Archive for the ‘Black Lives Matter’ Category

Oregon association for school resource officers cancels controversial ex-sheriffs appearance at conference – OregonLive

In the face of heated criticism, the Oregon School Resource Officers Association has voted to cancel next months appearance of David A. Clarke, a controversial former sheriff from Wisconsin who had been set to speak at its annual conference.

The associations leaders announced the sudden reversal on the nonprofit groups website Thursday night, less than 48 hours after The Oregonian/OregonLive wrote about the concerns of police reform advocates who were stunned that the group was giving such a public platform to a polarizing figure who has been an outspoken critic of the Black Lives Movement while defending the Proud Boys.

Clarke, who resigned as Milwaukee County sheriff in 2017, was under contract to speak for two hours about leadership and policing at the associations annual conference, which is scheduled July 24-27 at the Mt. Hood Resort in Welches. The association supports police agencies that assign officers to school districts.

The associations board announced it had voted unanimously to drop Clarke as one of its speakers, noting his politics have caused a number of Oregonians to reach out in protest.

If any presenter, in the eyes of some, is going to damage our credibility and/or ability to fulfill that mission, then we will make the necessary changes, wrote Mike Jackson, association president, and Rick Puente, association vice president. Days earlier, both had defended the choice of Clarke as a guest speaker, saying they werent interested in his politics.

On Thursday night, they wrote that Clarke had been chosen to be one of the keynote speakers based partly on what they described as his popularity with his constituents, his unabashed support for police officers around the United States and his support for police dealing with post traumatic stress. The association, they added, only cares about two things: safe schools and safe kids in Oregon.

Another speaker will take Clarkes place and be named at a future date.

Great victory! wrote Kathy Selvaggio, a West Linn community activist, on the West Linn Community for Police Reform Facebook page. So grateful for those who spoke out about their concerns.

Selvaggio has sought changes in the citys police department after West Linn paid $600,000 in February 2020 to settle a wrongful arrest suit filed by Michael Fesser, a Black man and Portland resident.

Community activists from West Linn and Lake Oswego and a city councilor from West Linn were among those who urged their police chiefs and school districts in the last week not to send their school resource officers to the conference.

Imagine how our Lake Oswego students will feel if they learn that Lake Oswego SROS (school resource officers), educators, and administrators are spending time learning from a man who is openly biased and who openly has disdain for some of them, wrote Willie Poinsette, president of the community-based group Respond to Racism, in a letter to Lake Oswegos city manager and school superintendent.

On the associations Facebook page announcing the decision to exclude Clarke, Pam Ashton commented, Tough decision. I admire your commitment to children, above all else.

Clarke has supported defunding schools to boost police ranks instead, mocked coronavirus safeguards such as mask mandates and amplified conspiracy theories about liberal philanthropist George Soros having his fingerprints all over the activism of student survivors of the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida.

Clarke, who is Black, has consistently referred to the Black Lives Matter demonstrations for civil rights and against police bias as Black Lies Matter. In recent weeks, he has defended the Proud Boys, calling the prosecution of some of the groups leaders on sedition charges in the U.S. Capitol insurrection an abuse of power. He also criticized the U.S. Justice Departments decision to investigate the police response to the Uvalde school shooter as improper.

During his tenure as sheriff, there were numerous reports of inmate abuse, staff harassment and five deaths in the county jail. The county paid out $6.75 million to settle a civil suit filed by the family of one man who died in custody from dehydration after they said he was denied water for six straight days.

-- Maxine Bernstein

Email mbernstein@oregonian.com; 503-221-8212

Follow on Twitter @maxoregonian

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Oregon association for school resource officers cancels controversial ex-sheriffs appearance at conference - OregonLive

BLM is silent on the top killer of black kids – New York Post

Guns are the leading cause of death among children, new CDC statistics show. But while the horrific massacre in a Texas elementary school rightly outrages the nation, such mass shootings are not the primary reason for that grim statistic.

Most young people killed by guns are shot in gang violence or other crime which has only gotten worse since the George Floyd race riots and their long anarchic aftermath.

