Posted on 02/07/2017 3:31:21 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
Police and criminal justice reform are just the beginning.
Donald Trump repeatedly expressed hostility towards Black Lives Matter activists during his presidential campaign, particularly for their efforts to confront police brutality. Now, faced with a Trump agenda whose repercussions for African Americans could reach far beyond policing, BLM organizers say they are broadly expanding their mission.
Ever since a police officer killed teenager Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, the Black Lives Matter movement has grown into a loose-knit web of like-minded groups nationwide that focus primarily on ending police brutality and the disproportionate incarceration of African Americans. Last August, a coalition of nearly 30 BLM groups, known as the United Front, released a policy platform calling for comprehensive police and criminal justice reforms, economic investments in black communities, and the mobilization of black voters. The shock of Trump's election has turbocharged their sense of urgency.
Trump's immigration order barring refugees and immigrants in particular "changed the rules of engagement," says Malkia Cyril, executive director of the Oakland-based Center for Media Justice, part of the United Front. The new president's agenda, she says, represents "an escalation of the war on black bodies and lives." Approximately a quarter of Muslims in America are black, she notes; Trump's order blocked immigrants from the African countries of Sudan, Libya, and Somalia, among others. "The issue is the culture that gets created that is anti-Muslim, anti-black, anti-brown, anti-woman," she says.
"We have tons of black folks that are going to be affected by the potential cutting of DACA," says Dante Barry, director of New York City-based Million Hoodies for Justice, referring to Trump's plan to crack down on undocumented residents. "We're going to have black folk that are going to be impacted by the cut of the Affordable Care Act."
Following Trump's election, I interviewed leaders and local organizers with seven groups participating in the United Front about their plans for confronting the Trump era. I also talked to an organizer with an eighth group, Campaign Zero, whose cofounders include Deray McKesson, perhaps the movement's most visible organizer. All of these activists reiterated that police and criminal justice reform will remain a priority, but that other issues have become equally urgent.
In the wake of Trump's immigration order, BLM organizers mobilized their networks to turn out at airports to protest. The groups also fired up their social media networks to amplify calls for the release of detained travelers. BLM leaders say their strategy will evolve as more details become known about what Trump plans to do on matters ranging from policing and reproductive rights to climate change and LGBT issues. They will focus on combating what they see as Trump's hostile, retrograde agendaand that of right-wing politicians emboldened by Trumpprimarily at the state and local levels.
Immigration concerns are squarely on the radar for Million Hoodies, Barry says. The six current members of the group's chapter in Greensboro, North Carolinaall college studentsare drafting sanctuary campus policies that they plan to pitch to school administrations. The group is also in talks with at least one other local group about how Million Hoodies can bolster their efforts to protect undocumented residents throughout Greensboro. Last fall, Million Hoodies Greensboro also supported a local campaign to repeal North Carolina's infamous anti-LGBT bathroom bill. "We just show up when folks need support," member Delaney Vandergrift told me. "Showing up at protests and community meetings. Amplifying on social media. Making signs. Anything that local organizations already doing the work are asking for."
Patrisse Cullors, cofounder of the Black Lives Matter Global Network, said her organization of nearly 40 chapters plans to expand its work on reproductive rights from a handful of southern US cities to other parts of country. The network hopes to replicate work like that of its chapter in Louisville, Kentucky, which is part of a repro-rights coalition that meets monthly and includes Planned Parenthood and the ACLU of Kentucky. This week, following the opening of the Kentucky legislature's next session, members from BLM Louisville and its partners plan to go to the statehouse in Frankfort to lobby against a bill that would require women to get an ultrasound before getting an abortion, according to Chanelle Helm, an organizer with the chapter. In the upcoming legislative session the group also plans to lobby against a Kentucky bill that would make assaulting a police officer a "hate crime."
Shortly before Trump's inauguration, Campaign Zero rolled out a Trump Resistance Manual, broadening its focus on data gathering beyond police reform. The site includes descriptions of various Trump policy proposals and assessments of their potential impact; it encourages users to crowd-source information about ways people can get involved in local organizing around more than a dozen issues, including police reform, LGBT rights, education, and climate change.
"The crises are so large that we have to have the capacity to address more than one thing at a time," said Sam Sinyangwe, a co-founder of the group. "In this moment when they're trying to take away health care from 30 million people, we simply cannot ignore that in the interest of focusing on one issue."
