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ckaihatsu
14th August 2014, 00:32
Fight to stop police terror - justice for Michael Brown!

By Freedom Road Socialist Organization

On Aug. 9, Michael Brown was murdered by the police in Ferguson, Missouri, a suburb of St. Louis. The African-American youth was only 18 years old. He was unarmed and committed no crime, yet was brutally shot by the police after they stopped and harassed him while he walked to his grandmother's house. Michael had a bright future ahead of him, as he was set to start classes at Vatterott College just a few days later. His family was proud of their son.

Two witnesses say that Michael had his hands up in the air when the police officer fired several shots, killing him. After murdering him, the police left his body for hours on the street, showing a total lack of respect. The next day, during a candlelight vigil, clashes broke out once again in Ferguson. The people's rebellion lasted late into the night. The police had wrongly murdered a community member and the people of Ferguson wanted justice.

The murder of Michael Brown, as well as the murder of others like Eric Garner, Jordan Davis and Trayvon Martin, shows that the system of national oppression is alive and well in the U.S. The police are the day-to-day enforcers of this system and they remind us of this with every Black man they murder.

Just as one of the foundations of the U.S. economy was profits from slavery, the U.S. legal system began with a constitution that said that African Americans were only three-fifths of a person. In 1857, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that African slaves and their children have no rights in the U.S., in the case of Dred Scott v. Sanford. Then in 1896, the Supreme Court ruled that segregation was constitutional in the case of Plessy v. Ferguson. And early last year, the U.S. Supreme Court gutted the Voting Rights Act, opening the door for racist local and state governments to exclude Black and Brown voters from the polls.

Even though an African American man has been elected president and there is a Black Attorney General, the law, the police and the courts are not about justice. They are there to protect the property, privilege and power of the monopoly capitalists - the richest 1% who own and control the companies and government that dominate the economy and society. They enforce the national oppression that African Americans face: the all-round, social, political and economic inequality of oppressed nationalities in the U.S.

The struggle for full equality and liberation by African Americans has been a powerful force for progress in the U.S. The sit-in by four African American college students at a segregated Woolworth’s lunch counter on Feb. 1, 1960 started a national movement of direct action to desegregate the South and to fight for Black political power. This movement, and the organization that arose out of it, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), was an inspiration to other oppressed nationalities, especially Asian Americans, Chicanos, Native Americans and Puerto Ricans, as well as the women’s movement, and the struggle of LGBTQ people.

Our experience has shown us that justice does not mainly come from the courts or elections. Nor does it mainly come from economic struggles, like boycotts. The fight for justice advances when the masses of working class people organize and show their power in the streets through militant mass actions such as rallies, marches, pickets, occupations, strikes, etc.

The way to get justice for Michael Brown lies through these militant mass actions. The Freedom Road Socialist Organization is calling for rallies and marches to demand justice for Michael Brown and to demand that the murderous cop be jailed. The people, not the police, are the makers of history and they will make their justice in the streets.

Stop Police Terror!

Jail the Killer Cop!

Justice for Michael Brown!

Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at [email protected]

Prole
14th August 2014, 01:50
Even though an African American man has been elected president and there is a Black Attorney General, the law, the police and the courts are not about justice. They are there to protect the property, privilege and power of the monopoly capitalists - the richest 1% who own and control the companies and government that dominate the economy and society. They enforce the national oppression that African Americans face: the all-round, social, political and economic inequality of oppressed nationalities in the U.S.

This is the key point in my opinion. The Ownership Class has been the true policy makers in this country however public ignorance allowed them to very much exist behind the curtains. With the introduction of social media into the equation they are able to be held ever more accountable for their actions and the public is able to scrutinize them.

I believe we are approaching a crisis point where the culmination of decades of abuse, both economic and physical, will drive the people and the state into a conflict of ideals. What comes of this (in my mind inevitable) conflict will remain to be seen.

We live in interesting times indeed, I only hope to see the end of the exploitation and oppression we have all grown so accustomed to.

Lord Testicles
14th August 2014, 18:22
The police reaction in Ferguson is insanely militaristic.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-trending-28782308

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/aug/14/ferguson-police-arrest-reporters-as-unrest-continues-over-michael-brown-shooting

Ele'ill
14th August 2014, 21:45
there are solidarity actions being planned for today/this weekend, there's at least one here later today

Ele'ill
14th August 2014, 21:47
http://anarchistnews.org/content/new-bail-fund-link-ferguson-rebels



New Bail Fund Link for Ferguson Rebels

Submitted by worker on Thu, 08/14/2014 - 09:18
Over the last few hours thousands of dollars have been streaming in from all over the world to support those arrested over the last few days in Ferguson, Missouri. This support is incredible and breath-taking, and sadly our previous link is not set-up to handle this level of activity.
Please, please, please, circulate this new link and continue donating.
https://secure.piryx.com/donate/mS25KFCe/MORE/mikebrown
Original call for donations:
A bail and legal fund has been established to support the 43 or so people who have been arrested during the anti-police demonstrations in Ferguson, Mo. Please spread the word widely and help us get some money together to get these people out.
All funds collected will be used to support those arrested during the demonstrations–their bail money, fines, legal funds, or other related expenses. In the unlikely event that there are additional funds, they will be used to support people resisting police repression and police violence in the future. Thank you.

Ele'ill
14th August 2014, 21:50
from philly!

http://anarchistnews.org/content/ftp-philly-solidarity-ferguson-clark-park


FTP: Philly in Solidarity with Ferguson @ Clark Park

Submitted by worker on Wed, 08/13/2014 - 22:00
For too long Philly has been pacified despite the large militant history ingrained in our radical community. Despite one of the largest repressive, and brutal police departments enforcing economic domination, we have rarely found one another in organized moments breaking from the framework of reform and party politics. Our Anti-authoritarian community is large, yet beyond social gatherings.. we often find ourselves thinking; "What is going to break us from this comfort of lifestyle activism? What is going to push us from fulfilling a scene towards an active force of resistance and solidarity?"
We find ourselves now contemplating on how we can express our utmost solidarity with not only the rebellion in Ferguson, but all communities who have increasingly been thrown into the spotlight following the onslaught of state-sponsored murders. Many of us feel powerless, and disconnected from others thinking the same exact thing, "We have no basis to act on". Well it's time to start building that base, and now is as good a time as ever to break that isolation that has been building up. We watch Ferguson in resistance, and are inspired. We see them confronting the fear that the state thrives on, finding one another, building bridges, and replacing tears with action. We are heartbroken over the constant deaths, many people of color and other less privileged classes have fell to at the hands of police. Yet Ferguson has taught us, it is simply not enough to be isolated in heartbreak. We must support one another, and build a base for unity through action. We can no longer weep, or simply talk about our solidarity. We can only act on our solidarity.
This is why, we, as an autonomous affinity of a few folks, are calling for a FTP, Solidarity With Ferguson March in Philly. We have no organizational affiliations. The call out is set for August 23rd, 7:30pm beginning @ the 45th & Regent section of Clark Park (think the big hole). Wear black to both mourn those who fell to state violence, and to negate the forces that kill on a daily basis. We decided as an affinity, that according to the location of an earlier event, this location would be most convenient. We are only few, but know there's more of yous out there feeling the same way no doubt. Help promote this amongst those peoples. Tell a friend, and tell them to tell a friend. We decided not to use Facebook ourselves due to both pending legal situations, and to the fact that we just don't got that social media swag to generate much invites. Anyone who wishes to, is welcome to create an event page though.
In love, solidarity and rage -
A few isolated Philly bouls sick of our own isolated tears and rage.

ckaihatsu
15th August 2014, 03:20
On the scene reporting: Marching against police killing in Ferguson, MO

http://www.fightbacknews.org/sites/default/files/imagecache/article-lead-photo/IrallyinMO.JPG

By Michael L. Sampson II

Ferguson, MO - Around 150 people gathered shortly after 12 noon today, Aug. 14, in Ferguson, a suburb of Saint Louis, across the street from Ferguson Fire Station. They are preparing to march to the Ferguson Police Department, demanding "Justice for Mike Brown." Brown, an African American 18-year-old teenager, was ruthlessly gunned down by the Ferguson Police Department on Aug. 9. So far, the Ferguson Police Department has yet to release the name of the officer who killed Brown.

Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at [email protected]

ckaihatsu
15th August 2014, 05:08
[LaborTech] The Police Can't Order You To Stop Filming Them In Public, Or Force You To Delete Pics From Phone

The Police Can’t Order You To Stop Filming Them In Public, Or Force You To Delete Pics From Phone

http://consumerist.com/2014/08/14/the-police-cant-order-you-to-stop-filming-them-in-public-or-force-you-to-delete-pics-from-phone/#more-10176501

By Chris Morran August 14, 2014

http://consumermediallc.files.wordpress.com/2014/08/aljazeera.png?w=680
An Al Jazeera TV crew being tear-gassed by authorities in Ferguson (via BoingBoing)

A good deal of the footage coming out Ferguson, Missouri, this week has been provided by non-journalists, using their phones to record and photograph events. At the same time, reports claim that police are attempting to block both ordinary citizens and journalists from documenting the situation. What these officers either don’t know or aren’t saying is that you have the legal right to photograph the police, even when they tell you not to.

GigaOm’s Jeff John Roberts has a concise piece on the topic that anyone interested should read.

In 2011, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit ruled [PDF] in the case of Glik v. Cunniffe that private citizens have the right to record public officials, including police, in a public place.

The court held that the First Amendment’s proscription on laws “abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press… encompasses a range of conduct related to the gathering and dissemination of information.”

The ruling cites an earlier Supreme Court pronouncement that people have the right to gather news “from any source by means within the law.”

“The filming of government officials engaged in their duties in a public place, including police officers performing their responsibilities, fits comfortably within these principles,” wrote the Appeals Court. “Gathering information about government officials in a form that can readily be disseminated to others serves a cardinal First Amendment interest in protecting and promoting ‘the free discussion of governmental affairs.'”

The Supremes had previously stated that “[f]reedom of expression has particular significance with respect to government because ‘[i]t is here that the state has a special incentive to repress opposition and often wields a more effective power of suppression.’”

And the First Circuit said this applies even more so to law enforcement officials, as they “are granted substantial discretion that may be misused to deprive individuals of their liberties.”

“Ensuring the public’s right to gather information about their officials not only aids in the uncovering of abuses but also may have a salutary effect on the functioning of government more generally,” wrote the court.

The Glik ruling also acknowledged limitations to citizens’ rights to record public officials.

“It may be subject to reasonable time, place, and manner restrictions,” the First Circuit explained. And though it did not specifically prescribe what those limitations might be, the court noted that “peaceful recording of an arrest in a public space that does not interfere with the police officers’ performance of their duties is not reasonably subject to limitation.”

The court explained that, much like police are expected to withstand verbal challenges from citizens without threatening arrest, this “same restraint demanded of law enforcement officers in the face of ‘provocative and challenging’ speech must be expected when they are merely the subject of videotaping that memorializes, without impairing, their work in public spaces.”

Regarding the question of whether or not police can tell you to delete photos from your phone, the recent Supreme Court rulings in Riley v. California and U.S. v. Wurie make it rather clear that they can not force you to do so.

In those cases, SCOTUS held that a warrant is needed to search a citizen’s phone, even if that citizen has been arrested. And since there is no way to tell if a photo has been taken — or what the content of a photo might be, or if it’s been deleted — without searching that phone, this tells us that an officer barking at you to “delete those photos!” can ask all that he or she wants, but it’s up to you whether or not you want to erase the images.

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Ele'ill
15th August 2014, 18:49
Portland solidarity protests *at the North precinct


http://imgick.oregonlive.com/home/olive-media/pgmain/img/oregonian/photo/2014/08/14/portland-protests-for-ferguson-30jpg-194fb474ccd446db.jpg
http://imgick.oregonlive.com/home/olive-media/pgmain/img/oregonian/photo/2014/08/14/portland-protests-for-ferguson-17jpg-84ffebc4a62ea50f.jpg
http://imgick.oregonlive.com/home/olive-media/pgmain/img/oregonian/photo/2014/08/14/portland-protests-for-ferguson-16jpg-1b3241c66990d6eb.jpg
http://imgick.oregonlive.com/home/olive-media/pgmain/img/oregonian/photo/2014/08/14/portland-protests-for-ferguson-11jpg-0c93229aaf1c0a23.jpg
http://imgick.oregonlive.com/home/olive-media/pgmain/img/oregonian/photo/2014/08/14/portland-protests-for-ferguson-9jpg-a38681641f593847.jpg
http://imgick.oregonlive.com/home/olive-media/pgmain/img/portland_impact/photo/portland-protest-for-fergusonjpg-2ded373e3eb60dbe.jpg

ckaihatsu
16th August 2014, 17:24
After midnight in Ferguson, more than 1000 in the streets against killer cops

http://www.fightbacknews.org/sites/default/files/imagecache/article-lead-photo/aftermidnigh.JPG

By Michael Sampson

Ferguson, MO – It is shortly after midnight, Aug. 15, and easily at least a thousand members of the Ferguson community have taken the streets tonight in what it seems like a atmosphere of celebration. Residents said that they are overjoyed that the police, at least tonight, have withdrawn their militarized force from their streets.

West Florissant Avenue, the street that police have used as their point of siege towards the Ferguson community, was filled with bumper-to bumper-traffic as cars honked at each in other in a festive atmosphere. This reporter talked to residents who said that the lack of military style police presence was great, with younger residents stating that the streets no longer belongs to the police but now is in the hands of the community.

The large crowd chanted, "Hands up, don't shoot!" with members of the New Black Panther Party directing busy traffic. Tonight was a night of relief for Ferguson residents. However, they know that getting justice for Michael Brown is gonna require them staying out in the streets and demanding it.

Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at [email protected]

ckaihatsu
16th August 2014, 17:28
Students from Howard University in Washington, DC, took a photo of hundreds of upperclassmen with their hands stretched in the air. The photo has been re-tweeted over 5,000 times.

http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/76955000/jpg/_76955135_howardsprotest.jpg

ckaihatsu
16th August 2014, 17:29
THE CRISIS IN FERGUSON IS ESCALATING -- MASS ACTION NEEDED!


[Please forward widely.]

THE CRISIS IN FERGUSON IS ESCALATING -- MASS ACTION NEEDED TO WIN JUSTICE FOR MICHAEL BROWN AND TO DEFEND CIVIL LIBERTIES AND CIVIL RIGHTS

Oscar Grant murdered January 1, 2009 in Oakland, CA; Trayvon Martin murdered February 26, 2012 in Sanford, FL; Eric Garner murdered July 17, 2014 in Staten Island, NY; Michael Brown murdered August 9, 2014 in Ferguson, MO; Ezell Ford murdered August 9, 2014 in Los Angeles, CA.

These are only a few of the numerous police and vigilante executions of Blacks that are becoming more and more commonplace across the country. While this has been going on for many decades, it has reached a boiling point, triggering tremendous outrage as large numbers of people take to the streets to demand justice and hold accountable those responsible for their criminal actions.

The question, as always, is what can be done to counter the horrific killings, which are too often countenanced by those in authority. This is particularly true in areas where depression conditions, massive unemployment, segregation, racial profiling, rundown schools and discriminatory composition of police forces provide the background for the repeated killings.

The situation in Ferguson is a classic case. An unarmed 18-year-old African American man, Michael Brown, was gunned down by a Ferguson police officer, Darrell Wilson, who shot him multiple times on August 11.