Homicides of youth between the ages of 10 and 17 rose 47% in 2020. That 47% increase far outpaced the record-breaking 29% spike in post-Floyd homicides across all age groups in 2020.

Black youth between the ages of 10 and 17 were killed at 11 times the rate of white youth in 2020. Virtually none of those black deaths was protested by Black Lives Matter activists, since the victims were killed overwhelmingly not by the police and not by whites but by other blacks and thus did nothing to advance the narrative about lethal white supremacy. Blacks between the ages of 14 and 17 commit gun homicide at more than 10 times the rate of white and Hispanic teenagers combined.

Children under the age of 10 were also mowed down in barbaric drive-by shootings. Examples of the youth carnage in 2020 include:

This carnage is out of sight, out of mind for most of the country. If these children had been white, there would have been a national revolution. The media ignore the routine killings of black children just as assiduously as the race activists do and for the same reason: They were not mowed down by alleged lethal white hate. In fact, the lethal-white-hate narrative that has entranced Democratic politicians and the press for the last two weeks is false: Blacks commit hate crimes nationally at more than twice the rate of whites. In New York City, blacks commit hate crimes at 2.43 times the rate of whites.

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The killing will not stop until the family and cultural breakdown that drives it is confronted head on. As then-candidate Barack Obama observed in 2008, too many black fathers are ignoring their children and abandoning their responsibilities. Boys grow up without learning impulse control and respect for authority. The intact, biological family is the best form of crime prevention because it is the best way to socialize children.

That fact breaks a number of taboos, however, and so forms no part of our cultural discourse. Until the inner-city family is restored, policing is the second-best solution for saving black lives. Too bad President Joe Biden again regurgitated the fiction this week that law-abiding black Americans are at daily risk of their lives from the police, a fiction that will only cost more black lives.

Heather Mac Donald is the Thomas W. Smith fellow at the Manhattan Institute and author of The War on Cops.

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BLM is silent on the top killer of black kids - New York Post

The Long History of Resistance That Birthed Black Lives Matter – The Nation

Donna Murch. (Photo by Don J. Usner)

Donna Murch is one of the foremost historians of Black radical movements in the 20th century. Her first book, 2010s Living for the City: Migration, Education, and the Rise of the Black Panther Party in Oakland, retold a seemingly familiar story with new insights drawn from oral histories and untapped archives. Murch saw the story of the Panthers as a product of the Great Migration and as a fight for, among other things, access to public resources, countering both conservative and liberal framings that saw the party as either a criminal enterprise or a project solely devoted to self-defense. In the process, she demonstrated that the group was far more complicated than had been recognized.

Since that groundbreaking books publication, Murch has become known as well for her distinguished essays on racial inequities in America. With a historians eye for detail, she has tackled such subjects as the Movement for Black Lives, the opioid epidemic, and mass incarceration for The Boston Review. Her most recent book, Assata Taught Me, collects these and other writings about the development of the Movement for Black Lives as part of a longer history that dates back at least to the Black Panther Party and that has been especially inspired by the work and thought of Assata Shakur. Murch is currently an associate professor at Rutgers University, where she serves as the chapter president of her union. The Nation spoke with her earlier this year about her new book, her research on the crack epidemic, and the future of Black radical organizing against state violence.

Elias Rodriques

Elias Rodriques: What led you to write this book?

Donna Murch: Most of these essays came about in a moment of joy and surprise. I was in Los Angeles from August 2013 through August 2015 to write a book called Crack in Los Angeles: Policing the Crisis in the War on Drugs. I am, in my heart, a social historian. I like to write about the places where I am, because I want the depth of experience that makes that kind of research possible. So I took this research trip. I conducted oral histories, went to different archives, and kept facing this conundrum: Even though theres a collective recognition of how damaging the Wars on Crime and Drugs were, people had difficulty mounting organized resistance to them. There were pockets of resistance and intellectuals. There were ways that people in their everyday lives resisted being criminalized. But finding organized resistance was difficult, despite the work of amazing people like the organizers of Coalition Against Police Abuse, Michael Zinzun, and others.

