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#BlackLivesMatter
7/13/2016 9:02:25 PM
Black Lives Matter Protests Go Global, From Ireland to South Africa

America’s Black Lives Matter movement has jumped continents in the wake of recent fatal police shootings of black men in the United States.

From Europe to Africa, people around the world are marching in solidarity for America’s grassroots campaign for racial justice and against excessive use of force by police, following the officer-involved shootings of two black men last week whose final moments were captured in shocking video footage that went viral online.

Alton Sterling, 37, was shot and killed by white police officers while being held on the ground outside a convenience store in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on July 5. A day later, 32-year-old Philando Castile was fatally shot by a police officer during a traffic stop in Falcon Heights, Minnesota.

In Ireland, hundreds of people gathered on Tuesday for protest rallies in Cork, Dublin and Galway.

In London, people showed up for rallies in the British capital over the weekend to show their solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement in the United States.

PHOTO: Hundreds of protestors march down Park Lane, London, July 10, 2016 as part of the Black Lives Matter movement in protest of the recent shootings of black people in the United States.Retna/Photoshot
Hundreds of protestors march down Park Lane, London, July 10, 2016 as part of the Black Lives Matter movement in protest of the recent shootings of black people in the United States.more +

In Amsterdam, hundreds gathered at Dam Square on Sunday wearing signs on their backs that read, “Don’t shoot -- I’m Trayvon Martin,” in reference to the 2012 fatal shooting of a black teen by George Zimmerman, who was acquitted of second-degree murder and manslaughter three years ago today.

In Berlin, protesters staged a "die-in" at Potsdamer Platz on Sunday and read aloud a list of the names of the black men and women killed by police in the United States.

PHOTO: Demonstrators hold a banner with the motto of the black civil rights movement Black Lives Matter to show their solidarity with African Americans in the USA, in Berlin, Germany, July 10, 2016.Wolfram Steinberg/EPA
Demonstrators hold a banner with the motto of the black civil rights movement 'Black Lives Matter' to show their solidarity with African Americans in the USA, in Berlin, Germany, July 10, 2016.more +

In Cape Town, South Africa, dozens of members from the Black Solidarity Action group marched on the U.S. consulate this morning to denounce the officer-involved killings of black Americans. They held signs that read “Black Lives Matter globally,” “stop killing blacks” and “black pride,” among other messages.

PHOTO: South Africans protest in support of the #BlackLivesMatter movement outside the US embassy in Cape Town, South Africa, July 13, 2016. Nic Bothma/EPA
South Africans protest in support of the #BlackLivesMatter movement outside the US embassy in Cape Town, South Africa, July 13, 2016. more +

PHOTO: South Africans face police as they protest in support of the #BlackLivesMatter movement outside the US embassy in Cape Town, South Africa, July 13, 2016.Nic Bothma/EPA
South Africans face police as they protest in support of the #BlackLivesMatter movement outside the US embassy in Cape Town, South Africa, July 13, 2016.more +

The demonstrations in Europe and Africa come after thousands have protested across the United States.

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RE: #BlackLivesMatter
7/14/2016 4:13:49 AM

No Decent Person Ever Said Black Lives Don’t Matter

The 'Ferguson Effect' is real


Demonstrators from the Black Lives Matter movement march through central London on July 10, 2016, during a demonstration against the killing of black men by police in the US. Police arrested scores of people in demonstrations overnight Saturday to Sunday in several US cities, as racial tensions simmer over the killing of black men by police. / AFP / DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS

Black Lives Matter demonstrators. (Photo: DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/AFP/Getty Images)

The Dallas police massacre has shocked major media outlets that managed to miss—or ignore—The War On Cops that began with the 2014 Ferguson, Missouri death of Michael Brown and accelerated with Baltimore’s riots following the death of Freddy Gray.

In the wake of the Dallas slaughter, community and civic leaders, especially the exceptional Dallas Chief of Police David Brown, provided first decisive then reassuring and unifying leadership.

Chief Brown gets credit for decisive leadership in crisis: He saw good men murdered in a sophisticated ambush. The sniper occupied a fortified position and promised to fight to the death. So Chief Brown gave the order to kill the sniper using a bomb delivered by an unmanned ground vehicle. No more good guys were at risk. The bomb limited collateral damage—Dallas wouldn’t repeat Philadelphia’s 1985 mistake when a police helicopter dropped a bomb on a bunkered position occupied by an armed black militants shooting at police. The bomb caused a fire and destroyed over 60 homes.