There is high tension in Ferguson today, primarily because of the failure of authorities to arrest Wilson and put him in jail where he belongs. Instead, he has been placed on administrative leave with full pay. The chief of police has praised him to the skies as being an excellent officer.

The other major contributing reason for the tension has been the way police used the press conference naming Wilson as the shooter. At the same time, they released still photos of a video allegedly showing Brown robbing cigars at a convenience store just minutes before the slaying. This had nothing to do with the execution of Brown and was an obvious move to deflect attention away from the officer's action and place the onus on Brown. Lawyers for the Brown family called it "character assassination."

Incidentally, the police chief initially stated categorically that there was no connection between the alleged robbery and the killing. Hours later his story changed and every time he appeared with a microphone in his hands he came out with a different version of what happened.

The facts could not be clearer: at the time that he was shot, Brown was yards away from Wilson and posed no threat to him whatever. According to three eyewitnesses, Brown, looking at the officer, had his arms raised, showing that he was unarmed and as a gesture of compliance. But his life was not spared. It was an unjustifiable murder having nothing to do with the alleged robbery at the store.

Even assuming for the moment that Brown did rob the store, the penalty for such a crime is not a death sentence.

Police Respond to Protests with Violence and Repression

In the aftermath of the murder, Ferguson residents, while engaging in peaceful mass protest, were subjected to tear gas attacks by police, flash bombs and stun grenades, snipers on top of armored trucks, rubber bullets, AR-15 assault rifles, police dogs, and cops and state police dressed in paramilitary uniforms.

Where did the Ferguson police get all of its weaponry? Most of it -- leftovers from the Afghanistan and Iraq wars -- was donated by the feds as a gift of a half-million dollars. Other cities throughout the country received similar donations, meaning our taxpayers' dollars are being used to help create the militarization of the police, as happened in Ferguson.

In short, Ferguson was under siege by a police/military force out of control. Free speech rights were trampled under foot, and peaceful protesters in the streets felt the need to hold their hands up high in the face of rifles pointed at their heads.

A state senator was hit with teargas, as were large numbers of others whose eyes were burning and watering. An alderman was arrested as were journalists for The Washington Post and The Huffington Post. One reporter, according to the American Civil Liberties Union, was told by a cop, "We will not allow you to write about what is happening here." So much for freedom of the press!

There are only three Black peace officers in Ferguson out of a force of 53. There is only one African American city council member out of six (and he was arrested during these events and held overnight in a jail cell).

Years ago, Ferguson was almost exclusively a "white" city so, of course, all the governing positions were held by white people. But as time went by, more and more Blacks moved into Ferguson so that today Blacks constitute 67% of the city's population. But the power structure remains as it was, with virtually no Black representation in the city's governmental bodies.

Given this, and the plight of Ferguson as a depressed community, it is little wonder that the city erupted as a result of the Brown slaying. The city had become a tinderbox and the protests had grown in intensity, fueled by the police refusing to identify themselves by displaying badges and the cops' long delay in divulging the name of the police officer who did the killing, which the community demanded be made known so that he can be held responsible and accountable.

Was there some rioting as a result of what had occurred? Inevitably, yes. It was born of deep frustration and exasperation flowing from the conditions capped by the murder. But as the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. said, "Rioting is the language used by the unheard." And since the protests were overwhelmingly peaceful, the police rioting that took place can no way be justified.

So What Is To Be Done?

Confronted by the overwhelming public denunciation of its tactics and abuses, the police supposedly were withdrawn as the primary force dealing with the protesters. Instead this has been turned over to the state's highway patrol. Assurances have been given that reforms will be instituted to ensure that free speech and the right to assemble and march peacefully will be safeguarded. And the name of the officer who murdered Michael Brown was finally released.

These are all concessions to the massive and militant demonstrations which rocked the establishment not only in Ferguson but also in St. Louis, the state of Missouri, and indeed the ruling circles in the country as a whole. It could not be otherwise, given the rallies of solidarity with the Ferguson residents which took place in New York, Washington D.C., St. Louis, Miami, Boston, Oakland, Cleveland, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Colorado Springs, Decatur, Burlington, Austin, Detroit, San Diego, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, Orlando, Minneapolis, New Orleans, Manhattan, Milwaukee, Indianapolis, Phoenix, Atlanta, Denver, Seattle, Eugene, Brooklyn, Portland, Nashville, Pittsburgh, Montgomery, Des Moines, and dozens of other cities in the U.S.

This is a time to keep the pressure on and to press forward relentlessly to ensure justice for Michael Brown, defense of civil liberties and civil rights, and the demilitarization of the police.

We cannot take for granted the indictment and conviction of the officer who killed Brown, as we learned in the case of Trayvon Martin. Nor can we assume that all the promised reforms will be implemented in the absence of continued demonstrations in the streets.

Let's not forget that in the immediate aftermath of the murder, Jon Belmar, St. Louis County police chief, stated, "The genesis of this was a physical confrontation … during which Brown physically assaulted the police officer." And so the campaign to vilify Brown was launched, as the police rally to Wilson's defense, using the age-old tactic of making the victim the criminal and the criminal the victim. Interviews with a number of Ferguson residents make clear that they see through and reject this insidious maneuver.

The fight of the Ferguson community for justice in this situation, starting with the arrest and imprisonment of Wilson, is one that the labor movement and its allies need to make our own. Therefore, we in the Labor Fightback Network urge a labor movement/civil rights movement initiated "March on Ferguson," so that more of our sisters and brothers at least in the major cities in the region -- St. Louis and Chicago -- can join the struggle in support of demands that these movements can advance.

Solidarity now -- not depending on investigations that can drag on for weeks or even months -- is the key to winning justice for Michael Brown and for all who support the struggle for human rights in Ferguson and everywhere else in the U.S. where racism can only succeed if too many of us are passive in the fight for freedom and equal rights.

Issued by the Labor Fightback Network. For more information, please call 973-944-8975 or email [email protected] or write Labor Fightback Network, P.O. Box 187, Flanders, NJ 07836 or visit our website at laborfightback.org. Facebook link : https://www.facebook.com/laborfightback

Donations to help fund the Labor Fightback Network based on its program of solidarity and labor-community unity are necessary for our work to continue and will be much appreciated. Please make checks payable to Labor Fightback Network and mail to the above P.O. Box or you can make a contribution online. Thanks!

ckaihatsu
16th August 2014, 18:14
ADC Statement on Shooting of Michael Brown

Washington, DC | www.adc.org | August 15, 2014 - The American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) stands with Ferguson’s peaceful protesters as they make a strong statement on the right side of history. ADC is appalled by the senseless and racially-charged murders of African-Americans by police forces, most notably that of Michael Brown, and the heightened police brutality against African-Americans in Missouri as a result of their exercise of free speech and protest.

On Saturday August 9, 2014, 18-year-old Michael Brown was unarmed when he was shot dead by Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson a day before he was to begin college. Although Michael Brown’s hands were raised in surrender, the police officer shot Michael Brown not once, not twice, but several times. Then, as residents took to the streets in protest of his murder, militarized police units from throughout St. Louis County occupied Ferguson, using rubber bullets, noxious gas, and LRAD sonic weapons on American civilians. The St. Louis County police units have also targeted journalists on the scene, attacking and arresting both protesters and journalists.

On Thursday, Missouri Governor Jay Nixon finally ordered the St. Louis County Police Department out of Ferguson and called in the Missouri Highway Patrol to handle the crowd control in Ferguson. According to the New York Times, the armored vehicles and militarized police units are now gone . ADC commends Governor Nixon for recognizing the inappropriate actions of the St. Louis County Police Department and taking action to defuse the situation.

Police brutality and targeting of minority groups is a pervasive problem in the United States. It is a race issue, and a civil rights issue. Not only does ADC stand with Ferguson’s peaceful protesters and civil rights activists because of the mutual targeting of the Arab-American community, but most importantly because no American citizen deserves to be targeted, harassed, or killed by police forces and have their rights violated by the same people whose job is to protect them.