Then, just as I arrived, there was this amazing arc that weve come to know as the Movement for Black Lives. It wasnt called that at the time, but that summer of 2013 [when people began using the hashtag #Blacklivesmatter on Twitter in response to the acquittal of George Zimmerman] helped birth all these organizations. Out of excitement for that political movement, I wrote a series of essays, extending the timeline of the 1980s and 90s that I had been researching to think about this period: the second administration of Barack Obama and the last decade, where we have seen much of the organized resistance to these overlapping punishment campaigns.

ER: What did you find from extending that timeline?

DM: In terms of repression and resistance, it takes people and communities time to understand what is happening to them. Take the example of the modern civil rights movement: what became visible as the national civil rights movement emerged in the mid-1950s with Brown v. Board of Education. But the institutions and infrastructure for fighting that battle went back at least to the 1930s. Some would take it back to Reconstruction. Theres a similar dynamic going on with the carceral state.

I lived through this era. I was a teenager in the 1980s. And the way that we understand it now is very different. The level of criminalization and sensationalization and the definition of monstersthe language of crack babies and gang memberswere at the center of the spectacle of punishment, so much so that they occluded the enormous violence of the state. It takes time for people to figure out how to mount resistance to something that, at the time, they may not even recognize is happening. Its very similar in the opioid crisis. Initially, these crises are understood as individual experiences, but to define them as a collective experience with culpable parties takes time.

ER: You mentioned that you were a teenager at the time. What did you experience?

DM: The first time I heard of crack, I was in college in the late 80s. I went home [to Erie, Pa.] to visit my parents and went to this doughnut shop on the east side of the city. This was one of the oldest parts of the city, with a lot of housing that had not been well maintained. It also had a giant industrial dumpsite. People didnt spend much time outside there in the winter, or even in the summer, for that matter. It always felt a little bit deserted. But we went to this doughnut shop in this neighborhood around midnight, just as the doughnuts were coming out. It was really cold, something like zero degrees, and there were all these little boys standing outside. I didnt have a context for understanding why they were there. It was only later, from talking to friends, that I realized that they were likely selling drugs. And I realized that a lot of the street-level drug economy is facilitated through young people. Arguably, a lot of it is child labor. Its not a sensational story, but it stands out in my mind because of their vulnerability: their vulnerability to the cold, their vulnerability in the part of the city that they were in, and the vulnerability that comes with being a young person working at midnight.

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ER: Lets keep moving back in time. Assata Taught Me begins with the uptick in the Great Migration in the 1940s and 50s. Why start there?

DM: I wanted to think about an arc that connected the organizing and radical possibilities in the postwar social movements like the Black Panther Party with what happened in the years after their heyday and finally with the rise of the Movement for Black Lives. The essay that starts the collection is a genesis, explaining the origins of the Black Panthers. Its different from the way the Panthers were understood in the 80s and 90s. We now have Stanley Nelsons documentary about the party that was funded, partially, by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. This was unimaginable in the 90s. The Panthers were demonized. They were largely excluded from professional histories and history departments, and they were often talked about as criminals. But I wanted to start with a sense of radical possibilities as a factor in the 60s and 70s.

At the time, people who became Panthers had migrated to California from Louisiana, Texas, and Arkansas. They were migrating for the opportunity for their children to attend high school, because many of the segregated cities and towns did not even have Black high schools. But in that period from the 40s through the early 70s, massive federal subsidies were poured into public education in California. California schools were much better resourced and funded than they are today. And in researching the genesis of the Black Panthers, I found something that surprised me: The Black Panther Party started with a study group, the Afro-American Association, at Merritt College in Oakland. If you look at the people that became important laterOaklands first Black mayor, members of the Black Panther Party, Ron Karengathey can all be traced back to this study group.

ER: At a community college.