In Ferguson 2014 and Baltimore 2015, violence continued unabated.

Leaders in Ferguson and Baltimore were confused, lacked decisiveness and feared their own people. They also feared the accusation of racism and fascism from radical activists. If anything, they magnified a highly questionable yet fashionable media narrative, that police in America kill young black American men at statistically heinous rates. (They don’t, but major media have been slow to recognize the fact.)

In Dallas, however, there is sadness, not riot. The language of Dallas’ civic leaders has been somber and reflective. A somber, reflective peace has settled on Dallas.

The opening minutes of the July 8 press conference conducted by Mayor Mike Rawlings and Chief Brown are illustrative.

Mayor Rawlings thanks Texas state leaders for their assistance and thanks President Barack Obama for his expression of concern. He reassures the people of Dallas that his administration’s number one job is to make certain their city is safe (a pertinent echo of New York mayor Rudy Giuliani’s reassurance during the far graver disaster of 9-11).

Rawlings praises Chief Brown. He clearly backs Chief Brown and his officers. Then the mayor wisely steps aside and Brown takes the mike—with eloquence: “We’re hurting,” he says. “Our profession is hurting… Dallas officers are hurting… We are heartbroken. There are no words to describe the atrocity that occurred to our city. All I know is this, this must stop, this divisiveness.”

Stop this divisiveness. The statement is a victory for sanity and honesty. Brown understands the price of violent divisiveness. He lost a police patrol partner in a gun battle. Drug dealers murdered his brother. His troubled son died in a firefight with police, after his son killed two people, one of them a policeman.

On July 8 Senator Tim Scott addressed the Dallas atrocity with similar grace. Senator Scott tackled it from the immensely difficult national perspective of incidents “involving law enforcement and black men.”

Speaking with the gentle power of thoughtful compassion Scott said: “There is absolutely no rationale for targeting law enforcement officers… these actions are truly reprehensible… even during the tragedy we saw the heroism of our brave law enforcement officers as they helped people to safety… Reacting to violence with violence will only lead to more heartache.”

The Senator then quoted Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.: “Returning violence for violence multiplies violence, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. We cannot, will not, let hate win…”

Scott believes that “understanding how our neighbors see the world” is an essential American obligation.

Stop this divisiveness.

* * *

But who has benefited from the division?

No sane person ever said black lives didn’t matter or that racial prejudice doesn’t exist in America—quite the opposite. But two or three short weeks ago try and whisper “all lives matter” much less “blue lives matter” (ie, the lives of law enforcement officers) and Black Lives Matter activists, their political allies and their friendly media pals would have scorned your words as gutter racism.

Black Lives Matter activists and their propagandists have waged a very effective War On Honesty. Black Lives Matter leaders employ vicious charges of racism to silence political opponents, or, failing that, deter media criticism of their radical tactics, which include violent language and occasional violent incidents. The goal is political provocation and divisiveness. Yes, Black Lives Matter benefits as an organization from divisiveness. It serves their political goals.

Exploiting a violent incident to spur divisiveness has also served the political goals of the Democratic Party. Recall the January 2011 shooting of U.S. Representative Gabby Giffords, which biased major media managed to blame on Sarah Palin—especially in the immediate, emotionally explosive aftermath.

It is a fact that Governor Palin’s Facebook page included a map with rifle scope cross hairs marking Democratic Party-controlled House districts that Republicans wished to defeat in the next election.

But suddenly this rather common icon tied Palin to an atrocity ripe for exploitation by leftist operatives with bylines. Instead of somber rhetorical reflection, they spewed hate.

Mike Daly in The New York Daily News, waging over-the-top War on Honesty, wrote: “But anyone with any sense at all knows that violent language can incite actual violence, that metaphor can incite murder.”

Paul Krugman of The New York Times just had to add his usual polemical nonsense.

Krugman hedged his accusation of murder, but barely: “We don’t have proof yet that this was political, but the odds are that it was.” Krugman rambled through dark references to Palin, the Tea Party, Republicans—you know, the monsters that live under Krugman’s bed.

To her credit, Palin fired back and claimed libel.

As for President Barack Obama? He weighed in a bit late. He called for civility. He called for free discussion beyond partisanship—then, lo and behold, he mentioned gun control.

Yes, he used the opportunity to flack one of his favored and highly-partisan political programs. His propaganda hides between the lines, but it’s there—oppose gun control and somehow you share responsibility for future Tucson-like atrocities.

