Tag Archives: police shootings

Police Organization Apologizes For Historic Mistreatment Of Minorities

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One of the nation’s largest police organizations apologizes for historic mistreatment of minorities. The group’s president urged law enforcement to acknowledge its role in causing poor relations with communities of color.

Police Organization Apologizes For Historic Mistreatment Of Minorities

Cookie Johnson Reveals How She Finally Accepted Son EJ Johnson’s Sexuality

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Cookie Johnson revealed that dealing with her son’s sexuality hasn’t always been easy.

Cookie Johnson Reveals How She Finally Accepted Son EJ Johnson’s Sexuality

Protests Planned In Atlanta Over The Weekend

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The Georgia NAACP is calling for a weekend of demonstrations in response to the fatal police shootings of Keith Lamont Scott in Charlotte and Terrance Crutcher in Tulsa. Activists want participants to wear black to show solidarity. And organizers stress—that participants must REMAIN PEACEFUL. Information on the rallies is below. I’ve also attached flyers for […]

Protests Planned In Atlanta Over The Weekend

Activists Plan Protests During Freddie Gray Hearings, Baltimore Police Prepare

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On Wednesday, hearings will begin to determine if the case against the six officers in the Freddie Gray case should be dismissed.

Activists Plan Protests During Freddie Gray Hearings, Baltimore Police Prepare

We All Have PTSD

A few days ago, I was heading into my office early before I hit the gym so that I could put my lunch in the refrigerator. Over the course of my 20-minute drive, I started thinking about how much I was putting my life in danger . I’d be going into the office before anyone else was there. I’d be dressed in gym clothes. And if a cop were to somehow catch me leaving the office, there’d be no way he or she would believe that I actually work in the building. And when I’d try to show my key or ID, it could be mistaken for a gun. And I’d be killed. For the rest of my drive to work, I thought about all of the scenarios. I thought about calling my wife and telling her what I was about to do so she’d know in case she got a call that I’d been killed. I started to post on Twitter that I’d be heading to my office and I wasn’t trying to break into anything, so that there would be a written testimony for when the media brings up some detail on my past to justify my death. These are the things I felt I needed to do to prepare for the possibility of running into American police. Because being Black in America means I’m perpetually putting my life in danger. I ended up just going to the gym and not even trying to go to the office early. ================ I remember hearing stories of suicide bombers in places like Baghdad and thinking about how terrifying it must be to not know when the next bomb was coming. This was right after 9/11 and we were inundated with stories of how dangerous life was for a Middle Eastern kid living in Al-Qaeda territories. In America, I’d felt like disasters on a 9/11 were scary, but they’d only happen at places like the World Trade Center or the Statue of Liberty. These kids in Iraq, though, were scared of being bombed at their coffee shops or buying fabric from the market. That just seemed like an entirely different terror to deal with. It haunted me to think about living in a circumstance in which any attempt to leave my house puts my life in danger. I feel that same terror. In 2015. In America. I’ve seen actual video of Black people murdered by police while driving to work, getting gas, riding their bikes and walking down the street. In 2003, 1.5 people were killed by suicide bomb every day in Iraq. In 2015, 2.3 people are killed by police every day. I don’t say this to compare the fears or say which situation was worse, but I do feel like we are living in a war zone. A country where citizens are in fear of a government-funded regime that’s determined to murder individuals with no recourse. And this can happen on our way to the store, at the park or on our own front porches. I’ve known too many Black men whose wives won’t let them go to a CVS to pick up a carton of eggs after dark. I know too many women who have to send text messages every 15 minutes of a road trip to reassure friends and loved ones that they haven’t been stopped by a cop. This isn’t living. This is surviving in a war zone. And we all have PTSD. I’ve seen PTSD firsthand. My father was a Freedom Rider and Civil Rights activist who saw friends die. He’s had police guns pointed at his temple and he’s woken up wondering how he survived the previous day. I’ve seen kids in New Orleans who survived Katrina and wouldn’t take showers even a year after the storm passed. Some kids, whose parents abandoned them to survive the storm, can’t be left alone for fear an adult is never coming back. I know the effects of PTSD well. And we all are suffering from it. There’s only so long we can watch people who look like us get gunned down daily and witness the murderers suffer zero consequences before it starts to affect us. It’s hard to imagine sometimes that the deaths of people we’ve never met before could affect us so much. That we’d not want to go to work the next morning or hang out because we were too affected by people who look like us getting killed. There have been days when I’ve seen a hashtag and haven’t wanted to get out of bed in the morning. A few weeks ago, I took a couple of days off of Twitter and was afraid to get back on because I didn’t want to see all the new hashtags I’d missed. Last night, there was another kid murdered by police in St. Louis and the script is the same. And it’s triggering. Police feel threatened. Boy accused of having a gun. People want answers. Gas bombs. Rubber bullets. It’s a nightmare that we relive every day. And it has tangible effects. America feels like a war zone. I don’t feel safe. I don’t feel like my life matters here. I feel like I’m at war in a battle that where I don’t have any weapons. It’s hard to tell myself not to live in fear. To defy the gun barrels aimed at my Blackness and enjoy my life. To tell my son that he can enjoy his youth and feel free here. Sometimes just feeling human seems impossible in America. Happiness is survival here. Functioning is a luxury. I just want to stay Black and live. And a lot of times, that’s the best I can do.