DM: We dont talk nearly enough about community colleges. The majority of people in this country attend community colleges and get associate degrees. Then, and now, we need to look past this elite bias in the United States that takes small private schools as representative. This is a privileging of the wealthiest people in the country as the normative subjects, even though they have no real relationship to what life is really like in the United States. And their numbers are tiny.

Containing the cost of expanding higher education in California was done by trying to create a pyramid with the broadest base being the community colleges, the mid-level being the state level colleges, and then the very top was the UC system. But Black students organized to use access to community colleges to figure out transfer rules to access the entire system of higher education. The study group and public schools are important parts of the stories of the 60s: poor and working-class kids accessing higher education without debt. (One of the most painful things is the way that these populations that became important to the formation of the Panthersmigrant working-class families and veterans like Geronimo Prattare precisely the populations that have been targeted by for-profit colleges.) That access to upward mobility and exposure to new ideas comes at the moment of decolonization. The young people that are entering Merritt College in the early 60s do so as a dozen countries in Africa are winning their independence. They enter with a global sense of possibility and with an infrastructure of colleges to organize around.

ER: How did this study group become so important?

DM: In the 1960s, the fight for access to higher education was an extension of Black and Latinx liberation struggles. These were fights for access to state resources, whether it was aid for dependent children or access to higher education. They were trying to force open these programs, many of which could be traced back to the New Deal. In the case of California, these organizations wanted access to schools that had expanded funding during the Cold War. In the 60s and 70s, there was no tuition cost in the California public university system. That is the single most important fact. Why does that matter so much? Because many of the people who became important in the Black Panther Party didnt come from Black middle-class families. They were a step away from rural Southern poverty, like Huey Newtons family. Just by moving to the West Coast, they got access, and access to education became the laboratory for radical ideas in the lunchroom of Merritt College. So I started the book there and then thought about how people understood the problems of that era and about why it was so difficult to transmit this history to the subsequent generations.

ER: Why was it so difficult?

DM: Repression was the first obstacle to this form of Black radical and anti-capitalist organizing. The Black Panther Party was a self-avowed Marxist organization. They were explicitly anti-imperialist. They identified with the socialist Marxist revolutions of Cuba, Vietnam, and even the Chinese Maoist Revolution. And they supported a program of armed self-defense and redistribution. The campaign that was brought to bear against them from all levels of governmentfederal law enforcement, state, county, and cityled to a breaking apart of the party. The Black Panther Party still existed until 1980 or 81, but oppression directed at the party and its individual members narrowed their reach.

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The second obstacle came from the Panthers themselves. After the radical movements of the 60s, which some people called a cultural revolution that offered blaxploitation instead of real Black Power and Black radicalism, the issue of drugs surfaced. Party members in Oakland and Los Angeles that I interviewed felt that the most important assaults on their community occurred in both the War on Drugs and the drug crises themselves. Now, this varied by city. In New York City, heroin was more dominant and powerful in those postwar years than on the West Coast. But on the West Coast, a lot of people talked about crack. The crack crisis and the War on Drugs interrupted this movement.

ER: Can you say more about this change?

DM: Many people assume that life is always a story of things getting better. But in many ways, those first stories about the Panthers are about the Second Great Migration. What comes later is a very different kind of story. Its a story of people of two generations in cities where there has been systematic public defunding and an intensification of incarceration, policing, and repression. In that sense, I would say that its best understood as part of the late 20th-century increased market governance and the withdrawing of resources from public institutions. Those kinds of resources dont exist today in the way that they did, especially in education. State defunding, the attack on teachers unions, and the acceleration in California of segregation as the demographics began to change all contributed to reducing those resources. This is a version of what were facing today: As populations of color grow, theres a limiting of resources. Although people look back to the Panthers, and it is important to have an idea of ancestry in politics, today we are facing a very different country, a different political economy, and a much more limited set of resources.

ER: As you point out in your book, the end isnt quite the end. BLM harks back to the Panthers and to Assata.