The Tucson shooter, Jared Lee Loughner, turned out to be a nut with hard left sympathies—much like Dallas sniper Micah X. Johnson.

* * *

A brief sampler of Obama’s use of violent metaphors in political speech:

“If they bring a knife to the fight, we bring a gun,” Obama said at a Philadelphia fundraiser in June 2008. “Because, from what I understand, folks in Philly like a good brawl. I’ve seen Eagles fans.”

March 2009: “I don’t want to quell anger. I think people are right to be angry. I’m angry.”

Yes, it is all constitutionally protected.

Should we be surprised? Harsh rhetoric to enthuse supporters and thrill media and sharp, partisan divisiveness are the tactical tools of “community organizing” as practiced by the American Left. Obama began his career as a “community organizer.”

* * *

With the Dallas slaughter, Black Lives Matter has lost—at least temporarily—the perceived moral advantage most mainstream media granted the firebrand organization.

Former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani—the stoic presence of 9-11—believes the Dallas atrocity exposes Black Lives Matter as what it is: an inherently racist organization.

“When you say black lives matter, that’s inherently racist,” Giuliani said during the interview. “Black lives matter. White lives matter. Asian lives matter. Hispanic lives matter. That’s anti-American, and it’s racist.”

Giuliani also said Black Lives Matter had a tendency to focus on killings of blacks from police officers, rather than paying attention to cases where blacks killed each other.

A harsh statement? Yes, definitely. But an intellectually and factually invalid position? Only in the world where major media Wage War on Honesty.

Giuliani exposes the double game played by Black Lives Matter and their media allies. The very name is a tool of division. Fact is, the name amounts to race-baiting. No one sane and responsible ever said black lives don’t matter. In an action reminiscent of 1930s-era Fascist thugs, on August 9, 2015 Black Lives Matter activists shouted down Senator Bernie Sanders then mobbed the stage at a rally in Seattle.

Activists with Black Lives Matter halted a political rally in Seattle where Democratic presidential candidate Sanders was scheduled to speak on Saturday afternoon.

From MSNBC:

“We’re shutting this event down—now,” said an activist who suddenly leapt on stage. She approached the microphone where Sanders had just begun speaking, thanking attendees for welcoming him to “one of most progressive cities in the United States of America.” An event organizer attempted to stop the activist, and a heated exchange ensued as the crowd booed.

Eventually, activist Marissa Johnson was allowed to speak. “I was going to tell Bernie how racist this city is, even with all of these progressives, but you’ve already done that for me. Thank you,” she said, as some in the crowd called for her arrest.

Johnson then asked for a four-and-half-minute moment of silence to honor Michael Brown Jr., the black teenager who was killed by police in Ferguson, Missouri, a year ago. As the crowd grew more agitated, Johnson added that Sanders says he cares about grassroots movements, but, “The biggest grassroots movement in this country right now is Black Lives Matter.”

Agitation. Shouts. Mob action to seize the stage and microphone. Then the appeal to the memory of the martyred Michael Brown, murdered by police.

Except he wasn’t murdered. He was killed, while fighting with a police officer.

A grand jury refused to indict the police officer who shot him, Officer Darren Wilson. Michael Brown had committed a crime and, rather than accept arrest, decided to fight.

The Volokh Conspiracy post dissects the various accusations that failure to indict demonstrated the legal system is flawed. The worst of these accusations goes something like this: the system is inherently racist. There is no justice for black men in America. Who benefits from this vicious accusation? Activist organizations like Black Lives Matter—which used Michael Brown to spur hate right there in Seattle. Oh, yes—leftist academics who build careers on embedded grievance studies, they also benefit.

The Ferguson Effect” is factual.

“…crime increased in cities after violent protests against police occurred.”

The War On Cops “serves ideological, not policing, goals.”

As quoted in National Review, author and expert on policing Heather Mac Donald was the first to identify the Ferguson Effect, “which she traces to anti-police rhetoric and then the resulting wariness of police to enforce the law and arrest lawbreakers. Academics who initially challenged the reasons for this wave of violence have now largely retracted that challenge. This is part of a larger movement of what she calls ‘the DE legitimation of law and order.'”

Yes, a victory for truth. Divisiveness that undermines law and order hardens a radical activist’s grip on the community he seeks to organize—and politically control.

* * *

Dallas seems to have made an impression on Obama.

Though he refuses to speculate on Michael X. Johnson’s motives for murdering police en masse, he has so far refrained from exploiting the tragedy.

