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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/17/2013 10:11:18 AM

Is this Trayvon Martin column in the Washington Post racist?


Hooded sweatshirts are "worn by a whole lot of thugs," writes columnist Richard Cohen.
Jon Terbush 17 hours ago
The Week
Longtime columnist Richard Cohen says George Zimmerman "understandably suspected" a black teen in a hoodie was up to no good

Longtime Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen arguedTuesday that George Zimmerman was justified in suspecting Trayvon Martin of being a criminal because Martin was black and wearing a hoodie.

Calling it an "Orwellian exercise in political correctness" to pretend blacs are not more likely than whites to commit violent crimes, Cohen wrote that Zimmerman's assumption was not rooted in racism, but rather in hard evidence.

I don't like what George Zimmerman did, and I hate that Trayvon Martin is dead. But I also can understand why Zimmerman was suspicious and why he thought Martin was wearing a uniform we all recognize. I don't know whether Zimmerman is a racist. But I'm tired of politicians and otherswho have donned hoodies in solidarity with Martin and who essentially suggest that, for recognizing the reality of urban crime in the United States, I am a racist. The hoodie blinds them as much as it did Zimmerman. [Washington Post]

In a subsequent interview with Politico, Cohen explained that by "uniform" he specifically meant hoodies, the preferred clothing that's "worn by a whole lot of thugs."

"Look in the newspapers, online or on television: you see a lot of guys in the mugshots wearing hoodies," hesaid.

The column sparked an immediate backlash and accusations that Cohen was himself racist — whether he knows it or not.

In 1986, the Post apologized for a Cohen column that said jewelry store owners were justified in assuming young black men would rob them, and could therefore refuse to allow them into their shops.

Cohen told Politico he was only trying to explain in his latest column why it wasn't necessarily racist to stereotype people.

"I don't think it's racism to say, 'this person looks like a menace,'" he said. "Now, a menace in another part of the country could be a white guy wearing a wife-beater under-shirt. Or, if you're a black guy in the South and you come around the corner and you see a member of the Klu Klux Klan."

Cohen said when it came to violent crime, statistics supported his argument. He justified New York City's controversial stop-and-frisk program — a policy the ACLU considers an overt case of racial profiling — by arguing that because young black men make up the vast majority of the city's shooting suspects, it made sense for police to target them when searching the streets for guns.

"The public knows young black males commit a disproportionate amount of crime," he wrote. "We know them from the nightly news."

Yet as ThinkProgress' Zack Beauchamp pointed out, the facts don't bear Cohen out.

Is Cohen’s basic claim — that higher rates of black crime make it reasonable to suspect black men of being criminals — true?

No. First, the basic assumption, that black men are more likely to commit crimes than the average member of another demographic, isn’t nearly as well-founded as Cohen wants it to be. For instance, blacks and whites use drugs at rates basically proportionate to the population: blacks are 14 percent of Americans and 14 percent of monthly drug users. Yet blacks are at least four times as likely as whites to be incarcerated for a drug crime. Could that have something to do with attitudes like Cohen’s? [ThinkProgress]

In a lengthy analysis at The Daily Beast, Jamelle Bouie elaborates on perceived notions of black crime:

Nor are African-Americans especially criminal. If they were, you would still see high rates of crime among blacks, even as the nation sees a historic decline in criminal offenses. Instead, crime rates among African-Americans, and black youth in particular, have taken a sharp drop. In Washington, D.C., for example, fewer than 10 percent of black youth are in a gang, have sold drugs, have carried a gun, or have stolen more than $100 in goods. [The Daily Beast]

Furthermore, as Elspeth Reeve at The Atlantic Wire noted, the gated community in Sanford, Fla, where Martin was killed is not New York City:

"Urban crime" is shorthand for young black people committing crimes in big cities on the verge of collapse. But Martin wasn't killed in Cabrini-Green. He was killed in Sanford, Florida (population 53,570), inside a gated community called the Retreat at Twin Lakes, which has about 260 townhouses. The alleged crime was a suburban crime. And, just for the record, it was not the black kid who was just acquitted of it. [The Atlantic Wire]

In other words, the staring-you-in-the-face facts that Cohen claims to have on his side appear to be very shaky. Which makes you wonder where Cohen's assumptions came from in the first place.