DM: The Black Lives Matter movement, and the broader Movement for Black Lives, chose Assata as the primary icon of their movement. They chose her image, but most importantly, they chose her words. They use a poem that was published in Cuba while she was in exile to open all of their meetings. It is our duty to fight for freedom. / It is our duty to win. / We must love and protect each other. / We have nothing to lose but our chains. That refrain is used in many kinds of meetings. They chose Assata for several reasons. Assata was a Black Panther Party member, but she was not from California. She was from New York, and she was a Southern migrant who came out of the Carolinas. She was also part of the New York party, which was purged from the larger national organization. The state repression against the Panthers was always terrible, but it was significantly worse in the largest cities in the United States. In New York City, theres [the incarceration of] the Panther 21. In Chicago, theres the assassination of Fred Hampton. And in Los Angeles, theres an attack on the Los Angeles chapter in 1969, which destroyed most of the aboveground party infrastructure.

Its significant that the historical memory that they tapped into was through Assata Shakur. She emerges in part because she wrote an autobiography that allowed for broad dissemination when it was first published in 1987. And her autobiography, much more so than some of the other Panther autobiographies, is largely a story about incarceration. So much of it is descriptions of what it means to be a woman who was incarcerated. That really resonates, especially for younger generations: all the effects of these domestic Wars on Crime, on Drugs, on Gangs. But she is broken out of federal prison, becomes a fugitive, and then becomes an exile in Cuba. This is a story of liberation. Assata does the impossible. It is her history as fugitive and as exile that also lends a sense of hope and possibility for people who are fighting something very, very difficult: the American police state.

ER: How did BLM frame that fight?

DM: Recounting police killings and reclaiming the histories of those people became a core organizing strategy. The decision to understand Black death became the strategy, as opposed to police reform or other technocratic solutions. One of the reasons for its success is the way that it was able to demonstrate and mobilize around a series of violent murders and deaths as the logical extension of carceral policies over the last half-century. And it was the image and the reality of Michael Brown, having been murdered in North County in St. Louis and left in the street, that set St. Louis on fire. In many ways, that provided a template for things that would happen across the country. At the core of that was exposing police murder.

ER: All the way until 2020.

DM: Near the end of the book, I observe that Weve had the largest number of protests ever in our history in 2020, with 26 million people going onto the streets and protesting in the name of Black Lives Matter. That encompassed 40 percent of the counties in the US. This is an amazing story of a different kind of genesis of a broad-based movement. And it has inserted abolition into mainstream discourse. Seeing corporate media and television talking about defunding the police and abolition were things that I never thought I would see. However, as I talk to you in the early weeks of 2022, were seeing, as we have often in history, the ways in which law enforcement and the forces of reaction use this moment to expand powers and expand funding. One of the really disheartening things about writing about law enforcement is seeing this constant oscillation between organizing against it and reform and then increased powers. So often law enforcement uses the challenges that are posed to them to expand their powers. In this momentthe second year of Joe Bidens presidency and a year after the attack on January 6were seeing a real resurgence in law-and-order rhetoric and policy.

ER: So what does Assata teach us?

DM: In terms of thinking about the title of the book, Assata Taught Me, I mean it quite literally. Before it became the language of the movement, the book Assata, Assata Shakurs autobiography, taught us. In 1987, when it came out, we were living under the second administration of Ronald Reagan. This is the era of Iran-contra and of the invasion of Grenada and anti-communist warfare. (None of us knew that 1989 was coming.) But Assata represented this other possibilitythis tradition of Black militants, of Marxismlinked to the anti-colonial struggle of Cuba, where she lives now. She literally taught me and people of my generation. And she has taught a subsequent generation, becoming the avatar and inspiration for new types of organizing against state violence, for demanding resources and funding, and for divesting from carceral projects and investing in education and health care.

ER: And she does so globally.

DM: In 2017, I visited the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. A graduate student who read my book asked me to come and give a talk to the group Occupy Alemo. Alemo is in North Rio. Its a part of a large complex of favelas of informal communities. I went to Zilda Chavess house, which is essentially a community center there. Many of the people there were part of the first generation of students who were attending university. This was, in many ways, a dynamic thats not unlike the one I talked about in California: the first real generation of large numbers of college students of African descent. I talked to them about Assata, and they grilled me. They were deeply invested in reclaiming Assata Shakur for a tradition of Pan-Africanism that was recognizable to them and that evoked the history of their mothers, sisters, and daughters.

