Tagged: complex social issue

“Employment discrimination law is at a crossroads. A wealth of interdisciplinary research suggests that the problem for the future of workplace equality is subtle and ‘structural’ rather than overt and individual. Race, sex, and other protected group characteristics will continue to factor into employment decisions, but the decisions are more likely to be driven by unconscious biases and stereotypes operating within a facilitating organizational context than by conscious animus operating in isolation. Recognizing that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the mainstay of legal prohibition on discrimination in employment, falls short of addressing the problem, legal scholars have begun to formulate a new paradigm of regulation that would impose an obligation on employers—through legal rights or otherwise—to take structural measures to minimize discriminatory bias in workplace decisionmaking. This ‘structural approach’ aims to minimize discriminatory decisionmaking at the individual level and to reduce unequal treatment in the workplace by pushing change at the organizational level in work environments and decisionmaking systems.”

Green said this eight years ago! Now employment discrimination law is on its deathbed, especially when the plaintiff is African American, due to the large number of ideologically conservative, white [male] federal judges that preside over these types of cases!!

Source Tristin K. Green. A Structural Approach as Antidiscrimination Mandate: Locating Employer Wrong. Vanderbilt Law Review. Pg. 850. 2007.

After attending that REPARATIONS meeting tonight in Harlem, I know a serious REVOLUTION is on the verge of taking place…

Some of the speakers in attendance at the Institute of the Black World’s (IBW) Opening/Welcoming Reparations Rally included Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Dr. Leonard Jeffries, Frantz Fanton’s daughter Mireille Fanon-Mendes [on my way home, the man sitting next to me on the train was reading Fanon’s Wretched of the Earth], UN Ambassador Rhonda King of St. Vincent and Dr. Adelaide Sanford. Also in attendance were various representatives from the Caribbean, who through the organization known CARICOM, are going after various European nations for reparations.

Overall, I have nothing but great things to say about the event. It was extremely informative and demonstrated in the words of Dr. Douglas Slater, that there was a “renaissance in the reparations movement” taking place, but I wish more people would have attended. As Rev. Jackson Sr. stated, both blacks and whites are afraid to address this issue  — albeit for different reasons — but black people must get over their fears or else we will continue to be exploited and experience this insidious genocide. As declared by the United Nations, January 1, 2015 marked the beginning of International Decade of People of African Descent. This is the decade in which the African personality will be restored and the Western world will pay for its egregious crimes against people of African descent!!

With all that having been said, I did find it strange that although this event took place at the historical Mother AME [AFRICAN Methodist Episcopal] Zion Church in Harlem, we were having a conversation about reparations while a huge mural containing a non-black Jesus and other figures, hung over our heads. Smdh!

MotherAMEZionInt2

The event was dedicated to the memory of Dr. Yosef Ben Jochannan, whose viewing was taking place a couple blocks away.

In the coming days, I will be posting quotes of statements that were made during the event that resonated with me.

Also, please note that while this 3-day event is taking place, our nation’s “first black President” is in the Caribbean, visiting Jamaica (where he spoke about the legalization and decriminalization of weed although black and brown people in the U.S. are disproportionately profiled, arrested and imprisoned for possession of this natural “drug”) and shaking hands with Raul Castro in Panama City while attending the Panama City for the Summit of the Americas…

if a company is intentionally breaking the law with “malice and/or reckless indifference” to the federally protected rights of African Americans, should the violator of the law have the power to determine who has exclusive jurisdiction to decide any aspect of a case against them if and once they are finally caught? is that conscionable or unconscionable?

NO BUENO! it was just announced that Attorney General Eric Holder is officially RESIGNING!! smdh.

This is sad on a number of levels. Although I feel Holder could have done more in the area of civil and human rights, I understand that there was only so much he could do within a historically white-controlled government. One cannot say that race is not relevant in the United States of America if Holder became the first African American Attorney General in the history of our nation (out of a total of 82) and was appointed to that position by our country’s “first black” President Barack H. Obama.

I would agree with the New York Times’ statement that Holder was one of the “most prominent liberal” voices in Obama’s administration, so if he leaves and Obama continues to remain silent about institutionalized, structural, systemic and social forms of white racism that are still taking place present day and destroying the black community [which has been acknowledged recently by the United Nations while President Obama still continues to avoid the issue], then it is highly unlikely that the next Attorney General will do any more than Holder in the area of civil and human rights, especially if they are white. I hope somebody proves me wrong, but if Congress [which is dominated by racist, ideologically conservative and highly ignorant white males] has anything to do with making that decision, there’s no possible way that they will appoint someone as “liberal” as Holder. And thus…the cycle continues…which means that until the cycle is eradicated entirely, things are only going to get worse, especially for African Americans.

It also seems like he wants and/or somebody wants him to get the fuck out of there, so I also wonder if Holder will have enough time to follow through on the promise he made to Mike Brown’s parents before he exits…

Source: Matt Appuzo. “Eric Holder Resigning As Attorney General.”  September 25, 2014. http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/26/us/politics/eric-holder-resigning-as-attorney-general.html.