Still, police reform remains crucial, and efforts at the state and local levels will be key. The new political reality of a Republican-controlled White House and Congress narrows the prospects for federal criminal justice reform, and leadership from the Department of Justice on police reform, as was the case under President Obama. "We have a federal governmentand when I say the federal government I mean [prospective] Attorney General Jeff Sessionswho doesn't believe in consent decrees," said Barry, referring to the DOJ interventions mandating reform for troubled local police departments. "So I think particularly the Trump administration is not going to be useful or helpful for our communities."
Trump has praised stop-and-frisk and the broken-windows policing strategy, both widely considered racially discriminatory. A budget blueprint for the next fiscal year prepared by the conservative Heritage Foundationa plan mirrored by budget proposals made by the Trump administration, the Hill reportedwould also cut $58 million dollars in funding from the DOJ's Civil Rights Division, which handles police investigations.
Barry said he expects DOJ work on civil rights investigations into police shooting cases that weren't finished under the Obama administrationsuch as the Eric Garner and John Crawford investigationsto stall. And worrisome for Campaign Zero's Sinyangwe is the prospect that, under Trump, the DOJ might be more inclined to intervene in cases of police violence in support of law enforcement. "That's a different situation that we're not accustomed to in terms of [the Civil Rights] division," he said.
This year, Campaign Zero will begin pushing for laws that empower state attorneys general to open civil rights investigations into local police departments, as is already the case in California, Sinyangwe said. The group will also push for local laws that require a vote by a city council before a police department can accept military equipment from the federal government. Trump has suggested that he will expand the DOJ program that transfers such equipment to local law enforcement.
BLM leaders aim to capitalize on the energy of the nationwide protests that have unfolded since Trump's election. The local Sacramento chapter of the Black Lives Matter Global Network has canvassed neighborhoods and college campuses five times since the election and has a fast-growing email list, Tanya Faison, the founder of the chapter, told me.
In mid-January, Black Lives Matter groups around the country led multiple protests against pieces of Trump's agenda that target immigrants, Muslims, and other people of color; the effort began on MLK Day and culminated with the mass anti-Trump protests on inauguration day. April Goggans, who is with the Black Lives Matter Global Network chapter in Washington, D.C., said BLM organizers have been "in awe" of the throng of supporters for their recent events. "It's really important to us that every time we have a mobilization, that we have an intentional thing to call people into next," Goggans said. "The days of just rallying and going home are over because there's a lot of work that needs to be done."
During the week of the inauguration, BLM groups hosted "Know Your Rights" trainings and "teach-ins" on Trump's agenda, among other efforts to educate and involve more supporters. In collaboration with the ACLU and the National Lawyers Guild, Goggans' chapter held trainings that walked attendees through everything from protest permit laws in DC to what a person's rights are when police give a dispersal order, and how to conduct yourself in jail if you do ultimately get arrested.
Goggans' chapter plans to rally supporters this month to canvas in neighborhoods in southeast D.C.an area shaken by increased gun violence in recent years, and where Goggans livesto encourage people to oppose a push by the city's mayor to hire more police as a key solution to violent crime. The plan is to talk to residents about initiatives like after school programs and donating books to schools, and "to listen to folks and ask, 'What is your biggest concern about this? Or what things do you think will be helpful for the issue happening on your block or in your community?' So that it's not just giving information, it's a sharing of information."
Building that people power will benefit from more collaboration and resource sharing with non-BLM groups. Even before Trump's election, some BLM groups had begun to build such coalitions. Last fall, some sent members to North Dakota to support Native American activists fighting against the construction of the Dakota Access pipeline, while others raised money and provided supplies for native activists on the front lines there. The Black Lives Matter Global Network has raised nearly $14,000 in support of the protest efforts at Standing Rock.
The potential for powerful grassroots alliances has only grown since Trump entered the Oval Office, BLM leaders say. "What we saw during the inauguration weekend is going to continue," said Barry of the historic marches around the country involving myriad activist groups. "We're all under attack. Each of us might be impacted very differently, but we now share a very similar political fate, and so it's incumbent on all of us to really be in full coordination and solidarity with other movements."
Ever since a police officer killed teenager Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri,
Ever since a brave and well trained police office legally defended himself from a crazed, strong arm robber on dope in Ferguson, Missouri . .
Call BLM by their correct name....commies and anarchists
This is another Soros attempt to subvert America. It would fall apart without his funding. Surely, something can be done to spike his guns.
Whenever you make it easy for free cheese the biggest and most rabid rats will be lining up for it. blm fits the cheese mold.
The lazy and filth in America will be its downfall if we workers allow it.
Incarceration isn’t disproportionate if it’s being given to those who do crimes.
I agree that more police are not the answer - not when the people arrested are plea bargained back onto the streets.