But the Post has stood by the column, citing the need to offer an array of opinions.

"I think if people want a 'conversation about race,' as is frequently suggested, they should be open to a range of views and perspectives," the Post's editorial page editor, Fred Hiatt, told the Huffington Post. "If people don't like a particular opinion, my feeling is they should respond to it, not seek to stifle it."

Hiatt's explanation hardly quelled the criticism:

Read more

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/17/2013 10:22:22 AM

4 jurors distance themselves from Juror B37


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A woman wears a sticker supporting Trayvon Martin during a peaceful protest of the acquittal of George Zimmerman for the 2012 shooting death of Martin, in Los Angeles, California July 15, 2013. REUTERS/Jonathan Alcorn

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Four of the jurors at the George Zimmerman trial distanced themselves late Tuesday from statements that another juror made in a televised interview.

The four jurors issued a brief statement on court stationary saying that the opinions expressed by Juror B37 to CNN's Anderson Cooper on Monday night are not representative of their views.

"The opinions of Juror B37, expressed on the Anderson Cooper show were her own, and not in any way representative of the jurors listed below," said the statement, signed by Jurors B51, B76, E6 and E40.

Juror B37 said the actions of Zimmerman and 17-year-old Trayvon Martin both led to the teenager's fatal shooting last year, but that Zimmerman didn't actually break the law.

The four other jurors said in their statement that Martin's death weighed on them.

"Serving on this jury has been a highly emotional and physically draining experience for each of us," the statement said. "The death of a teenager weighed heavily on our hearts but in the end we did what the law required us to do."

They also made a request for privacy. The court has not released the names of the six-woman jury, which included five whites and one woman who appeared to reporters to be Hispanic.

The interview came two days after the jury acquitted Zimmerman, a former neighborhood watch volunteer, of second-degree murder in the shooting death of Martin in a gated community in Sanford, Fla. Martin was black, and Zimmerman identifies himself as Hispanic. Zimmerman was not arrested for 44 days, and the delay in charging him led to protests from those who believed race was a factor in the handling of the case.

While prosecutors accused Zimmerman of profiling Martin, Zimmerman maintained he acted in self-defense. He claimed Martin was slamming his head into the concrete sidewalk when he fired the gun.

In the CNN interview, Juror B37 said she didn't believe that Zimmerman followed Martin because of his race. She said Zimmerman made some mistakes, but that she believed Martin struck Zimmerman first and that the neighborhood watch volunteer had a right to defend himself.

Juror B37 said the jurors were initially divided on Zimmerman's guilt, with three jurors believing he was guilty of either manslaughter or second-degree murder, but that the jury agreed to acquit the 29-year-old Zimmerman after more closely reviewing the law.

In a part of the interview that aired Tuesday, Juror B37 said it wouldn't have made much difference if Zimmerman had testified at trial since she believes he would have gave the same story he gave investigators in videotaped police interviews that were played at the trial.

Juror B37 said at one point it appeared they might be heading to a hung jury as another juror wanted to leave. The other jurors convinced her to stay.

Juror B37 said a block of concrete that defense attorney Mark O'Mara placed in front of jurors during closing arguments made an impression, as did photos of Zimmerman's bloodied head. She also believed Martin's actions contributed to his death.

"I think George got in a little bit too deep, which he shouldn't have been there, but Trayvon decided that he wasn't going to let him scare him and get the one-over, up on him or something," she said. "I think Trayvon got mad and attacked him. "

By not walking away from the confrontation, the juror said of Martin, "I believe he played a huge role in his death."

___

Follow Mike Schneider on Twitter: http://twitter.com/mikeschneiderap


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/17/2013 10:27:19 AM

'The Daily Show' Has a New Motto for Florida: 'The Worst State'

The Atlantic Wire

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The Daily Show' Has a New Motto for Florida: 'The Worst State'

By Steve Gorman and Dana Feldman

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Hundreds of protesters staged boisterous but peaceful protests in Los Angeles and San Francisco late on Tuesday against the acquittal of a neighborhood watch volunteer charged with murdering unarmed black teenager Trayvon Martin.