During the conversation, there was a tension between pan-Africanism and Marxism, or even Angela Davis versus Assata Shakur. I forced myself to listen (because I had my own opinions). But it was a reminder of the importance of Assata in the diaspora. Im still thinking about it. One of the reasons I have such a great affection for the Panthers is that they bring together those two traditions of Pan-Africanism and Marxism. They are an all-Black organization, and this is a very important development in the modern Black freedom struggle. At the same time, they really believed in radical coalitions and made common cause with white radicals, mother country radicals, and Brown Berets. At the core of that was anti-imperialism. Even though its contested, I am invested in claiming Assata Shakur for both those traditions.

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The Long History of Resistance That Birthed Black Lives Matter - The Nation

Chicago pastor: I live on a roof to raise cash for black youthsbut BLM wont help – New York Post

Since Nov. 20, 2021, Rev. Corey B. Brooks has been living on a roof on the South Side of Chicago. He wont come down until he gets $35 million in donations to build a new 84,000-square-foot community center across from his New Beginnings Church, which he established 20 years ago as a place of worship where local youths can get an education and train for jobs. A leader in the fight against violence on Chicagos South Side for almost three decades, Brooks, 53, had hoped that Black Lives Matter, which took in $66 million in donations following the death of George Floyd in May 2020, would help him with some funding. But though he reached out to the group, he said he never got a response. Here, Brooks tells The Posts Dana Kennedy his story

Im living up on the roof to bring attention and awareness to the violence that is so commonplace in Chicago. I want people to know what goes on here.

I stay up here 24/7. I make phone calls. I sleep in a tent, and I do pretty much everything by Zoom. I have a babys bathtub that I fill with water to clean myself. I use a five-gallon paint bucket with trash can liners to relieve myself. For food we either have restaurants who donate or we order from UberEats. I get by in the cold months by layering up but it feels like the Arctic up here in the winter.

Were fighting to change the mindset. We are about making people take responsibility for their actions and not blame others. I also hope to bring in some money so that we can build a community center here across the street from the church.

Were up against a lot in our immediate area. First of all, a bad education system. The elementary school has a 4% reading proficiency level, a 6% math proficiency level. So we get a lot of young men who are growing up but cant read and so when they get to ninth grade they drop out because theyre so frustrated. Secondly, we have one of the highest unemployment rates in the country in our area, especially among young black males. Then when you add the fact that we have so many gangs from block to block those issues compound. Were dealing with the Gangster Disciples, the Black Disciples and the Black P Stones among others.

Ninety children have been shot this year alone in Chicago. Over 25 of them have been killed. Its tough for a lot of these mothers, especially the single mothers who are trying to do the best they can to raise their children in such a violent environment. The stress these families are experiencing is overwhelming.

I would never walk around here at night. You could be mistaken for a gang member and shot. But since weve been here, weve been able to get rid of a motel that had sex trafficking and drugs. Weve been able to get people hundreds if not thousands of jobs.

Back in 2000, we first found the building for our church and it was a torn-up skating rink called Route 66 that had been used for skating parties and raves. The building was pretty much demolished and was a big piece of junk. We bought it and renovated it and put $5 million into it. We started a church that was contemporary, credible and creative, in a community that had a lot of needs.

Now, we have a charter school for 16 to 21 year olds whove been kicked out of Chicago public schools. Weve got them engaged in education and we get them to graduate. We also have a trade school. We offer mentoring and counseling. We have a wellness component and we also have a violence prevention team of 15 full-time employees who work in our neighborhood.

We need another building because we have a construction program where we recruit men and women in gangs or who have been marginalized or are just re-entering society from prison. We train them and then we give them jobs. We have trained over 160 people so far with an 80% job placement rate. We just had our first all womens electrician class! So were doing a lot of great work. We just need more space.

