Tagged: criminal justice system

“Bernie Sanders says he would not support reparations for African-Americans as president. ‘Its likelihood of getting through Congress is nil,’ he told Fusion in an interview. ‘Second of all, I think it would be very divisive.'”

Wait?!? Bernie thinks reparations are divisive but not global white supremacy (racism)?!?

I think Bernie by far is the best candidate to become the next President of the United States [due to the fact that majority of the candidates are pretty horrible], but his answer to this question — based on his knowledge of America’s history of white racism — shows that he’s not really serious about eradicating global white/”Jewish” supremacy and America’s racial caste system.

Basically, this means that no matter who is elected president this year, white racism is only going to worsen since the white elite and those in positions of power will continue to ignore the realities and effects of institutionalized white racism on people of African descent. Smdh.

Black people better wake up! You don’t have much time left!

“The NYPD will launch a unit of 350 cops to handle both counterterrorism and protests — riding vehicles equipped with machine guns and riot gear — under a re-engineering plan to be rolled out over the coming months. The Strategic Response Group, or SRG, will be devoted to ‘advanced disorder control and counterterrorism protection,’ responding to the sort of demonstrations that erupted after the Eric Garner grand jury decision and also events like the recent Paris terror attacks.”

Huh???? “Counterterrorism”? Aren’t they the true terrorists, aggressors, racists, etc. = THE PROBLEM?? I’m also confused by this article because many world leaders participated in the Paris protests… Basically, the NYPD just wants to spend a lot more money on weapons so they can be better prepared when the next time comes to kill more protesters. The predominately all-white “top brass” at the NYPD and all affiliated organizations (including Commissioner Bill Bratton) need to be FIRED!

Source: Shawn Cohen and Kevin F. “NYPD To Launch Beefed-Up Counterterrorism Squad.” New York Post. January 31, 2015. http://nypost.com/2015/01/30/nypd-to-launch-a-beefed-up-counterterrorism-squad/.

“Justice Sotomayor’s implicit message is that, when the legal system breaks down, the Supreme Court, as the nation’s court of last resort, has a duty to step in.”

Source: Robert M. Yablon. “Justice Sotomayor and the Supreme Court’s Certiorari Process.” Yale Law Journal. March 24, 2014. pg. 556. http://www.yalelawjournal.org/forum/justice-sotomayor-and-the-supreme-courts-certiorari-process.

John Legend pens letter to Billboard, asking for “the people to wake up, stand up and demand change”!

When Common and I wrote the song “Glory” for the stunning new film Selma, we drew inspiration from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and his contemporaries who strived and sacrificed to achieve racial equality in the face of seemingly hopeless odds. As I watched the final version of Selma, I did so with the backdrop of the streets of many of our major cities filled with protesters, crying out for justice after yet another unarmed black person’s life was taken by the police with impunity. After the events of the past few weeks, in Ferguson, Mo.; Staten Island; Phoenix; and Cleveland, things feel eerily the same. While it is important to recognize and acknowledge racial progress through the years, it is also clear that we are far from King’s dream of equality and justice for all.

Slavery ended 150 years ago. The most egregious elements of Jim Crow were deemed illegal 50 years ago. But the problems of structural racism are old and ongoing. We still have a huge wealth gap rooted in decades of job, wage and housing discrimination. Voting restrictions that disproportionately affect the poor, minorities and youth are in place and growing. A persistent gap between black and white student achievement points to an education system that fails to provide a ladder of opportunity for everyone. African-American communities are being crushed by a criminal justice system that over-polices us, over-arrests us, over-incarcerates us and disproportionately takes the lives of our unarmed youth because of the simple fact that our skin, our blackness, conjures the myth of a hyper-violent negro.

I did an album with The Roots in 2010 called Wake Up! We wanted to use music to encourage young people who were politicized by the election of President Barack Obama to continue mobilizing. We covered songs from the 1960s and ’70s by artists like Nina Simone and Curtis Mayfield as inspiration and a blueprint. They marched. They wrote songs. They met with political leaders. They provided financial support. They risked arrest.

Today, I am part of a generation of artists who benefit from unprecedented access to our fans. Tools like Twitter and Facebook act as a megaphone, allowing us to speak directly and powerfully to millions of people. Yet our actions, or lack thereof, speak louder: 140 characters cannot excuse us of our obligation to stand up, sit in or march forward.

Obama recently told the young activists gathered in the Oval Office to “think big, but go gradual.” His words reminded me of President Lyndon B. Johnson’s reluctance to tackle voting rights, as depicted in Selma. Despite Johnson’s qualms, civil rights activists refused to wait for a more convenient political time. They took to the streets and used grass-roots organization and the moral force of their argument to create better conditions so the legislation could pass. We can’t wait for gradual and incremental change. Our government is a democracy, by the people and for the people. It is time for the people to wake up, stand up and demand change.

Source: John Legend. “Op-Ed: John Legend Demands Change After Eric Garner & Ferguson Decisions.” Billboard. December 12, 2014. http://www.billboard.com/articles/news/6406005/john-legend-ferguson-eric-garner-blacklivesmatter.

Read Tina Gharavi’s article in The Telegraph: “America’s racist penal system is slavery by another name.”