ADC is pleased that the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) is investigating Michael Brown’s shooting but calls on the FBI to also conduct a thorough investigation of the Ferguson Police Department for racial profiling. ADC demands disciplinary action to be taken against Officer Wilson and the Ferguson Police Department.

It is time for all communities to come together and demand steps to be taken in our police forces so that no person of color in America with his or her hands up in the air will ever suffer such an atrocity again.







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ckaihatsu
16th August 2014, 18:18
Cops use tear gas, attack Ferguson protest demanding justice for Michael Brown

http://www.fightbacknews.org/sites/default/files/imagecache/article-lead-photo/fergusonriotpolice.png

By Michael Sampson

Ferguson, MO – The joyful atmosphere in the streets of Ferguson came to an end in the early morning hours of Aug. 16 when law enforcement launched tear gas and flash-bang grenades at peaceful protesters. At around midnight, law enforcement in riot gear started to threaten protesters with force if they didn't disperse. The crowd didn't back down from police threats and stayed in the streets with their hands up, chanting. The crowd of a few hundred included young and older people with a few children holding signs.

Around 50 riot police started to get back into their armored vehicles to the crowd's excitement. However, law enforcement threw tear gas and flash-bangs into the crowd, sending protesters running. This reporter experienced the tear gas from law enforcement. As people ran away from the tear gas, they yelled, "get the children," making sure everyone was safe.

The previous night was different as the crowd simply chanted and demanded justice with zero police presence. However, tonight law enforcement in riot gear sought to destabilize and repress the protesters. Many who attended the rally said that this seems like a calculated plan by law enforcement to criminalize the protests. In addition, Ferguson police have tried to criminalize Michael Brown, releasing footage of Brown allegedly stealing cigars from a gas station, footage many residents say is based on deceit from the police department.

Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at [email protected]

Ele'ill
17th August 2014, 00:22
I am so fucking sick of hearing about 'the peaceful protesters', 'the correct protesters'. You remember now and throughout history when the police have fled from neighborhoods or not responded because they couldn't risk their potential casualties doing so? Its a hint, the police aren't afraid of protests, that's not why they are seemingly criminalizing 'protest events', they're afraid of protests turning into riot and insurrection and its the exact same thing that non-profits and community leaders are afraid of because it takes social and monetary power away from them and puts it back into the hands of every individual. I am not suggesting that people do anything in particular but I think it should be pointed out that standing in the street and resisting police orders and then getting gassed and possibly arrested and hurt further is a daring first step but what is it going to be a step towards, what is that exactly? Where do folks want to go with it?

asiankaos
17th August 2014, 11:53
This happens way to often in America, and you know what the sad thing is Robin Williams suicide is all the news talks about. While this murder gets a scroll across the bottom. The apathy of Americans is fycking amazing, and sickening.

bcbm
19th August 2014, 03:15
This happens way to often in America, and you know what the sad thing is Robin Williams suicide is all the news talks about. While this murder gets a scroll across the bottom. The apathy of Americans is fycking amazing, and sickening.

this was a major story on cnn for much of the day today

GiantMonkeyMan
19th August 2014, 04:03
this was a major story on cnn for much of the day today
There was this interesting little bit on cnn where a reporter was pushed back by a cop and he made some pretty sympathetic comments along the lines of 'if the cops are willing to do this to me, imagine what they're doing to protesters who don't have a national tv camera pointed at them' sorta thing. To be honest I'm surprised there's not been more discussion on the forum. Protesters tried to storm the Governor's St Louis offices demanding the removal of the national guard....

A Revolutionary Tool
19th August 2014, 19:36
They're cracking down on media, many people there(and myself) are worried they'll start shooting or something once the cameras are gone. One of the reporters from Vice News was saying last night they were going door to door raiding places.

Ele'ill
19th August 2014, 20:17
Has anyone followed up with that vice reporter and asked for specifics on that (the raids)? Has anyone simply proposed that some type of assembly happen whenever people want it to, if they want it to, if they want to participate in it, just to open up communication between folks who are there in the street and from neighboring communities? I want to talk to people who are there.

BIXX
19th August 2014, 20:22
I wanna communicate with folks who are there as well. Anyone live there/near there?

bropasaran
19th August 2014, 22:34
I watch Last Week Tonight with John Oliver and they covered Ferguson protests and police militarization, I watched some clips about that, man, that stuff's crazy, even we in eastern Europe don't have things like that, police looking like military, having military vehicles. Here the police uses rubber bullets and water cannons very rarely, in cases of some super-massive (like tens of thousands of people) protests that start turning into riots, even when there are huge football (/soccer) hooligan fights and riots, the police don't use rubber bullets, they just get a bunch of police cordons out with full body armor and shields (we call them turtles), and they split up and push back the fans, sometimes using tear-gas, but often not.

If someone wants to watch the show I mentioned:

KUdHIatS36A

coda
19th August 2014, 22:42
Jail the killer cop is not enough. The cops (plural) need to be disarmed.
and the people need to be armed against them. It's urban warfare. How many more people need to die?

warsie
20th August 2014, 03:26
Some of the RCP people came to protest and apparently start some stuff, according to some 'community leaders' (mainly ministers and whatot). Those same minister said they weren't wanted. This is funny. The RCP may be many levels of bullshit but at least they provide a counter to the current system. Talk about shooting the person offering help......

(They didnt say it was 'RCP' but 'revolutionary communists' and I think the only people who were there now were the RCP. Source: I know RCP member who was there recently)

ckaihatsu
20th August 2014, 14:35
Milwaukee protest stands in solidarity with Ferguson

Demands justice for victims of police terror

http://www.fightbacknews.org/sites/default/files/imagecache/article-lead-photo/sunday%20protest%203.jpg