Police and civic leaders appealed for calm but braced for more unrest after nearly two dozen people were arrested in Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay area late on Monday in a second night of protests over a case that has captivated and polarized the U.S. public on race, gun and self-defense laws.

Protesters said they were angry at what they saw as a miscarriage of justice in the verdict reached on Saturday by Florida jurors who found George Zimmerman, the white-Hispanic man who shot Martin, not guilty of murder or manslaughter.

Public comments from one of the six jurors stoked anger further as they were widely regarded as too sympathetic toward Zimmerman, who said he acted in self-defense. He was accused of having singled out Martin as suspicious because he was black.

CNN said on Tuesday four other jurors released a statement distancing themselves from the juror's comments.

About 100 demonstrators, many of them holding placards bearing Martin's likeness, gathered in front of City Hall in downtown Los Angeles early in the evening chanting, "Your son, our son. We are all Trayvon" and "No justice, no peace."

"This is not just a protest. It's a movement for justice all across the country," organizer Eugene Puryear, 27, from Washington, D.C., shouted to the crowd. "We won't get off the streets until there's justice for Trayvon Martin."

Puryear told reporters the aim of the rallies in various cities was to tap into anger over the verdict and "to channel that into a mass movement to attack the root of the problem."

"Trayvon Martin can be a symbol for a movement that says, 'No more' to racist violence, 'no more' to oppression and exploitation," he said.

About eight miles away in the predominantly black Crenshaw District, scores of people assembled on Tuesday evening in a public park as a steady stream of passing motorists honked their horns in support. Police helicopters were overhead.

The scene was loud but peaceful, with police staying mostly on the sidelines while making their presence known.

"This is supposed to be a peaceful demonstration, and we should respect the wishes of Trayvon's mother and father because they said that they don't want any violence," said Lawrence Warren, who was at the park with members of his family in tow.

MONDAY RAMPAGE

On Monday night, a crowd estimated by police to have numbered 150 went on a rampage blocks away from the park, setting trash on fire, smashing windows and assaulting a television news crew. Fourteen people were arrested, most of them accused of disobeying orders to disperse.

Mayor Eric Garcetti later called for members of the public to exercise restraint and to avoid letting "passions" sparked by the case "ignite this city." Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck said officers would take a "much stricter posture".

Police Commander Andrew Smith said minor infractions tolerated by police on Sunday and Monday, such as blocking traffic, would not be overlooked on Tuesday.

The LAPD's show of force would be "significantly above" the 300 to 350 officers present on Monday, he said. "The message is very clear: We expect everyone to act in a lawful manner."

Well after night fell, demonstrators in Los Angeles appeared to be heeding those warnings, though at one point, fireworks were set off about a block away from the park.

In San Francisco, about 150 people gathered at a rally that went off without incident on the steps of San Francisco City Hall on Tuesday evening.

About a third of the protesters wore hooded sweatshirts, or "hoodies," similar to the one Martin wore on the night of his death, and a single red sign popped up from the center of the crowd that read "Stand up for Justice." Some attendees held candles decorated with images of Martin's face.

Lynn Banks, 55, an account manager who attended the protest with her son, said Zimmerman's acquittal left her heartbroken.

"My first thought was there is no hope for my son coming up in this world," she said. "We pass a Zimmerman every day - a wannabe cop that has an issue with young black men."

In Oakland, across the bay from San Francisco, police arrested one person at a small protest, police spokesman Randy Wingate said.

About 250 protesters swarmed downtown streets of the city on Monday night, vandalizing cars and businesses and scrawling graffiti. Nine people were arrested.

No serious injuries were reported in either Oakland or Los Angeles on Monday, but officials urged organizers to keep further protests peaceful.

A statement signed by Oakland Mayor Jean Quan and other city officials called the death of Martin "a tragic event felt throughout the community," adding the city was committed to "supporting peaceful assembly and freedom of speech" following the "emotional" verdict.

Some Oakland residents on Tuesday criticized the city's police department for what they saw as a failure to prepare for demonstrations following the verdict.

"It didn't seem as if Oakland watched the trial," Evelyn Hogan-Jackson told the City Council. "I'm really tired of paying for your mistakes, of paying for your lack of planning."