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We All Have PTSD

Report: Police Fatally Shot More Than 2 People A Day So Far in 2015. Here’s The Breakdown

Statistics about fatal police shootings are notoriously hard to come by, so the Washington Post started counting this year. The result is an analysis of…

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Report: Police Fatally Shot More Than 2 People A Day So Far in 2015. Here’s The Breakdown

A Lil Positivity: “Preachers Of Detroit” Star Organizes End Police Brutality March For MLK Jr. Day [Audio]

Finally! Something good comes out of reality TV … Preachers of Detroit Star & National Spokesperson of the Change Agent Consortium (CAC) Pastor David Alexander Bullock has organized the End Police Brutality March in Detroit, MI on January 19, 2015. The peaceful march is in honor of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and in response to the rising awareness of incidents of police brutality. Pastor Bullock will also release his first single titled “I Can’t Breathe” produced by Multiplatinum Producer Tim Bosky (credits include Justin Bieber, Chris Brown, Britney Spears). “I Can’t Breathe” features an all-star team of talent such as singer/songwriter Keely Ferguson, Joshua Blvck, Aaron BraveSoul and Moe Hardwick. Bullock cites “I Can’t Breathe, a powerful single that captures the angst and promise of a solution to police brutality in America”. You can check out Bullock’s single below: We thought it was actually pretty dope. What did you think? About the End Police Brutality March: “The End Police Brutality” March is a clarion call to all citizens to join the fight to end the use of wanton police force in America. Police brutality is not only a concern in Detroit, but around the country. This is not an anti – police march, it is an anti-excessive and cruel violence march. We encourage people to abandon their silos of fear and join us in the march. We march to remember McKenzie Cochran, Adaisha Miller and the other victims of police brutality. We march to change public policy, increase civic capacity and restore hope in our communities. We will not adjust to fear we will face it head on” -David Alexander Bullock If you’re in Detroit, will you be marching alongside Pastor Bullock today?

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A Lil Positivity: “Preachers Of Detroit” Star Organizes End Police Brutality March For MLK Jr. Day [Audio]

Numbers Don’t Lie: The Disturbing Black-White Statistics In Ferguson

Racial tensions are running alarmingly high in places where recent cases of police brutality have made headlines, Ferguson is at the heart of it all. Here are some stats that just might blow your mind – keep in mind that Blacks and Whites make up about two-thirds and one-third of the Ferguson population, respectively. – See more at: http://madamenoire.com/461672/disturbing-black-white-statistics-ferguson/#sthash.KZdsxX11.dpuf More…

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Numbers Don’t Lie: The Disturbing Black-White Statistics In Ferguson