By staff

Milwaukee, WI - Over 250 people gathered for a rally here, Aug. 16, to stand in solidarity with the struggle in Ferguson, Missouri, where more than a week of militant protests have erupted since 18-year-old Michael Brown was murdered by a Ferguson police officer. The Milwaukee demonstration also focused on the last couple years’ victims of police violence and white vigilantes. It was organized in coordination with the families of Dontre Hamilton, Corey Stingley and Derek Williams. Protesters demanded the immediate arrest of the racist killers. Dontre Hamilton, an unarmed 31-year-old Black man, was shot 15 times by a Milwaukee Police officer as he tried to take a nap on a public bench in Milwaukee this past spring. Corey Stingley – a 16-year-old Black child – was strangled by three adult white men after stealing and returning a bottle of alcohol at a corner store in the suburb of West Allis. Derek Williams, a 24-year-old Black father of three, begged for his life for over 30 minutes in the back of a Milwaukee Police squad car after he was violently arrested, eventually dying while an officer listened to music in the front seat of the squad, ignoring Williams’ cries for help. These cases happened in the last three years and none of those responsible for the murders have been held accountable for their actions. Protesters gathered in Red Arrow Park in downtown Milwaukee, the site of Dontre Hamilton's murder this past spring. Speakers pointed out that Michael Brown’s and the Milwaukee victims' murders did not happen in a vacuum, but rather these murders are part of the racist discrimination and national oppression African Americans have been facing for hundreds of years. Jorge Maya of Youth Empowered in the Struggle spoke, making the connection between the violence perpetrated against young Black men to that of the Milwaukee Police and Sheriff's Departments terrorizing immigrant communities in Milwaukee through deportation and racial profiling. "The police are not here to protect common people, they protect people with property. Just as innocent people like Michael Brown are arrested and killed for no reason, many immigrants are arrested and deported for having done nothing wrong. The system is not broken, it is working perfectly," said Maya. Micaela Magel of Students for Justice in Palestine spoke of the militarization of local police departments to U.S. imperialism, the ongoing assault on the Gaza strip and the occupation of Palestinian lands, stating, "From Milwaukee to Ferguson to Palestine, we demand the end to killings and oppression of innocent civilians." Police in the Saint Louis area as well as the Milwaukee County Sheriff have participated in a national ‘counter-terrorism’ training hosted in Israel to learn the newest techniques of their military. The protesters then marched in the street for several blocks to the Police Administration building where family members of Corey Stingley and Dontre Hamilton spoke. “See those police officers over there,” said Nate Hamilton, Dontre Hamilton’s brother, pointing towards two officers on motorcycles watching the crowd at the police station, “They don't give a fuck about us. We should be able to film them, ask them about their jobs but we can't … We have got to tear the walls down, that's what it said in the bible to tear the walls down.” The crowd, then about 100, marched toward the 43/94 highway to shut down the highway exit at 10th Street. The crowd stayed for an hour chanting “No justice, no peace” and “Hands up, don't shoot!” as cars began to pile up at the blocked exit. The Milwaukee County Sheriff's office was forced to eventually close the exit from the highway and allow the over a dozen cars to turn around to get back on the highway. The protesters had successfully shut down the major exit to downtown Milwaukee. The crowd then marched back towards the starting point of the rally, singing We Shall Not be Moved beginning the chorus with several of the names of murdered Black youth by police and white vigilantes in Milwaukee and the rest of the country. Demonstrators then shut down a major intersection in downtown Milwaukee at Water and Wisconsin Avenue, with Craig Stingley, Corey Stingley's dad, addressing the crowd. “Did my son deserve to die, because he stole some alcohol and then gave it back? Should Michael Brown have died for supposedly stealing some cigars? I know if that would have been a white boy he wouldn't have been killed…the plainest of all our civil rights is the right to life, and it was taken. These are hate crimes,” said Stingley. Everyone then marched back to Red Arrow Park for a moment of silence and closed the four-hour event out with a prayer for justice for families in Milwaukee, Ferguson and the world. This event was co-sponsored by Occupy Milwaukee, Occupy Coalition, Milwaukee Anti-War Committee, Youth Empowered in the Struggle, Students for Justice in Palestine, Ma'Ruf, the Milwaukee Committee to Stop FBI Repression and African American Roundtable.

Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at [email protected]

ckaihatsu
20th August 2014, 17:48
---





Jail the killer cop is not enough. The cops (plural) need to be disarmed.
and the people need to be armed against them. It's urban warfare. How many more people need to die?





The Black Panther Party or BPP (originally the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense) was a black revolutionary socialist organization active in the United States from 1966 until 1982. The Black Panther Party achieved national and international notoriety through its involvement in the Black Power movement and U.S. politics of the 1960s and 1970s.[4]




The Black Panther Party's most widely known programs were its armed citizens' patrols to evaluate behavior of police officers and [...] their confrontational, militant, and violent tactics against police.[7][8][9]




Huey Newton and Bobby Seale founded the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense on October 15, 1966. They drafted the party's first 10-point platform. Sixteen-year-old Bobby Hutton was their first recruit. The organization initially set forth a doctrine calling primarily for the protection of black neighborhoods from police brutality.[16]




http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Panther_Party

Hagalaz
20th August 2014, 22:39
Fight to stop police terror - justice for Michael Brown!

By Freedom Road Socialist Organization

On Aug. 9, Michael Brown was murdered by the police in Ferguson, Missouri, a suburb of St. Louis. The African-American youth was only 18 years old. He was unarmed and committed no crime, yet was brutally shot by the police after they stopped and harassed him while he walked to his grandmother's house. Michael had a bright future ahead of him, as he was set to start classes at Vatterott College just a few days later. His family was proud of their son.

Two witnesses say that Michael had his hands up in the air when the police officer fired several shots, killing him. After murdering him, the police left his body for hours on the street, showing a total lack of respect. The next day, during a candlelight vigil, clashes broke out once again in Ferguson. The people's rebellion lasted late into the night. The police had wrongly murdered a community member and the people of Ferguson wanted justice.

The murder of Michael Brown, as well as the murder of others like Eric Garner, Jordan Davis and Trayvon Martin, shows that the system of national oppression is alive and well in the U.S. The police are the day-to-day enforcers of this system and they remind us of this with every Black man they murder.

Just as one of the foundations of the U.S. economy was profits from slavery, the U.S. legal system began with a constitution that said that African Americans were only three-fifths of a person. In 1857, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that African slaves and their children have no rights in the U.S., in the case of Dred Scott v. Sanford. Then in 1896, the Supreme Court ruled that segregation was constitutional in the case of Plessy v. Ferguson. And early last year, the U.S. Supreme Court gutted the Voting Rights Act, opening the door for racist local and state governments to exclude Black and Brown voters from the polls.

Even though an African American man has been elected president and there is a Black Attorney General, the law, the police and the courts are not about justice. They are there to protect the property, privilege and power of the monopoly capitalists - the richest 1% who own and control the companies and government that dominate the economy and society. They enforce the national oppression that African Americans face: the all-round, social, political and economic inequality of oppressed nationalities in the U.S.

The struggle for full equality and liberation by African Americans has been a powerful force for progress in the U.S. The sit-in by four African American college students at a segregated Woolworth’s lunch counter on Feb. 1, 1960 started a national movement of direct action to desegregate the South and to fight for Black political power. This movement, and the organization that arose out of it, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), was an inspiration to other oppressed nationalities, especially Asian Americans, Chicanos, Native Americans and Puerto Ricans, as well as the women’s movement, and the struggle of LGBTQ people.

Our experience has shown us that justice does not mainly come from the courts or elections. Nor does it mainly come from economic struggles, like boycotts. The fight for justice advances when the masses of working class people organize and show their power in the streets through militant mass actions such as rallies, marches, pickets, occupations, strikes, etc.

The way to get justice for Michael Brown lies through these militant mass actions. The Freedom Road Socialist Organization is calling for rallies and marches to demand justice for Michael Brown and to demand that the murderous cop be jailed. The people, not the police, are the makers of history and they will make their justice in the streets.

Stop Police Terror!

Jail the Killer Cop!

Justice for Michael Brown!

Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at [email protected]

Not that I condone the situation but most of your "facts" are wrong.

Ele'ill
20th August 2014, 22:43
which ones

ckaihatsu
21st August 2014, 01:15
Miami protest demands: ‘Justice for Michael Brown’

http://www.fightbacknews.org/sites/default/files/imagecache/article-lead-photo/FLprotestFed.jpg

By Alekos Zambrano

Miami, FL - Around 100 protesters met on the Wolfston campus of Miami-Dade Community College, Aug. 14, to demand justice for Mike Brown. Led by groups like Dream Defenders, Miami Workers Center, and Power U, protesters held signs reading “Hands up don’t shoot!” and chanted “No justice, no peace, no killer police.”

In addition to demanding justice for Michael Brown, they also focused on the case of Israel Hernandez. Israel Hernandez, 18, known as Reefa to his peers, was murdered by Miami Beach Police a year ago to the day.

After chants and holding signs, the crowd formed four columns and marched silently through the small campus and into the Federal Building housing the U.S. Attorney’s office. They filled the lobby of the building and amid chants of “Hands up, don’t shoot,” and demanded to speak with U.S. Attorney Wilfredo Ferrer, who oversees the southern district of Florida. The group’s spokesperson presented a list of demands which included: Obama visit Ferguson; Jail the cops that killed Israel Hernandez and Mike Brown; Make Police wear body cameras, and for there to be an independent investigation of these teens murders.

“It is time for the federal government to reign in the Miami Beach Police Department, the Ferguson Police Department and other bigoted departments around the country with an established history of targeting and terrorizing communities of color," said Phillip Agnew of the Dream Defenders.