Assistant Chief Paul Figueroa said Zimmerman's acquittal caught his department off guard on Saturday night and the police insufficiently staffed the protests on Sunday and Monday nights.

He said the city had its largest contingent of officers out on Tuesday night, and the interim police chief planned to meet with business leaders on Wednesday to discuss the situation.

"This violence is unacceptable," he said.

(Reporting and writing by Steve Gorman; additional reporting by Ronnie Cohen and Laila Kearney in San Francisco; Editing by Cynthia Johnston, David Brunnstrom, Tim Gaynor and Elizabeth Piper)


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/17/2013 10:30:50 AM

California protests at Trayvon Martin verdict peaceful


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People march during a rally organized by the Act Now to Stop War and End Racism (ANSWER) coalition to protest the acquittal of George Zimmerman for the shooting death of Florida teenager Trayvon Martin, in Los Angeles, California July 16, 2013. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni

By Steve Gorman and Dana Feldman

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Hundreds of protesters staged boisterous but peaceful protests in Los Angeles and San Francisco late on Tuesday against the acquittal of a neighborhood watch volunteer charged with murdering unarmed black teenager Trayvon Martin.

Police and civic leaders appealed for calm but braced for more unrest after nearly two dozen people were arrested in Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay area late on Monday in a second night of protests over a case that has captivated and polarized the U.S. public on race, gun and self-defense laws.

Protesters said they were angry at what they saw as a miscarriage of justice in the verdict reached on Saturday by Florida jurors who found George Zimmerman, the white-Hispanic man who shot Martin, not guilty of murder or manslaughter.

Public comments from one of the six jurors stoked anger further as they were widely regarded as too sympathetic toward Zimmerman, who said he acted in self-defense. He was accused of having singled out Martin as suspicious because he was black.

CNN said on Tuesday four other jurors released a statement distancing themselves from the juror's comments.

About 100 demonstrators, many of them holding placards bearing Martin's likeness, gathered in front of City Hall in downtown Los Angeles early in the evening chanting, "Your son, our son. We are all Trayvon" and "No justice, no peace."

"This is not just a protest. It's a movement for justice all across the country," organizer Eugene Puryear, 27, from Washington, D.C., shouted to the crowd. "We won't get off the streets until there's justice for Trayvon Martin."

Puryear told reporters the aim of the rallies in various cities was to tap into anger over the verdict and "to channel that into a mass movement to attack the root of the problem."

"Trayvon Martin can be a symbol for a movement that says, 'No more' to racist violence, 'no more' to oppression and exploitation," he said.

About eight miles away in the predominantly black Crenshaw District, scores of people assembled on Tuesday evening in a public park as a steady stream of passing motorists honked their horns in support. Police helicopters were overhead.

The scene was loud but peaceful, with police staying mostly on the sidelines while making their presence known.

"This is supposed to be a peaceful demonstration, and we should respect the wishes of Trayvon's mother and father because they said that they don't want any violence," said Lawrence Warren, who was at the park with members of his family in tow.

MONDAY RAMPAGE

On Monday night, a crowd estimated by police to have numbered 150 went on a rampage blocks away from the park, setting trash on fire, smashing windows and assaulting a television news crew. Fourteen people were arrested, most of them accused of disobeying orders to disperse.

Mayor Eric Garcetti later called for members of the public to exercise restraint and to avoid letting "passions" sparked by the case "ignite this city." Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck said officers would take a "much stricter posture".

Police Commander Andrew Smith said minor infractions tolerated by police on Sunday and Monday, such as blocking traffic, would not be overlooked on Tuesday.

The LAPD's show of force would be "significantly above" the 300 to 350 officers present on Monday, he said. "The message is very clear: We expect everyone to act in a lawful manner."

Well after night fell, demonstrators in Los Angeles appeared to be heeding those warnings, though at one point, fireworks were set off about a block away from the park.

In San Francisco, about 150 people gathered at a rally that went off without incident on the steps of San Francisco City Hall on Tuesday evening.

About a third of the protesters wore hooded sweatshirts, or "hoodies," similar to the one Martin wore on the night of his death, and a single red sign popped up from the center of the crowd that read "Stand up for Justice." Some attendees held candles decorated with images of Martin's face.

