Thursday, August 21, 2014

Ass Talk: AP pushes "cop-on-black killings" propaganda

8/21/2014


Many police killings, but only Ferguson explodes

Updated 11:54 pm, Wednesday, August 20, 2014
  • FILE - In this Aug. 13, 2014 file photo, a man watches as police walk through a cloud of smoke during a clash with protesters in Ferguson, Mo. The response to Brown’s death turned violent because of a convergence of factors, observers said. Photo: Jeff Roberson, AP / AP
    FILE - In this Aug. 13, 2014 file photo, a man watches as police walk through a cloud of smoke during a clash with protesters in Ferguson, Mo. The response to Brown’s death turned violent because of a convergence of factors, observers said. Photo: Jeff Roberson, AP









There was little violence after the acquittal of Trayvon Martin's killer last July. Peace prevailed when at least four other unarmed black males were killed by police in recent months, from New York to Los Angeles.
Then Michael Brown was gunned down in Ferguson, Missouri. And waves of rioting have convulsed the St. Louis suburb for more than 10 days.
Why Ferguson?
The response to Brown's death turned violent because of a convergence of factors, observers say, including the stark nature of the killing in broad daylight, an aggressive police response to protests, a mainly black city being run by white officials — and the cumulative effect of killing after killing after killing of unarmed black males.
"People are tired of it," said Kevin Powell, president of the BK Nation advocacy group, who organized peaceful protests after the Florida neighborhood watchmanGeorge Zimmerman was found innocent in Martin's killing.
Powell is headed to Ferguson as an organizer and peace activist after the killing of Brown, the unarmed black 18-year-old who was shot by white police officerDarren Wilson. Battles have raged in Ferguson almost nightly, with stores looted, police firing tear gas and rubber bullets, people tossing Molotov cocktails, and dozens of arrests.
When police first confronted protesters with armored military vehicles, assault weapons and dogs, it reminded Powell of images from the 1960s civil rights movement.
"Just a reckless disregard for the safety of the community they're supposed to be protecting," he said. "They just don't care, it feels like they don't care at all."
"Zimmerman was one person. This is an entire police force. It feels like the whole system doesn't care."
It is not all that unusual for an unarmed black person to be killed by police. There are no reliable national statistics on people of any race killed by police, but anecdotal reports count significant numbers. One study, relying on Internet searches of media reports, found 18 unarmed black people killed in the first three months of 2012, including Trayvon Martin.
More recently:
On July 17, Eric Garner was killed by a chokehold after an arrest for illegally selling loose cigarettes in New York City.
On August 5, John Crawford III was killed while handling a toy gun in a Walmartoutside Dayton, Ohio.
On August 11, Ezell Ford, a mentally disabled man, was shot dead in South Los Angeles.
The circumstances of each case are different, of course, and investigations continue.
Brown was killed Aug. 9. The riots erupted Aug. 10, when more than two dozen businesses were damaged and looted. Some of the rioters, according to media reports, are hardened, violent young men who speak of seeking "justice," which is often confused with revenge. Some are coming to Ferguson from out of town, whether to show solidarity or fight the crackdown, or possibly drawn to the media spectacle. Police have reported arrests of people from New York and California.
"It feels like a turning point," said Blair L.M. Kelley, a history professor at North Carolina State University. "I think because so many black men die at the hands of the state."
Kelley and Powell both said that the nature of Brown's killing fueled anger: He was shot six times in broad daylight, in the middle of the street, in his own housing complex. Then his body lay in the street for hours, uncovered, in a pool of blood, before being taken away.
"There were more than 100 people there looking at his body," Kelley said.
She mentioned the killings of Jonathan Ferrell, an unarmed black man who was shot by a white officer after crashing his car in Charlotte last September, and the black woman, Renisha McBride, who crashed her car in Detroit, went to a nearby house for help, and was shot dead through the front door.
"Those happened at nighttime, away from the public gaze," Kelley said. "To leave Brown in the street like that, it was a disregard they could feel and taste and see."
The last riots over an unarmed black death were in 2009, when Oscar Grant was killed by a white officer while lying face down on a train platform in Oakland, California. Hundreds of businesses were damaged, cars were overturned and smashed, and more than 100 people were arrested.
Similar circumstances led to unrest in Cincinnati in 2001 and in St. Petersburg, Florida, in 1996. One of America's worst race riots ever was in 1992 in Los Angeles, after the acquittal of four white officers who beat the black motoristRodney King. And people in many cities rioted against racial oppression during the turmoil of the 1960s.
"Riots erupt when all other options have been closed," said Cathy Schneider, anAmerican University professor who studies race riots. "When people really feel vulnerable in the face of police violence and local authorities are totally impervious to community demands."
Ferguson is 67 percent black; the mayor, city council, school board and police force are almost all white.
Schneider said that the riots of the 1960s gave rise to individuals and groups who could effectively negotiate tensions with police. That infrastructure may not exist in Ferguson, where the population has rapidly changed due to white flight, she said. Local officials promised Tuesday to make changes and be more receptive to community concerns.
Powell sees Michael Brown as a bookend of sorts to Trayvon Martin.
"Many of us who were involved in Trayvon thought we could get through this summer without another incident," he said. "Sad to say, this relit another fire."
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