The group hoped to highlight the state violence Latino and Black communities face in America. They connected the Israel Hernandez case with Mike Brown’s case, as well as that of Eric Garner, Jordan Davis, Javon Neal, Trayvon Martin, Sean Bell and others.

After two hours of waiting, Wilfredo Ferrer failed to address the protesters. Police officers and U.S. Marshalls were then ordered to clear the lobby as the building was set to close for the night. Eight protesters, five women and three men, refused to move until they got an answer to their demands. They were arrested with their hands up and held on federal charges of disobeying a law enforcement officer and excessive noise. They were all released later that night and all vowed to keep fighting until justice was won for victims of police terror and the killer cops were jailed.

Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at [email protected]

ckaihatsu
21st August 2014, 01:15
ARREST DARREN WILSON NOW!

JUSTICE DELAYED IS JUSTICE DENIED!

A well-orchestrated and coordinated campaign to protect and immunize Darren Wilson, the police officer who murdered Michael Brown, is well underway. It has several facets:

· Drag out the legal procedures for determining whether Wilson should be charged with a crime;

· Portray Wilson as a competent cop with an excellent record and a good family man;

· Focus not on the violence of the state but the disorder on the streets;

· Hold Brown responsible for what the police claim was a scuffle with Wilson over the officer's gun, which preceded the officer's execution of Brown;

· Publicize widely Brown's alleged robbery of cigarillos at a convenience store shortly before the officer shot him in the street; issue to the media a videotape and a 19-page police account of the robbery in a transparent attempt to divert attention away from Wilson's crime;

· Withhold Wilson's written report of the confrontation, other than the alleged struggle near and in the police car;

· Withhold information about gun residue on Brown's clothes -- if any -- which are in possession of the police;

· Withhold evidence, if there is any, of Brown's DNA on the gun;

· Withhold comment on Wilson's whereabouts when he suddenly disappeared from view;

· Make clear that Wilson remained in good graces with the authorities by placing him on paid administrative leave; and the police have never announced whether he was asked to surrender his gun and badge;

· Not announcing the results of the St. Louis County autopsy of Brown, other than leaking that he had marijuana in his system (Washington Post, August 18) when we were told that a toxicology report would take weeks;

· Spur the organizing of a right-wing, racist movement in defense of Wilson.

The list above is certainly not exhaustive. But it suffices to make clear that the police, the politicians and the power structure are prepared to wage an all-out fight to prevent Wilson from being arrested and brought to justice.

What is the legal requirement for making an arrest at this point? Or, as Brown's mother, Lesley McSpadden, asked in the aftermath of the autopsy performed by Dr. Michael Baden, a former New York City medical examiner, what else do they need to arrest the killer of my son?

The answer to her question is that nothing more is needed. All that has to be shown to justify an arrest is that there is "probable cause" to believe that a crime has been committed and that the perpetrator is the one being arrested for committing the crime. The results of the Baden autopsy and the statements of eyewitnesses are more than enough to show probable cause in this case.

The Wall Street Journal article of August 19 on the slaying of Michael Brown states "Probe Likely to Take Weeks, Officials Say." NBC News quotes prosecutors as saying it will likely take months.

This will not fly. Justice delayed is justice denied! "NO JUSTICE, NO PEACE!" is the chant most widely heard on the streets.

Need for the Labor Movement, the Civil Rights Movement
and All Progressive Forces to Mobilize

We in the labor movement have a great stake in the outcome of this fight. The same is true of the civil rights movement and all progressive forces. This is a showdown between the racists and those committed to equal rights, human rights, dignity for people of color, and due process.

We cannot depend on politicians and authority figures to make right what is so shockingly wrong. President Barack Obama, Governor Jay Nixon of Missouri and Captain Ron Johnson of the State Highway Patrol are the three most-quoted figures in this conflict. All three have one thing in common: None call for the arrest now of Wilson. Each, instead, urges people in the streets to be calm, orderly, patient and let the investigations run their course. They would like nothing better than to have protesters abandon the streets. But the opposite is what's needed. The streets should be flooded in solidarity with Michael Brown, his family, and with the African American community in Ferguson and their allies, marching behind a banner that demands "Arrest Darren Wilson Now! Justice for Michael Brown!"

The labor movement and our community partners can make the difference. We cannot afford the kind of defeat experienced in the Trayvon Martin case. It's time now to organize a March on Ferguson and give meaning to the word SOLIDARITY. Let's urge the protesters in Ferguson to hang in there and -- in the words of the great labor song -- "Hold the Fort, For We Are Coming!"

Issued by the Labor Fightback Network. For more information, please call 973-944-8975 or email [email protected] or write Labor Fightback Network, P.O. Box 187, Flanders, NJ 07836 or visit our website at laborfightback.org. Facebook link : https://www.facebook.com/laborfightback

Donations to help fund the Labor Fightback Network based on its program of solidarity and labor-community unity are necessary for our work to continue and will be much appreciated. Please make checks payable to Labor Fightback Network and mail to the above P.O. Box or you can make a contribution online. Thanks!

ckaihatsu
23rd August 2014, 22:41
Mayor Rahm Emanuel speech disrupted at pro-Israel event

http://www.fightbacknews.org/sites/default/files/imagecache/article-lead-photo/Rasmea.jpg

By staff

Chicago, IL - 150 protesters confronted the Jewish United Fund of Metropolitan Chicago as it rallied in support of the murderous Israeli war on Gaza, Aug. 21. Palestinian flags flew alongside a big cardboard sign that read, “Occupation is a crime, From Ferguson to Palestine.”

The Students for Justice in Palestine organized a die-in on the sidewalk in front of the Hilton and Towers hotel. Meanwhile, a dozen activists with Jewish Voice for Peace, the Anti-War Committee, and others repeatedly disrupted the speeches by Mayor Rahm Emanuel and an Israeli Defense Forces soldier who had participated in the attacks on Gaza.

Hatem Abudayyeh of the Chicago Coalition for Justice in Palestine and the U.S. Palestinian Community Network reminded the crowd at the end of the protest of the victory scored in Oakland, California when Palestinians and their supporters, along with the members of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union stopped an Israeli ship from unloading at the docks. Kait McIntyre of the Anti-War Committee urged people to come to court Aug. 26 at 9:00 a.m., 555 W. Harrison, to support those arrested at the protest against Boeing Company in July.

Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at [email protected]

ckaihatsu
28th August 2014, 13:41
Tampa community fights police brutality, shows solidarity with Mike Brown

http://www.fightbacknews.org/sites/default/files/imagecache/article-lead-photo/tampa%20solidarity%20to%20mike%20brown.jpg

By Jared Hamil

Tampa, FL - On a rainy afternoon, Aug. 23, 70 people rallied in downtown here, demanding justice for Mike Brown of Ferguson, Missouri. Gathering at Lykes Gaslight Park, the people protested outside the Tampa Police Department and the U.S. Attorneys Office for the Middle District of Florida. Protesters showed solidarity with the people fighting back in Ferguson by demanding the jailing of killer cops in Tampa.

Alekos Zambrano of Tampa Dream Defenders said, "We are here today to demand justice. We demand the immediate arrest and prosecution of the officer that shot Mike Brown. The immediate arrest and prosecution of the officer that killed Javon Neal. The immediate arrest and prosecution of the officer that killed Arthur Greene. We believe that these demands are reasonable. We believe that these demands are just. We also demand that here in Tampa, the police wear forward facing cameras so we no longer have to take their word for it, when they tell us that our young sisters and brothers forced them to pull the trigger. And we demand the police records of arrest, detainment and questioning, not ending in conviction. This way we can prove that stop and frisk exist in Tampa, and that harassment and profiling exist in Tampa as standard practice. And in this way we can have a fighting chance at changing racist policies and demanding justice for our murdered children."