This new building will house all our programs, including our trade, school and entrepreneurial programs. So far weve raised $12 million about 80 percent of which has come from small donors across America with the rest coming from Chicago and corporate donors. People can donate to the Get Pastor Brooks Off the Roof fund.

Thats a result of me living on the roof for 170 days. Ive only come down once to visit my mother, Evelyn Wyatt, in Indiana where she was dying of cancer. I stayed with her the last three weeks of her life and then came back up to the roof.

Weve had CEOs from around the country come to stay with us including the CEO of the McCormick Foundation. Weve invited the mayor of Chicago so hopefully, shes gonna be here. We invited Eric Adams when he came to town but his schedule didnt allow him to come over. There are no bathrooms up here but when people come to stay we tell them, were giving you a pot and a cot.

Ive always kept my politics to myself. For the first 14 years with my church I never even really thought about politics at all. And it wasnt until six years ago, that I finally told people I was a Republican. Ive been a Republican since I was 20.

(Then-Mayor) Rahm Emanuel was all for me until he found out I was a conservative. He tried to shut down everything we were trying to do. So we decided that we werent going to depend on the government for anything and stopped asking. Were out on our own trying to find people who arent worried about our political affiliation. But we definitely have been ostracized for our conservative views.

At the end of 2020, I emailed the director of Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation for the first time on the website where it says you can apply for donations. I kept emailing and asking: How do you go about trying to get funds for your organization from Black Lives Matter? I kept waiting for a human response or any response at all. I tried again in the summer of 2021. I never heard anything back from anyone.

We were going to try a third time when we started hearing about all the problems they were having. My attorney and I looked into the possibility of taking over the organization but one of the biggest obstacles we encountered was that there was literally no one at the helm of it. There was no infrastructure.

Theres a Black Lives Matter chapter in Chicago but theyre like a secret. Nobody has seen them do any work for the community or has any data or has heard anything about them. So if they exist its only on paper.

It makes me angry honestly, that people who supported Black Lives Matter were abused by an organization who gave money to people or organizations that arent doing any of the work needed in our communities. Whenever people profit off black pain for their own gain that makes me angry. Ive been saying for a long time that Black Lives Matter doesnt benefit the black community in any way.

Whenever people profit off black pain for their own gain that makes me angry.

My goal was to stay here until we raised all the money needed to build the center. I still feel that way. But I must admit that it is starting to wear and tear on me physically. At least its almost summer and not so cold. So Im going to continue to stay as long as I possibly can. And hopefully that will not be much longer.

The block where our church is located is called O Block, after a young man who was shot and killed here. His name was Odee Perry. He was a member of the The Black Disciples gang, and the gang picked up the O in his name and started calling it O Block. Since I got here, I decided were going to keep the O, but were going to make it mean O for opportunity, the Opportunity Block.

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Chicago pastor: I live on a roof to raise cash for black youthsbut BLM wont help - New York Post

Black Lives Matter vigils return to the Unitarian Society of Germantown – WHYY

Vanessa Lowe is a member of the Unitarian Society and an organizer with POWER, the largest interfaith-based social justice organization in Pennsylvania.

Lowe will be participating in the vigils. She said she values the ability to collectively grieve, and not just process the ongoing news, alone.

When we hear these stories, its gut-wrenching and its hard. And me by myself, looking through the web or watching TV its just like the shock, said Lowe. You need a community to come together with, and cry with, and just put your heads together, and just be together.

Theres so much pain in the world and so much of it is about relations and how we see each other, or dont see each other. So, coming together, as humans, when things like this happen, is really critical, added Lowe.

Lowe is still hopeful that the moral arc of the universe will bend towards justice, hearkening back to the quote by Martin Luther King, Jr.

Shes looking forward to expanding multi-faith organizing in the Philly region, where different religions can come together based on their commonalities; the belief in the inherent worth of every being, and the wish for a healthy, happy world.

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Black Lives Matter vigils return to the Unitarian Society of Germantown - WHYY