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Thursday, December 25, 2014

They Didn't Just Try Children As Adults, Not the Young Black Males Anyway...



     Well, it's not 'Today in Black History', but it is something that I’m sure not too many people know about, and I thought it was worth posting. Perhaps this will wake one or two people up to what is really happening in the streets today. IMO, they don’t seem to understand that this rash of young black males being killed in the street by the servants of the so-called legal system has not just started happening. This has been going on for more years than I am old; the difference is that we have now become a ‘cyber’ nation. It’s no longer just the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal informing the nation of what they want them to know; now there are news outlets everywhere, and they are all able to communicate with all the readers of the world, thanks to the power of cyber electronics. The news that this is not the only country suffering this plague of racial profiling, stereotyping, and ‘KWB’ (Killing While Black) can now be spread throughout the world in a matter of seconds. Everyone is now finding out these things are happening as soon as they happen, not years later, and they are feeling the hurt and anger right away. Because they haven’t been hearing it however, they think it is something new… Sorry to disappoint you folks:

George Stinney Jr, age 14

I found this article completely amazing, and not just because they waited 70 years to exonerate him. Look at him closely, and think about the name of this blogpost…

Monday, December 1, 2014

Today In Black History (and a Little of My Opinion)

It’s ironic that the whole Darren Wilson/Michael Brown thing should be going on right now. Many people are holding up cases like this one and others (Trayvon Martin, Eric Gardner, Tamir Rice) as evidence that blacks have not come as far as they thought they had in the fight for equality, that all the ground we thought we’d gained has actually been nothing but a mere footstep. (And some feel that we’re being pushed back so that we lose that footstep!) It’s just sad, that on a day like today when we should be commemorating how far this country has come toward equality for all, we are instead commiserating with parents whose children have been snatched away from them by a police system that was supposed to be in place “To Protect and Serve”.
Today in Black History, in 1955, an event occurred which at the time seemed momentous; an event that sparked the flame that was The Civil Rights Movement. December 1, 1955 was the day that one lone young woman made a decision which, at the time, didn’t seem like it would generate the national controversy that followed.
Rosa Parks at work
Rosa Parks on the bus
Rosa Parks mug shot
On this day in black history a young lady, tired from a long day at work, took a seat on a Metro bus and prepared herself for the ride home. What she didn’t prepare herself for was to be screamed at, called names, taken to jail like a common criminal, and then hailed as a national hero for helping to launch the civil rights struggle into the country’s collective consciousness. The woman?
The woman was Rosa Parks, who went from an unknown faceless black woman in the back of the bus to a woman with a mug shot, whose face was known everywhere and by everyone in the time it took to ride the bus home. She didn’t want the fame, or the notariety, but when it was thrust upon her she didn’t shirk her reponsibility.      
So many people are up in arms about what’s happened in Ferguson, and unfortunately many of them are resorting to looting and burning, as if that is going to change anything… imo, it not only won’t effect any positive changes, it further cements the stereotypical picture that white America already has. The few strides we had made did not come about because of violence, they came about through the work of peaceful activists like Martin Luther King. They didn’t come about through big  “die-ins”, where large numbers of people suffered financially and feared for their lives, where there was no regard for who the owners of those stores were or what their sympathies were. Those strides came about through certain stores/bus companies/restaurants which were known to discriminate being boycotted, and staging peaceful sit-ins; no violence, no threats, no profanity, just quiet dignity. What Rosa Parks did led to public transportation being integrated so that everyone could ride in any seat on the bus they chose without fear of being told to move, or risking arrest or even a beating, and she did not even set out to do it! She was merely a tired woman who had worked hard that day and didn’t see why she should have to get up.
The young men that have been killed, the men and women who have been abused by the police department, we should not mar their memories with all this violence and unrest. For the parents to specifically ask that people not link their son’s name with all the rioting, and for those people to ignore their pleas… well, it just makes me so sad. This is how her son will be remembered.
We should be commemorating the struggle that was fought for us so many years ago; remembering the people like Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks; carrying on their work, instead of taking part in this mindless, useless, violence.

On this day in Black History, a tired young woman named Rosa Parks sat quietly in a bus seat, and forever changed the way the country treated black people.