Posted on 12/29/2017 7:07:42 PM PST by Kaslin
So, I bet youve heard about the airline incident between a woman and Texas Democratic Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee. Katie wrote about it. In all, Jean-Marie Simon was booted from her first class seat on a United flight for Lee. Simon was obviously upset, voiced her objections, and was even threatened with being forced off the flight. She was eventually given a $500 voucher for her pre-paid seat and relocated to economy class. She alleges that United gave the Texas Democrat preferential treatment.
The saga got even worse when Lee accused Simon of racism regarding this matter.
I noted that this individual came toward me and took a picture. I heard later that she might have said I know who she is. Since this was not any fault of mine, the way the individual continued to act appeared to be, upon reflection, because I was an African American woman, Sheila Jackson Lee (@JacksonLeeTX18) December 26, 2017
seemingly an easy target along with the African American flight attendant who was very, very nice. This saddens me, especially at this time of year given all of the things we have to work on to help people. But in the spirit of this season and out of the sincerity of my heart, Sheila Jackson Lee (@JacksonLeeTX18) December 26, 2017
if it is perceived that I had anything to do with this, I am kind enough to simply say sorry. I understand the airline is working to address the passengers concerns. I am glad of that. But as an African American, I know there are too many examples like this all over the nation Sheila Jackson Lee (@JacksonLeeTX18) December 26, 2017
. I hope one day, we will accept our collective diversity. Happy Holidays. ine, the way the individual continued to act appeared to be, upon reflection, because I was an African American woman, seemingly an easy target along with the African Sheila Jackson Lee (@JacksonLeeTX18) December 26, 2017
Identity politics will eventually lead to you stepping on a rakeand Lee probably should have just enjoyed the holidays and commented on this matter after looking up Jean-Marie Simon, who, as Katie noted, is a human rights activist that focused on Guatemala for nearly a quarter century. She was covering the nations brutal 36-year civil war, living there between 1980-1988 as a photojournalist. Her work has been featured in Amnesty International, who Im pretty sure dont accept submissions from members of the Klan.
Heres a post from 2012 on the conflict:
Guatemala is deceptive. I know people think that in the 80s it was a war zone.
But the country was very different from that. You knew things were going on, you sort of arrived in the capital and you did see soldiers all over the place but it was not like they were sand-bagging the main streets and car bombings and green zones and people running around in flak jackets.
In Guatemala City the army was targeting student leaders, unionists, and university professors. Picking them off one by one or in small groups. In fact, I think the word desaparecer (to disappear) as a transitive verb, first originated in Guatemala back in the 1960s.
[ ]
After my experience in Guatemala I would say remember who the heroes are.
Its so easy to forget how we were able to do our work in the first place and the only reason we had access to these events, whether documentary filmmaking or photography or reporting is because somebody in Guatemala risked their neck to show us something they wanted the rest of the world to see.
I think we should keep the focus on Guatemalans who risked themselves during this decade and many whom have never been recognized for this, thats the most important thing to me.
Another article about her work from the Christian Science Monitor from 1988:
Like most other Americans, Jean-Marie Simon knew little about Central America's largest nation before she came to work here in the early 1980s when military oppression was its height. Ms. Simon's first trip to Guatemala, one she thought would be a three-month visit and a ``steppingstone'' in her photography career, became a seven-year obsession with the country.
Simon, now considered the leading authority on human rights in Guatemala, has compiled her work, both photographs and research, into a book called ``Guatemala: Eternal Spring - Eternal Tyranny.''
The book documents the most recent episode in Guatemala's violent history. It begins with the year 1980 - when the country was ruled by Gen. Romeo Lucas Garc'ia, considered the nation's most brutal head of state - and ends with 1987, the second year of civilian rule in nearly two decades.
Here are some of her photographs from Guatemala. The description notes, The photographs reflect all sides of the war: government death squads, the armed opposition, beleaguered internal human rights groups, and a civilian population for whom opposition meant death or exile.
Heres The New York Times 2012 post about her account of the 1982 coup that saw Gen. Efraín Ríos Montt seize power. Gen. Montt has since been tried and convicted for war crimes and genocide. In 2013, his conviction was overturned and his retrial is set to begin in the near future.