When the unarmed black teenager, Michael Brown, was shot by a police officer in Ferguson violent protests broke out. Alarming pictures of police violence, siege-like militarism and a stand-off that recalls the Sixties Civil Rights era have since been beamed across the globe. However, for those who have been aware of the barometer of American civil rights struggles, this is unsurprising. What is surprising is that it hasn’t bubbled up before. Even under its first black president, America is a mostly segregated society. I grew up in New Jersey in the Eighties and Nineties, and people for the most part had either white friends or black friends. High-school lunch tables were codified by colour. The America I knew had a massive race problem and as an Iranian, neither white nor black, I experienced enough racism to know I couldn’t change it from within. So I left America in 1996, tired of the inequalities, particularly around race and social justice, and certain that a life as a free-thinking filmmaker wasn’t possible, certainly not when you had to wed yourself to a corporation in order to have health care.

This year, now a UK Citizen, I am returning to America to film a documentary which will look at the issue of race in America through the prism of the prison system. I have already visited one in Louisiana where I saw mostly black men picking cotton in fields – they were paid up to 13 cents per hour – while the predominantly white guards, armed and on horseback, watched over. Sound familiar? Unknown to most, slavery is still legal in the US: under the 13th Amendment it was outlawed “except as a punishment for crime”.

My film, From the Plantation to the Penitentiary, looks at the privatised prison system as a sanitised slave system. And in it, I ask whether America is heading towards another race war. It is not, as some have said, fanciful agit pop. What we have seen in Missouri over the past couple of weeks shows what is bubbling close to the surface. Eighteen-year-old Michael Brown, along with Eric Garner, Ezell Ford and John Crawford III all men who have been killed by the police, is another victim of the race wars in America.

And America’s race tragedy is, in part, the legacy of slavery. Although black people make up just 13 percent of the overall population, one in 10 black men in their thirties is in jail or prison on any given day. As Michelle Alexander points out in her book The New Jim Crow, more black men are in “prison or jail, on probation or on parole than were enslaved in 1850”. Slavery never ended in America, it just changed its face.

Why does a country seemingly so concerned with liberty, have such a high rate of incarceration (2.3 million and counting)? Because it pays to imprison. Prisons are increasingly owned by corporations that profit from incarceration. These private companies are either paid by the state, or they put the inmates to work thus creating a cheap and constant work force. If a product is “Made in America”, chances are it was made in a US prison. Ninety-three per cent of household paintbrushes in the states are made in US prisons, 30 per cent of consumer electronics. Companies such as Victoria’s Secret, Walmart, Starbucks, Microsoft and Nintendo have products made in prisons (often via subcontractors) and states attract business by boasting about large prison populations which can be put to work as cheap labour. The first prison in America, after all, was formulated by a Texas governor in the year that slavery was abolished (at the end of the day, who was going to bring all that cotton and crops back in?). This eventually led to the chain gangs and Jim Crow laws which continued to criminalise and incarcerate black people in America well into the Sixties.

Ironically, prisons don’t seem to do much to reduce crime. Studies suggest that very substantial increases in imprisonment will produce only a modest reduction in crime. Worse, there is evidence that prison acts only to increase recidivism. Locking up people in the States doesn’t make a safer society. But it is a profitable business made off the backs of mostly African-Americans (and increasingly Latinos and other migrants).

America has never formally broken its relationship with slavery – and black communities still live in its shadows. America needs to re-examine it’s past in order to be able to move forward. Missouri is not the beginning, nor will it be the end.

As Dr Martin Luther King, Jr said, “Three hundred years of humiliation, abuse and deprivation cannot be expected to find voice in a whisper.”

Source: Tina Ghavari. “America’s racist penal system is slavery by another name.” The Telegraph. August 20, 2014. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/11046113/Americas-racist-penal-system-is-slavery-by-another-name.html.

“Brooklyn’s ‘gentrification’ is changing juries who decide cases.”

Brooklyn’s courthouses are being rocked by the “Williamsburg Effect.”

The influx of well-off and educated white people to trendy neighborhoods such as Williamsburg is rapidly “gentrifying’’ the borough’s jury pool — and transforming verdicts, lawyers and judges told The Post.

It’s good news for prosecutors in criminal cases — and bad news for plaintiffs in civil lawsuits, they said.

“The jurors are becoming more like Manhattan — which is not good for defendants,’’ noted veteran defense lawyer Julie Clark.

“They are . . . much more trusting of police,” Clark said of the jurors. “I’m not sure people from the University of Vermont would believe that a police officer would [plant] a gun.’’

Former Brooklyn prosecutor and defense lawyer John Paul DeVerna said, “The ‘Williamsburg Effect’ affects every case that goes to trial.

“A contrarian-minded person — and Billyburg has them in spades — can cause discord in the jury room. And if the hipster gets along with everyone, that can even be more dangerous because they are confident and educated, which means they have the potential to hijack the jury.”

The seismic shift also is affecting grand juries, lawyers said.

“The grand jury used to have an anti-police sentiment. When I was a prosecutor 22 years ago, a jury would be 80 percent people of color,” said high-profile lawyer Arthur Aidala. “Now, the grand juries have more law-and-order types in there.

“People who can afford to live in Brooklyn now don’t have the experience of police officers throwing them against cars and searching them. A person who just moves here from Wisconsin or Wyoming, they can’t relate to [that]. It doesn’t sound credible to them.”

Meanwhile, civil juries have become more pro-defendant.

“There’s an influx of money, and when everything gets gentrified, these jurors aren’t pro-plaintiff anymore,” said plaintiff lawyer Charen Kim.

“We’re dealing with more sophisticated people, and they don’t believe [plaintiffs] should be awarded millions of dollars for nothing.”

The percentage of white people in Brooklyn grew from 41 percent to 50 percent between 2000 and 2012, according to US Census data.

Rents in the borough also spiked by 77 percent over the same period, according to a recent report by the city comptroller’s office.

Read more here: http://nypost.com/2014/06/16/brooklyn-gentrification-is-changing-juries-who-decide-cases/.