Tampa police gunned down Javon Neal, a 16-year-old African American with no criminal record on July 22. In another deadly incident, Arthur Green, a 63-year-old African American man, suffered a medical emergency due to diabetes. The diabetic episode caused him to swerve while driving and sideswipe two cars. Police pulled Green from his car and handcuffed him. While handcuffed Green stopped breathing and though EMTs revived him, he later died at the hospital.

In the rain, people chanted, "Hands up, don't shoot!" and "No justice, no peace, no killer police!" Catherine Lim, a local activist with Raices En Tampa said, "We will never see the end of racism unless all those who are oppressed are liberated. The enemy - whether it's racist police, the National Guard in Ferguson, or the U.S. military in my home country of the Philippines, they're counting on us to stay divided. While our struggles might not be the same, we need to remember the power of staying united. From Ferguson to Palestine, to the Philippines, and to Tampa, Florida, solidarity!"

From Lykes Gaslight Park, the protesters marched to Tampa Police headquarters. They threw open the doors and marched up to the front desk. They demanded to speak with top police administrators. The protesters kept on chanting, as more police entered the lobby. The police refused to meet with the protesters and kept saying there was nobody in the multiple-story building to meet with them. After the police refused to meet and hear their demands, protesters kept chanting. As more police came downstairs, the protesters regrouped outside of the building.

Tampa Dream Defenders and the community will fight again. Their current campaign is against police brutality in Tampa. They're demanding the jailing of local killer police, release of police records on arrests of local African-Americans, external investigation into TPD, and forward facing cameras placed on all local TPD officers.

Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at [email protected]

ckaihatsu
30th August 2014, 00:10
Salt Lake City: Justice for Dillon Taylor, Mike Brown, Danielle Willard

http://www.fightbacknews.org/sites/default/files/imagecache/article-lead-photo/JusticeforDillon%20%282%29.jpg

By staff

Salt Lake City, UT - More than 30 people marched through the streets here, Aug. 25, to demand justice for Dillon Taylor, Danielle Willard and Mike Brown. Protesters were outraged at the recent killing of Dillon Taylor, an unarmed man, at the hands of the Salt Lake City Police, as well as other killings by the police, such as Danielle Willard and Ferguson, Missouri’s Mike Brown. Gregory Lucero of the Revolutionary Students Union stated, “We have to stand against police brutality now, to demand that these killer cops get proper punishment and prevent this from happening ever again.” Protesters marched to several Utah landmarks, including the federal building, the state courthouse and the police department to make their voices heard. Speakers at each stop told of their stories about harassment and grief at the hands of Salt Lake City’s cops. At the police station, Dillon Taylor's aunt relayed a message of hope and support to the protesters, thanking them for their determination to fight police brutality. Fatima Badran, the organizer of the protest, also spoke to those in the march, saying, “This is how justice is won. By making our voices heard and standing up against police brutality, we can make a difference.” The march is one among many across the county this past week in a show of solidarity with protesters in Ferguson. The demands of the march included justice for the people of Ferguson and removing the National Guard. The crowd also called for harsh punishment for the officer who killed Utah’s Dillon Taylor. Christopher Manor, of the Freedom Road Socialist Organization (FRSO) stated, “These actions show people locally that the same systems of oppression that are being faced around the country are still present and problematic here and that we can fight them.”

Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at [email protected]

ckaihatsu
2nd September 2014, 01:57
Chicago students rally for Michael Brown on first day of school

http://www.fightbacknews.org/sites/default/files/imagecache/article-lead-photo/ChiMike.jpg

By Kait McIntyre

Chicago, IL - On, Aug. 25, 250 people gathered in the University of Illinois-Chicago (UIC) campus quad to commemorate Michael Brown. UIC was one the colleges across the U.S. to hold demonstrations and student walk-outs on the day of Brown's funeral. At UIC, speakers read a list of Black lives lost as a result of police brutality. The UIC action was called by the Black Student Union (BSU). The national call for protests said Aug. 25 should have been Mike Brown's first day of college had he not been the victim of a racist police murder.

Evan Taylor, outreach chair of the BSU, challenged the university to reaffirm its alleged commitment to diversity. Taylor explained that, while UIC claims to be one of the most diverse universities in the country, the Black student population, in addition to their graduation and retention rates, has been declining. And, although UIC is a research institution, little to no research has been done on this issue.

The demonstration ended with the chant that Brown's death has inspired, “Hands up; don't shoot!”

Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at [email protected]

Decolonize The Left
22nd September 2014, 07:23
^ ... and... banned.

ckaihatsu
1st October 2014, 00:30
Black and Brown solidarity rally condemns deportations, police brutality in Milwaukee

http://www.fightbacknews.org/sites/default/files/imagecache/article-lead-photo/BlackBrownSolidarity.jpg

By staff

Milwaukee, WI - More than 100 people gathered at a rally, Sept. 26 at the Milwaukee Area Technical College (MATC) to condemn deportations and police brutality. Timed to coincide with a talk by Michelle Alexander, the author of The New Jim Crow, the rally brought together two of the largest movements in Milwaukee. One is the movement against the mass deportations of undocumented immigrants, gathered around Youth Empowered in the Struggle (YES) and its parent organization Voces de la Frontera. The other important movement is against police brutality and mass incarceration, gathered around a number of community leaders and the families of police brutality victims. Speaking to the gathered crowd, State Representative-elect David Bowen condemned the deaths of young African-American men at the hands of police. Next from Voces de la Frontera, Executive Director Christine Neumann-Ortiz denounced “the private prison system that profits from filling its beds with undocumented immigrants.” Then Angela Walker, socialist candidate for county sheriff, explained, “The historic tactic of the ruling class is to divide oppressed peoples against one another. By holding rallies like this we are challenging oppression and exploitation.” Nate Hamilton, brother of Dontre Hamilton who was murdered by the Milwaukee Police Department, implored, “We need unity between Black and Brown communities. We call on all forces to rally this upcoming Tuesday at Red Arrow Park, the site of my brother’s murder, to mark the fifth month anniversary of his death.” MATC community college students led the rally. Youth Empowered in the Struggle at MATC founder Mario Gomez laid the foundation for the rally by looking at the common denominator between mass deportation and mass incarceration - class exploitation and national oppression. Gomez spoke directly, “Let’s be honest, they’re targeting the working class. They’re not targeting just anybody. They’re not out here targeting and deporting rich Europeans and Canadians. They’re targeting the working class, and as a proud member of that working class, at the largest working class college in Wisconsin, we’ve got to start fighting back!” The rally maintained a high level of enthusiasm throughout, and ended with YES leading the crowd in a Unity Clap, inspired by the farmworkers struggle of the 1960s and 1970s. All participants were invited to a lunch social afterward, hosting by the MATC student organizations. Co-sponsors of the rally included: Youth Empowered in the Struggle, Youth Empowered in the Struggle - MATC, MATC Black Student Union, MATC Latino Student Organization, Voces de la Frontera, and the African American Roundtable.

Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at [email protected]

ckaihatsu
6th October 2014, 22:41
DEMAND JUSTICE FOR MICHAEL BROWN -- DEMONSTRATE IN FERGUSON ON OCTOBER 10-13!

August 9, 2014 -- that is truly a day that will live in infamy. It is the day when a Ferguson police officer gunned down unarmed teenager Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri. His body was left unattended to for hours on the street in the hot summer sun, and neither family nor friends were even able to cover him.

Darren Wilson, the cop that did the killing, is still a free man, drawing full pay from the Ferguson police force. He has yet to tell his story publicly as to what happened, so the public is left in the dark. Meanwhile, in a highly provocative action, police in Ferguson began wearing "I Am Darren Wilson" bracelets until federal officials persuaded them to take them off.

In the past two months, the African American community in Ferguson, together with its many supporters, has been seething with anger. But along with that, activists have been organizing, and have called "A Weekend of Resistance" for October 10-13. Among the actions planned during those days is a march to the prosecutor's office, which is certainly needed in view of his record of shielding white police officers from prosecution, despite their having killed unarmed Black people.