Efraín Ríos Montt, a former Guatemalan general who is now bespectacled and gray-haired, now insists through his lawyers that he never issued orders that left thousands of his countrymen dead or disappeared in the 1980s.But Jean-Marie Simon remembers how on March 23, 1982 the day he seized power in a coup he looked every bit in control. Indeed, his rule would be marked by some of the worst atrocities that befell that Central American nation, where he now faces charges of genocide and war crimes.
I wish this trial would have happened 30 years ago, when he had a long life ahead of him in prison, said Ms. Simon, who spent most of the 1980s photographing in Guatemala. It is so disingenuous to say, I didnt know or I wasnt in control of the army. He was the commander in chief, he had command responsibility for the troops below him. Like a commander in the field once told us, theres a very short leash between us and the National Palace.
This week, while Mr. Ríos Montt is under house arrest, Ms. Simon is reprinting her book Guatemala: Eterna Primavera, Eterna Tirania, a chronicle of the worst of the war years that builds upon her 1988 volume Guatemala: Eternal Spring, Eternal Tyranny. This time, she has raised $20,000 through Kickstarter to help produce 4,000 copies on glossy stock and with sewn bindings that will be sold for about $10 each. More important, she has set aside some 1,000 copies to be given away to schools and teachers in Guatemala.
Yeah, a human rights activist and a photojournalist who captured the most brutal aspects of a Latin American nations civil warthis doesnt sound like the makings of a racist. Ms. Simon was upset rightfully that she was bumped from her seat. And apparently this isnt the first time Rep. Lee has acted ridiculously on an airline.
Washington Times)I saw Sheila Jackson-Lee on a domestic flight two years ago. While I was walking back to coach, she was throwing a hissy fit in First Class over why the steward had to gate-check her carry-on. (It was too big to fit in the overhead.) She threw a tantrum worthy of a 3-year-old. David Martosko (@dmartosko) December 26, 2017
I think Sheila Jackson is about as flummoxed about who she is as any one could be.
I’m the QUEEN bitch, back the f up.
If this happened to her you would never hear the end of it.
All congress people should fly lavatory seat.
Every. Single. One.
The Congresswoman from Texas, Otherwise known as “Thunder Thighs”,,,,,
Man, They be FAT and UGLY...
you just can’t take them out of the cotton patches.
Does this woman look like she has ever "reflected" a day in her life?
None of that matters. She’s white, therefore racist.
They eat their own. Do you think enviro lefties have anything in common with blacks? Human rights? / SJL only knows human wrongs.
Jean-Marie Simon, the eye and voice of historical memory
We can not deny the tenderness as well as the devastating power of a photograph, with it we can make eternal the fleeting, tangible the abstract of a memory, and above all give voice to a story frozen in time, to voices and characters that may never let's meet However, as sincere and eloquent as the images are, a vignette fails to capture the background, the dialogues, the scents and flavors of the scene. We can not then suppose more.
However, this terrible amnesia is sometimes treatable, even curable. History is not dead, only jealously guarded in those who lived it, who were part of it, or at least beats timidly in its witnesses. We recently came across a delta of stories, a silent witness who walked upright during the most gruesome years of the country's history. Remains unbeatable, with a broad smile on his face and a warm temper, this pilgrim photographer is the key to hundreds of stories
Its protagonist is a whole country in one of its worst moments, the internal war. Behind each photograph there is a story. She narrates them remembering what she has lived, seen, heard and smelled. What he has captured is a historical record of the children, young people, women and men who lived in Guatemala in the eighties during a violent period that has marked the country.
[ more at above link ]
She’s nothing but a LEFTIST. Glad Shelia gave her a piece of her mind.
United really needs to get rid of their VP of Customer Service and start hiring people who understand that their customer is always right.
Shes nothing but a LEFTIST. Glad Shelia gave her a piece of her mind.
You’re glad that “do you know who I am????” Sheila...the crazed, unhinged lib...gave this paying customer a piece of her mind...and, had this customer bumped from a paid for seat???
After having this waved in my face for several days; my analysis: The white lady went to the trouble of reserving a First Class seat an unknown interval ahead of the flight. SJL, the professional black woman, did not bother, KNOWING the creeps at United would bump somebody for her.
Sheila Jackson Lee gets a white woman bumped from a seat.
White woman complains.
Sheila Jackson Lee is the victim of racial oppression.
I think this is the nutshell version.
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