In 2008 Barack Obama was touted as a racial healer. He would do more for the old racist U.S. than any prior president, with the possible exception of Abraham Lincoln.

But Obama’s healing would extend beyond race. He—his personhood—was a force. Obama was the promised Great Uniter.

In 2016—after the Dallas police massacre—it’s reasonable to ask if Obama has healed or harmed race relations and if, in retrospect, he is a Uniter or a Divider?

The Great Healer/Uniter message certainly looks like a propagandist’s War on Honesty. The Self-Serving Community Organizer And Occasional Divider Who Didn’t Unite America is a moniker Obama’s adoring press corps will resist and leftish academics will excoriate. However, the bleeding streets of Summer 2016, The War On Cops and a rising violent crime rate at least sketch a case that he has earned the name.

SEE ALSO: WAR ON HONESTY I, WAR ON HONESTY II, WAR ON HONESTY III, WAR ON HONESTY IV, WAR ON HONESTY V

Austin Bay is a contributing editor at StrategyPage.com and adjunct professor at the University of Texas in Austin. His most recent book is a biography of Kemal Ataturk (Macmillan 2011). Mr. Bay is a retired US Army Reserve colonel and Iraq veteran. He has a PhD in Comparative Literature from Columbia University.

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RE: #BlackLivesMatter
7/15/2016 10:16:42 PM
Woman in iconic Baton Rouge protest photo speaks out


A demonstrator protesting the shooting death of Alton Sterling is detained by law enforcement near the headquarters of the Baton Rouge Police Department in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, July 9, 2016.REUTERS/Jonathan Bachman A demonstrator protesting the shooting death of Alton Sterling is detained by law enforcement near the headquarters of the Baton Rouge Police Department in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, July 9, 2016.

A powerful image of a female protester dressed in a sundress, standing her ground against Baton Rouge police officers during protests after a police shooting took the internet by storm.

In her first-ever protest against police brutality, Ieshia Evans stood calmly in the middle of the street - despite being told not to do so - as officers in riot gear rushed towards her.

"It was silence. It was just a lot of nonverbal communication," Evans told "CBS This Morning" co-host Gayle King. "Sometimes, silence speaks volumes."

"What did you want your silence to say?" King asked.

Protests against police violence

"I'm human. I'm a woman. I'm a mom. I'm a nurse. I could be your nurse. I could be taking care of you. You know?" Evans said. "I'm here. We all matter. We don't have to beg to matter. We do matter."

Despite being confronted by police fully clad in body armor, Evans appears seemingly placid in the photo. She said she had "no fear in my body."

"It's when you see these officers and you see their gear... and I see his gun. They look impenetrable compared to me with no armor in the sundress... but there was no fear," Evans said.

The now-iconic photo has since been hailed as a symbol for peaceful demonstrations against police brutality. It has also been likened to photos captured in past civil rights protests as well as one of the takeover in Tienanmen Square in China that captured a man staring down the tank. For Evans, the comparisons give a powerful sense of a purpose.

"It means that God has chosen to put me in a position to make a difference, make a change," Evans said. "It is more than me, it is more than myself. So here I am, I have a responsibility to do something.

Evans was arrested for the first time shortly after the photo was taken, in what she said was her first protest against "all the injustices before."

"I felt like I was just a bystander and I had - you have a choice as a human being to do something or to not do something. I chose to go to work the other times during the other protests. I chose to pay those bills, to put the food in the refrigerator," Evans said. "Once the opportunity presented itself, it was just like, 'yeah, definitely.'"

When the video of Alton Sterling surfaced, Evans said she couldn't get herself to watch it right away.

"It literally rendered me numb. I couldn't cry, I couldn't scream, I couldn't break anything. I was just numb," Evans said.

Then another video of the police shooting death of Philando Castile in Minnesota surfaced the next day.


Black Lives Matter protests continue across the nation

"I felt something has to be done. Something has to be done," Evans said.

Her arrest from the protest called for an honest conversation with her six-year-old son, Justin.

"He said, 'why did you go to jail? I thought only bad people go to jail,'" Evans recalled. "I didn't have an answer for him. I told him that sometimes, that's not the case. And that was the best answer that I could give to my son at that moment."

But the experience has marked an important turning point for Evans.

"Do you see yourself as an activist?" King asked.

"Before this? Not really. I wouldn't really call myself an activist. I have a passion for my people. I love my people," Evans said. "So I never really considered myself to be in the definition of brave. But sometimes, jobs are given to you that you're not really-- you didn't apply for. You know?"


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