We need more prison space, plus changing the welfare system so as to make it less attractive for a woman to have kids without an employed husband.
Unfortunately, I’ll bet he is.
'Rev' is for revolutionary.
'Com' is for communist.
Revcom.us bills itself as "the voice of the Revolutionary Communist Party, USA." The explicit objective is to overthrow our constitutional republic and replace it with an oligarchical collectivist dictatorship along the lines of North Korea and the Soviet Union.
Why would advocates of a communist police state agitate against the police? Because as leftists used to admit openly, the issue is never the issue.. This isn't about the police, any more than it is about blacks. It is about destabilizing the system so as to create opportunities to weaken it and eventually overthrow it.
That's what community organizing boils down to. These people have taken over the executive branch of the federal government; why would they stop there?
The next hill they take will be federal control of local police. After that, things will start to get scary.
http://moonbattery.com/?p=54033
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From the website of the Revolutionary Communist Party (revcom.us):
"Create Public Opinion, Seize Power: We are preparing minds and organizing forces for the time when there is a major crack in the system, whenever it comes and wherever it comes from: an opening that makes it possible to bring the future Revolutionary Army of the Proletariat (R.A.P.) into the field and wage a revolutionary armed struggle that actually has a chance of winning.
And we have said that building our party itself is the most important part of organizing forces for revolution. This is true now, and it is true looking forward to the creation of that future R.A.P. and the waging of that armed struggle.":
http://revcom.us/a/v20/1000-1009/1000/barw.htm
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The 1992 LA/Rodney King riots were instigated by the Revolutionary Communist Party...
From David Horowitz's FrontpageMag.com /DiscoverTheNetworks.org:
"Throughout its history, one of RCP's [Revolutionary Communist Party] principal objectives has been to foment civil unrest in the United States. The most notable example of such efforts occurred on April 29, 1992, when RCP members looted and trashed the downtown and government districts of Los Angeles, triggering the infamous Rodney King riots. During the days immediately preceding the violence, RCP -- which maintained close ties to the L.A. gangs known as the Crips and the Bloods -- had circulated throughout South Central Los Angeles a leaflet featuring a statement by RCP National Spokesman Carl Dix, titled 'It's Right To Rebel' -- a quote popularized by Mao Zedong.
Encouraged by Dix, RCP activists helped lead the riots that would leave 58 people dead, more than 2,300 people injured, some 5,300 buildings burned, and $1 billion in property damaged or destroyed. On the ten-year anniversary of the rioting, RCP member Joseph Veale fondly recalled the violence as 'the most beautiful, the most heroic civil action in the history of the United States.'"
http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/groupProfile.asp?grpid=6197
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REVOLUTION: Voice of the Revolutionary Communist Party, USA [Maoist]
[Revolution] Interview with Bill Ayers, Revolution #63, October 1, 2006:
"On Progressive Education, Critical Thinking and the Cowardice of Some in Dangerous Times"
http://web.archive.org/web/20110727113745/http://rwor.org/a/063/ayers-en.html
Signs printed by them can also be found at the women’s marches, anti-Milo speeches, immigration, etc.
The commies will latch onto any “crisis” to make it worse and further their ends.
To those with the signs that read “Whose side are you on?”, I am not on the side of the party that runs the inner cities and the police departments where blacks are being gunned down on a regular basis.
” BLM Louisville and its partners plan to go to the statehouse in Frankfort to lobby against a bill that would require women to get an ultrasound before getting an abortion, according to Chanelle Helm, an organizer with the chapter.”
I’ll just pull this from their long list of all the bad things they want. Abortion is sort of the litmus test for me if someone can be taken seriously. Can ANYONE tell me what reason, other than to keep the mother of the child about to be executed for being conceived ignorant, would there be a problem with an ultrasound?
I do agree with #BLM that there is a serious problem with police in America, however I don’t believe it has anything to do with race.
more and more SorozNazi $$$$ to destabilize weaken and undercut America
when O when will he be properly prosecuted and, imho, seriously punished for all the damage he’s inflicted on people (all around the world)?
If it wasn't obvious before, there should be no now as to who the terrorists really are...
Another major organizer of these sorts of protest rallies (besides the Revolutionary Communist Party) is Workers World Party, a Stalinist yet legal political party based in New York City. They have several front groups and offshoots, A.N.S.W.E.R being one of them.
Well, that could be the EBT folks in checkout line 7 at the local Walmart.
#BLM = KKK in blackface
Of the more than $100 million in donations they received last year, $23 million came form Soros. The rest came from places such as the Ford Foundation, etc.
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