From the beginning, the Labor Fightback Network, along with countless other organizations and individuals, has been demanding the immediate arrest of Wilson. He must be held accountable for what eyewitnesses on the scene -- whose version of the events has not been refuted publicly so far by Wilson or the police -- have described as his flagrantly unjustified shooting.

We strongly believe that the key factor in determining whether the Grand Jury will allow Wilson to walk is the magnitude of the movement demanding justice for Michael Brown. That is why the actions called for October 10-13-- and the ones that will surely follow -- are so critically important.

The key to the situation, in our judgment, is the extent to which the labor movement, particularly in the states contiguous to Missouri but also in other parts of the country, together with its allies and partners, will make the October actions as massive as possible. Surely the racist character of the Brown killing, together with the pattern of oppression, discrimiation, and victimization of the African American community in Ferguson, warrant such labor action now. Brown's mother is a member of the United Food and Commercial Workers union. The situation underscores the importance of the age-old labor principle that an injury to one is an injury to all.

The whole world is watching what is transpiring these days in Ferguson. If Wilson is allowed to walk free of the charges without so much as a trial, the hypocrisy of the U.S. "justice system" will be apparent to all who are not blinded by racist poison. But in addition, if labor, with the exception of progressive local unions here and there, is passive and fails to mobilize its ranks in solidarity with the Brown family and the working class in Ferguson, it will be subject to sharp criticism -- and legitimately so.

To our brothers and sisters in the labor movement, we urge you to pull out all the stops at this moment of crisis. Let us together do everything we can to win our unions to galvanizing a turnout so large as to help make the difference. Demanding Justice for Michael Brown without combining that demand with action will not win the day.

Join us in Ferguson on October 10-13!

Issued by the Labor Fightback Network. For more information, please call 973-944-8975 or email [email protected] or write Labor Fightback Network, P.O. Box 187, Flanders, NJ 07836 or visit our website at laborfightback.org. Facebook link : https://www.facebook.com/laborfightback

Donations to help fund the Labor Fightback Network based on its program of solidarity and labor-community unity are necessary for our work to continue and will be much appreciated. Please make checks payable to Labor Fightback Network and mail to the above P.O. Box or you can make a contribution online. Thanks!

ckaihatsu
17th October 2014, 06:19
Milwaukee needs a new sheriff: Interview with Angela Walker

By staff

Milwaukee WI - For the first time in Milwaukee's history, an African American woman is running as a socialist candidate for the office of Milwaukee county sheriff. The following is an interview that that Fight Back! conducted with Walker. For more information about her campaign, see Angela N Walker for Milwaukee County Sheriff (http://fightbacknews.us1.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=a29530af96a02fc55d345e735&id=54622efb4b&e=d323598fe4)

Fight Back! asked Angela Walker to describe her campaign. Here is her response:

I believe a socialist can play a big role in the Milwaukee County Sheriff's Office. The sheriff is primarily an administrative position, overseeing the operations of the office in the jail, House of Correction and county entities, including parks and transit. I believe there is a need for an approach that considers the needs of the people of Milwaukee County as well as the people who are employed in the sheriff's office. If we look at this office as part of the infrastructure of our county and its role as true public service rather than the customer-oriented view the current sheriff takes, we will get a different result.

I decided to run for sheriff’s office because I think a social justice approach needs to be taken to address the poverty and systemic racism that keeps people trapped in circumstances they did not create and do not want to live in. If we want a safer, healthier county, the needs of all residents must be addressed.

Capitalism impacts policing in a variety of different ways I think. One way is through residency requirements. The people policing the streets here do not want to live in the city in which they serve and that makes a difference. There is class conflict exacerbated by racism that results in officers who don't understand or care for the people who live in this city. The federal government's policy of giving military equipment to local law enforcement entities is a huge problem, because when you have the weapons, you need to find reasons to use them. The epically failed ‘War on Drugs’ and mass incarceration, the systematic defunding and closing of public schools, the industry that is prison construction and staffing - you are talking about the commodification of human beings and human suffering. It is disgusting.

I think that as we see more people being denied access to living-wage work, safe and healthy housing, good healthcare, robust transit and public schools, all the things that people are supposed to have in a functioning society, you will keep seeing the kind of violence on our streets that we are seeing now. Add to that the removal from communities of people who could be productive and present for their families through over-incarceration, you have instability. Social safety nets like food stamps and unemployment insurance are being cut past the bone and people are seriously in need and not being helped. Poverty is a direct cause of crime and that is not being addressed here now.

I am opposing the current sheriff because his approach is completely wrong for the issues this county is facing. This is not the time for political pandering to right-wing forces that have no interest in the well being of the inner city or the people affected by hurtful policies. This is what the current sheriff has done and continues to do. We who live in this county need elected officials who are fully aware of the impact of punitive and restrictive policies on marginalized communities. There has to be an awareness of the role systemic racism and class conflict play in keeping people from accessing the resources to live better lives. The current sheriff does not believe in alternatives to incarceration, working cooperatively with other county government and city government agencies, or with community groups that work for social justice. He blames the poor for their condition, and does not consider the structures in place that keep poor folks poor. There is no time for that kind of thinking here, not when so many are suffering. His "tough on crime" stance has not alleviated crime on our streets.

My primary plans for the sheriff's office include working with community groups to address ways to end mass incarceration in this county. Manpower is being wasted in locking up people for nonviolent marijuana offenses, and assisting in ICE raids that terrorize our communities. I'd be interested to see how deputies are being deployed and where they could better serve. I want to restore programming to the House of Correction and revamp policies so inmates have educational options and services available. I am interested in expanding programs like the Huber work program, so inmates who can be productive have that opportunity. I will do what I can to keep people from being removed from their homes by banks. There is too much blight in this city, and foreclosed homes do nothing to add to the community. I am very interested in creating a work environment for deputies and other staff that fosters open communication and clear objectives, as well as mutual respect and respect for the members of this community at large. I want to work with groups addressing human trafficking and help end it here.

As to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids, unless there is a specific warrant for a specific individual that has committed a specific crime; I have no intention of expending manpower to help terrorize members of this community. There is a county ordinance on the books that gives the sheriff's office latitude on this. I do not believe in the indefinite detention of people, especially not of folks who have not committed violent crimes.

Excessive and/or lethal force must be addressed by law enforcement. I want to explore nonlethal and more effective ways of dealing with conflicts in the jail and the House of Correction, and on the street when applicable. We cannot forget that public trust and accountability are essential.

I believe that advocating for living-wage work, fully funded and available educational opportunities, particularly for youth, and services that help families sustain themselves are necessary to reduce recidivism. People who have been incarcerated need strong communities with resources that will help them get back to work or school, and be productive where they are. I also want the voting rights of people who have been incarcerated restored to them immediately upon release. We need to be able to respect the humanity of those who have been locked up, and the presence of community support will help with this. I would be able to implement these policies by working with organizations and legislators to build them and put them in place.

I think the biggest challenges, from where I am standing, for people who are incarcerated right now are reintegration into the community, family restoration and finding living-wage work or educational opportunities. Many, if not most, people who are released from jail or prison are reentering the community with the burden of financial obligations to the county and state hanging over them. How are they supposed to address this when there are no structures in place to help them? And currently, there are very few. We can work on that.

If I am elected, I will be the first African-American woman socialist elected as Milwaukee County Sheriff. That is pretty historic, especially at a time when people are realizing that the two-party system this country uses is not working for them. There are a whole lot of folks looking to independents to make the changes they want to see, and I think that it is empowering. When people realize their own power, realize that they can stand up outside of this system, without money or corporate backing, and run candidates who stand for what they believe in, it is awesome. People who truly represent people whose issues have been ignored can make giant impacts across this country. I am excited about the prospects.

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