.

The march will go from Lake Eola to Callahan Park before heading toward the Orlando Police Department and then back to Lake Eola.

One of the big motivations for the march is the dramatic increase in homicides in the Pine Hills neighborhood, Allen said.

Pine Hills is a beautiful neighborhood, she said. I dont understand why our security cant be through our community.

Change, Allen said, starts at home.

We can patrol our streets as a community, she said. We can work with the police force.

I love my community and my community has always taken care of me.

The march is scheduled to start at 6 p.m.

2017 Cox Media Group.

See the rest here:
Activists face backlash after announcing Friday's Black Lives Matter march in Orlando - WFTV Orlando

Five Lessons the Women’s March Movement Can Learn From Black … – Newsweek

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

Time Magazines February 2017 cover will feature the Womens March on Washington (WMoW), with the caption, The Resistance Rises: How a March Becomes a Movement.

The WMoW has rapidly become an umbrella protest for a variety of causes, and now shows signs of becoming a movement not just for protest, but to advance womens rights and effect policy changes. But successful social movements dont effect change simply via polite organized marches in Washington; they disrupt the status quo and pressure lawmakers into making changes with real consequences. And unlike certain other movements at work in the U.S. today, the WMoW marchers are in a privileged position to make this happen.

Try Newsweek for only $1.25 per week

After the WMoW on January 21, President Trump took to Twitter to demonstrate his approval: Peaceful protests are a hallmark of our democracy. Even if I dont always agree, I recognize the rights of people to express their views. This is in stark contrast to Trumps statements about Black Lives Matter (BLM).

Just before the election, he singled out a BLM protester at one of his rallies and said he should be roughed up. He has called the movement divisive. His new administration has added a new page to the White House website entitled Standing Up For Our Law Enforcement Communitythat states:

The dangerous anti-police atmosphere in America is wrong. The Trump Administration will end it Our job is not to make life more comfortable for the rioter, the looter, or the violent disrupter.

Many in the BLM movement have read this as a threat to protesters. So why the apparent double standard?

One obvious explanation is that the womens marchers were, in Trumps terminology, peacefulno clashes between police and protesters, no violence, no rioting or looting. Indeed, many who supported the WMoW took to social media the next day to pat themselves on the back for executing a peaceful protest during which no-one was arrested.

But unsurprisingly, many BLM activists argued that white privilege played a major role in how the protest was perceived by the public and handled by the police. The Washington march itself was attended overwhelmingly by white women and was far less radical in tone than a BLM march despite their common goals.

Clearly, the two movements are disconnected. Two viral photos from the WMoW demonstrate the distance between them.

This image of Angela Peoples has received widespread attention. Its a fair point: 53 percentof white women in America voted for Trump, and while the estimated 500,000 women protesting in Washington most likely didnt, most of their peers did.

In this second photo, protester Amir Talai draws attention to the divisions between WMoW organizers and attendees about the role of race in the protest. As some women of color began criticizing their white allies, they started to make them feel alienated from the causeand the sometimes heated dialogue between white women and women of color on the WMoW Facebook page is testament to the tensions that persist.

While the WMoWs white protesters are willing to accept women of color in support of their cause, many arent willing to return the favor by supporting BLM: only 51 percentof white Americans aged 18-30 support BLM, and far fewer actually show up at protests.

It would be a huge wasted opportunity if these movements couldnt bridge the gap between them. We should expect more and more protests during the Trump Administration, and the time is right for action.

Clearly, WMoW has something to learn from BLM. Here are five core lessons.

The WMoW must be inclusive of all women, regardless of race, class, religion, age, political beliefs, sexuality, or their possession of a vagina (yes, trans women are part of this movement too). BLM has done this very well: spearheaded by LGBT women, many of the movements leaders are to this day young, queer, and trans women of color. If the WMoW wants to succeed as a movement, it will have to live up to that standard.

The key to mobilizing a movement beyond one march is to organize self-sustaining sub-groups across the country. This will include local organizations coming together under the banner of one name, whether the WMoW, the Resistance or something else. It also means lobbying local and state politicians. Activists can do this by asking their mayors to designate their cities as sanctuary cities for immigrants, or by calling state representatives to oppose legislation that would limit womens reproductive health options.

BLM has deliberately represented itself as revolutionary in political orientation, often supporting left-wing candidates but not aligning itself with a particular political party. That helps it push candidates harder. From before the primaries even began in early 2016, its protesters were highly visible throughout the campaign, making their demands a constant issue. If the WMoW wants to match its power, it will have to step away from partisan alignment and push policy demands across the spectrumespecially once the 2018 midterm elections start to ramp up.

A variety of nonviolent civil disobedience and peaceful protests must be used to have the greatest effect. Civil Rights campaigners in the 1960s used civil disobedience to resist Jim Crow segregation by sitting at whites-only lunch counters, resisting efforts to remove them; today, BLM protesters have taken to stopping traffic on busy highways. In short, peaceful protests are fantastic for bringing awareness to a problem, but they dont disrupt the status quo or bring pressure on lawmakers to make changes.

Angela Peoples photo speaks a very particular truth: many of these white middle-class American cisgender women are new to protest politics. That is not a bad thingbut if the WMoW is going to effectively challenge the Trump Administration and Congress on womens rights, they are going to have to keep showing up. Even when they dont feel like it. Even when its inconvenient. Even when they might get arrested for civil disobedience. Successful social movements are not all sunshine and pussyhats;much of the work is tedious, tiresome, and thankless.

BLM protesters understand this. They show up day in and day out to have their voices heard. The Resistance, or whatever were calling it, will have to do that, too.

Laura Grahamisassistant professor of sociology atTrinity College Dublin.

Originally posted here:
Five Lessons the Women's March Movement Can Learn From Black ... - Newsweek