Lynn Banks, 55, an account manager who attended the protest with her son, said Zimmerman's acquittal left her heartbroken.

"My first thought was there is no hope for my son coming up in this world," she said. "We pass a Zimmerman every day - a wannabe cop that has an issue with young black men."

In Oakland, across the bay from San Francisco, police arrested one person at a small protest, police spokesman Randy Wingate said.

About 250 protesters swarmed downtown streets of the city on Monday night, vandalizing cars and businesses and scrawling graffiti. Nine people were arrested.

No serious injuries were reported in either Oakland or Los Angeles on Monday, but officials urged organizers to keep further protests peaceful.

A statement signed by Oakland Mayor Jean Quan and other city officials called the death of Martin "a tragic event felt throughout the community," adding the city was committed to "supporting peaceful assembly and freedom of speech" following the "emotional" verdict.

Some Oakland residents on Tuesday criticized the city's police department for what they saw as a failure to prepare for demonstrations following the verdict.

"It didn't seem as if Oakland watched the trial," Evelyn Hogan-Jackson told the City Council. "I'm really tired of paying for your mistakes, of paying for your lack of planning."

Assistant Chief Paul Figueroa said Zimmerman's acquittal caught his department off guard on Saturday night and the police insufficiently staffed the protests on Sunday and Monday nights.

He said the city had its largest contingent of officers out on Tuesday night, and the interim police chief planned to meet with business leaders on Wednesday to discuss the situation.

"This violence is unacceptable," he said.

(Reporting and writing by Steve Gorman; additional reporting by Ronnie Cohen and Laila Kearney in San Francisco; Editing by Cynthia Johnston, David Brunnstrom, Tim Gaynor and Elizabeth Piper)


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/17/2013 4:08:27 PM
This Is How the American Justice System is Plagued by Racism









Written by Judd Legum

George Zimmerman killed one boy, 17-year-old Trayvon Martin. Although a Florida jury found Zimmerman not guilty, his attitude — that a young black male is an object of suspicion and contempt — not only cost Martin his life but has infected the entire United States criminal justice system.

Law professor Michellle Alexander makes the point powerfully: “It is the Zimmerman mindset that must be found guilty – far more than the man himself. It is a mindset that views black men and boys as nothing but a threat, good for nothing, up to no good no matter who they are or what they are doing. It is the Zimmerman mindset that has birthed a penal system unprecedented in world history, and relegated millions to a permanent undercaste.”

The statistics back up Alexander’s point. Minorities, especially the six million young black men in America, get much worse outcomes from the criminal justice system for the same conduct:

1. A black male born in 2001 has a 32% chance of spending some portion of his life in prison. A white male born the same year has just a 6% chance. [Sentencing Project]

2. In major American cities, as many as 80% of young African-American men have criminal records. [Michelle Alexander, The New Jim Crow]

3. African-Americans who use drugs are more than four times as likely to be incarcerated than whites who use drugs. African Americans constitute 14% of the population and 14% of monthly drug users. But African-Americans respresent 34% of those arrested for a drug offense and 53% of those sentenced to prison for a drug offense. [American Bar Association]

4. In seven states, African Americans constitute 80% or more of all drug offenders sent to prison. [Michelle Alexander, The New Jim Crow]

5. Black students are three and a half times as likely to be suspended or expelled than their white peers. One in five black boys receive an out-of-school suspension. Education Secretary Arne Duncan who commissioned the study, said “The undeniable truth is that the everyday education experience for too many students of color violates the principle of equity at the heart of the American promise.” [New York Times]

6. Black youth who are referred to juvenile court are much more likely to be detained, referred to adult court or end up in adult prison than their white counterparts. Blacks represented 28% of juvenile arrests, 30% of referrals to juvenile court, 37% of the detained population, 35% of youth judicially waived to criminal court and 58% of youth admitted to state adult prison. [National Council on Crime And Deliquency]

7. The United States imprisons a larger percentage of its black population than South Africa did at the height of apartheid.[Michelle Alexander, The New Jim Crow]

In 2004, the Amerian Bar Association created a commission which produced recommendation to address “racial and ethnic bias in the criminal justice system.” Thus far, their recommendations have been largely ignored in much of the country.

This post was originally published at ThinkProgress.

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