The conclusions contained in the longitudinal study Discrimination and Desegregation: Equal Opportunity Progress in U.S. Private Sector Workplaces mirror the workplace trends of William Morris over the past four decades. This study was one of the “first to produce long-time trends on workplace equal employment outcomes” by comparing the fates of black, white, Hispanic and Asian men and women over a period of 36 years (from 1966 through 2002). The researchers concluded: “…from documenting these basic trends..while almost all workplaces have incorporated women and racial/ethnic minorities as employees, status segregation within workplaces remain very high, white males continue to have advantaged access to the best quality jobs, most racial progress in EEO stalled after 1980, and white women seem to have benefited the most from the struggles for EEO.”

an effect of Hollywood racism

“Black History: Lost, Stolen or Strayed” narrated by BILL COSBY (1968)

I’m just finding out that this Emmy Award winning documentary, which originally aired in 1968, is now available to watch on Youtube! I first read about this film while  writing my opposition to WME’s Motion to Compel Arbitrate and incorporated into my motion to help support that as a result of this company’s flagrant disregard of this nation’s antidiscrimination laws, arbitration was not an appropriate forum for this particular case and that no one individual should determine the merits of my claims. On July 20, 2011, Republican appointed federal judge P. Kevin Castel, erroneously compelled this landmark human rights and employment discrimination case into arbitration after “ignoring my argument, omitting pertinent facts and misapplying the law” — in clear violation of many of the Judicial Code of Conduct’s Canon.

For majority of Cosby’s career, he was represented by this racist Hollywood institution that  believes that one’s “race” is a prerequisite to being hired and ultimately promoted to Agent and refers to African Americans as “nigger,” “nigga,” “coon” and other racially derogatory terms in their e-mails. Currently, he is represented by rival agency Creative Artists Agency, which also believes and does the same.

Since learning about this doc, I have always wondered: Given Cosby’s knowledge of history, as demonstrated by his involvement with a film like this, why hasn’t he spoken out against the discriminatory employment & business practices, policies and procedures  of William Morris, NBC and other predominately all-White/”Jewish”institutions that have sought to “freeze” the status quo in decision-making positions throughout Hollywood? I ask, because a few years ago, Cosby was very vocal in his chastisement of the African American community, while forgetting to acknowledge the “source” still responsible for our collective problems today (e.g. global white supremacy (racism)). Smh.

In Leonard Rowe’s case, Cosby was actually deposed and gave a deposition. I’m going to find it the deposition and upload it later.

“Why are the federal courts so hostile to discrimination claims?”

Each year, the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts holds an extraordinary panel. All active judges are present to answer questions from the bar. A lawyer’s question one year was particularly provocative: “Why are the federal courts so hostile to discrimination claims?” One judge after another insisted that there was no hostility. All they were doing when they dismissed employment discrimination cases was following the law—nothing more, nothing less.

I disagreed. Federal courts, I believed, were hostile to discrimination cases. Although the judges may have thought they were entirely unbiased, the outcomes of those cases told a different story. The law judges felt “compelled” to apply had become increasingly problematic. Changes in substantive discrimination law since the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 were tantamount to a virtual repeal. This was so not because of Congress; it was because of judges.

Decades ago, law-and-society scholars offered an explanation for that phenomenon, evaluating the structural forces at work in law-reform litigation that lead to one-sided judicial outcomes. Focusing on employment discrimination claims, Marc Galanter argued that, because employers are “repeat players” whereas individual plaintiffs are not, the repeat players have every incentive to settle the strong cases and litigate the weak ones. Over time, strategic settlement practices produce judicial interpretations of rights that favor the repeat players’ interests. More recently, Catherine Albiston went further, identifying the specific opportunities for substantive rulemaking in this litigation—as in summary judgment and motions to dismiss—and how the “repeat players,” to use Galanter’s term, take advantage of them.

In this Essay, drawing on my seventeen years on the federal bench, I attempt to provide a firsthand and more detailed account of employment discrimination law’s skewed evolution—the phenomenon I call “Losers’ Rules.” I begin with a discussion of the wholly one-sided legal doctrines that characterize discrimination law. In effect, today’s plaintiff stands to lose unless he or she can prove that the defendant had explicitly discriminatory policies in place or that the relevant actors were overtly biased. It is hard to imagine a higher bar or one less consistent with the legal standards developed after the passage of the Civil Rights Act, let alone with the way discrimination manifests itself in the twenty-first century. Although ideology may have something to do with these changes, and indeed the bench may be far less supportive of antidiscrimination laws than it was during the years following the laws’ passage, I explore another explanation. Asymmetric decisionmaking—where judges are encouraged to write detailed decisions when granting summary judgment and not to write  it—fundamentally changes the lens through which employment cases are viewed, in two respects. First, it encourages judges to see employment discrimination cases as trivial or frivolous, as decision after decision details why the plaintiff loses. And second, it leads to the development of decision heuristics—the Losers’ Rules—that serve to justify prodefendant outcomes and thereby exacerbate the one-sided development of the law.

Great article by Nancy Gertner [not a woman of color]. This is what happens when the federal courts have intentionally been filled with ideologically conservative, white male, Republican appointed federal judges, particularly since Ronald Reagan became president 34 years ago. Below is Gertner discussing this topic at the New York Law School’s Symposium titled “A View From the Bench — The Judges’ Perspective on Summary Judgment In Employment Discrimination Cases.” [go to the 38:38 mark]

Major reform is needed — not only to strengthen the Civil Rights Act of 1964, but to develop structural mechanisms that will eliminate racist and corrupt judges who intentionally ignore the law and deprive plaintiffs in employment discrimination cases of their right to a jury trial under the color of law.

Source: Nancy Gertner. “Loser’s Rules.” The Yale Law Journal Online. October 16, 2012.  http://yalelawjournal.org/the-yale-law-journal-pocket-part/procedure/losers%E2%80%99-rules/