Tag: racial injustice
Will Arbery’s Killers Get Away With A Lynching?

Will Arbery’s Killers Get Away With A Lynching?

The video clip is a mere 36 seconds, but it is shocking, explicit, sickening. And because it has gone viral -- prompting national outrage -- two white men have finally been arrested and charged in the death of a black jogger in southeast Georgia in February.

That hardly means that the family of Ahmaud Arbery will get justice, that his killers will pay for their crime. Gregory McMichael, 64, and his son, Travis McMichael, 34, have been charged with murder and aggravated assault, but they must still be tried and convicted. The outcome is uncertain. The quest for a righteous outcome has staggered this far along only because of the emergence of that appalling few seconds of video.

Read NowShow less
In America, Justice For Some — Especially The Four-Legged

In America, Justice For Some — Especially The Four-Legged

Reprinted with permission from Roll Call.

From the current administration’s indifference to congressional requests for information on the Mueller report to its hardening policies restricting those seeking asylum from violent homelands, one would think Donald Trump and company cared little for justice. But the president did manage to speak out recently in support of one particular victim he felt was wronged.

In a signature tweet, he said: “The Kentuky Derby decision was not a good one.” (He has since corrected the spelling to “Kentucky.”) “It was a rough and tumble race on a wet and sloppy track, actually, a beautiful thing to watch. Only in these days of political correctness could such an overturn occur. The best horse did NOT win the Kentucky Derby — not even close!”

Yes, Donald Trump reacted in outrage, in defense of a horse.

It is possible to have sympathy for Maximum Security winning and then losing the biggest race in the sport while also wondering how and why the president of the United States, in times challenging for actual human beings, managed to find the energy to trot out bold support of an animal, blaming PC culture, which he pretty much blames for everything.

The Trump administration can always be judged by looking at those it defends and those it attacks.

You can see it in Trump’s coming to the rescue after Facebook and other social media platforms started to ban figures who spread hate speech, including one of his buddies, Infowars founder Alex Jones, the same Alex Jones who persecuted the parents of children murdered at Sandy Hook Elementary School with accusations that the tragedy was a hoax.

Trump responded to the ban by attacking social media companies, the press and Democrats (all favorite targets) and spending the weekend retweeting far-right extremists and, presumably, dismissing those on the receiving end of their lies and threats. As long as you support the president and the actions of his administration, he will return the favor.

In fact, he quite admires bullies, domestic and foreign, and saves special ire for those, like the late GOP Sen. John McCain or current Democratic Rep. John Lewis, who have sacrificed much in service to a cause. The report in The New York Times that he managed to lose more than $1 billion and avoid paying taxes, unlike the rest of us, from 1985 to 1994, shows he believes that hewing close to the rules — and the Constitution — is for other people.

It’s amusing to regularly hear those appalled at the political theater and policies that most harm the vulnerable repeat the noble words, “This is not who we are,” when actually, this is exactly who we are, and have always been.

We are a country that has somehow squared liberty and justice for all with buying and selling people and slaughtering others. Surprised that Trump’s bizarre foray into officiating a horse race barely caused a ripple while more pressing matters await? We have always been a country that compartmentalizes, full of folks who may weep over the plight of animals and jump at the chance to pet and pamper them and treat them as almost human but turn a blind eye to the suffering of other actual humans, especially if they happen to be black or brown, or Muslim or Jewish or gay or somehow “different.”

It’s heartening and surprising that even in the worst of times, a few individuals can see the injustice and make a difference. That is how we have moved forward as a country. But are these voices being drowned out by the noise of those willing to compromise principle for a price?

Many of the president’s supporters follow the leader, as seen in the actions of this administration’s most fervent boosters, white evangelicals, who say little about the meek, the merciful and the peacemakers of the biblical beatitudes when gaining coveted conservative judges and limits to abortion and gay rights. Does a pro-life stance carry over to after a child is born, to be met with cuts in Medicaid and food assistance? Why does Franklin Graham tell South Bend mayor and Democratic presidential hopeful Pete Buttigieg to repent for the “sin” of being gay, also known as being his authentic self, while ignoring the transgressions of the president Graham has never criticized?

Americans are justifiably frustrated at the country’s broken immigration system and the inability of politicians from both parties to pass the comprehensive reform all profess to want. But parents and children have been separated at the southern border by our government in our name, with many still awaiting the promised reunification our leaders never really planned for. That can only happen if the enforcers believe some people don’t love and bond with their children as others do.

The new team at the Department of Homeland Security — with hardliner Mark Morgan, who backs tougher border security measures, newly named as the head of Immigration and Customs Enforcement — does not inspire hope of a humane solution, especially now that a federal court has ruled migrants can be sent back to Mexico, despite dangers they may face there.

Republicans in Congress prefer not to reflect on their very different reactions to alleged wrongdoing by Democratic presidents past, when invoking executive privilege — as Trump has done to shield portions of the Mueller report — or merely issuing executive actions would have provoked howls of overreach. Watergate-era Republicans who eventually called out Nixon for his crimes, including Justice Department officials who resigned rather than carry out unethical orders, would not recognize today’s GOP leaders.

With this president and his party, it is only about winning and losing no matter who or what gets hurt along the way, which, come to think of it, makes the president’s horse-racing tweet just about perfect.

Mary C. Curtis is a columnist for Roll Call. An award-winning journalist, she has worked at The New York TimesThe Baltimore SunThe Charlotte Observer, and as national correspondent for Politics Daily. Follow her on Twitter @mcurtisnc3.

IMAGE: The 145th Running of the Kentucky Derby.
Personal Mantras And Racial Realities

Personal Mantras And Racial Realities

We’re in the last week of the semester here at Kent State, when graduating seniors have reached the zombie stage of stress, and everyone else, it seems, is somewhere else, even when they’re sitting right in front of you.

As a teacher, it can be a challenge in these last days to find that sweet spot between exhaustion and panic. Fortunately, I spent last Sunday evening interviewing Stacey Abrams in front of a sold-out crowd of 750 supporters for an event sponsored by the Toledo Public Library Foundation. Ten minutes with her, and your mind breaks open and starts buzzing.

Abrams is the former minority leader of Georgia’s house of representatives who became the first black woman in the United States to be nominated by a major party to run for governor. Had she won her race in Georgia, she would have been this country’s first black female governor. It speaks to the magnitude of Abrams’ personality and message that she now commands center stage of the Democratic Party despite not becoming governor, after a race that will forever be known for its voter suppression.

Abrams is currently on tour promoting her book, Minority Leader: How to Lead from the Outside and Make Real Change. In it, she writes that each of us should have a personal mantra. When I asked for hers, she answered with one word: “Fight.”

How the mind works. The following morning, I began ethics class by sharing Abrams’ question with my students: What is your personal mantra? I gave them a few minutes to think on it, and then we went around the room so that each of them could share their mantra, and explain why it mattered.

Fifteen students, most of them white, shared personal philosophies of varying degrees of endurance and optimism. Then it was Isaiah Nearor’s turn. I have his permission to share this story.

At 26, he is the oldest in the class and the only military veteran. He is also black. He’s one of my more reticent students, a hard worker with an easy smile and a preference for listening. When Isaiah does talk, I’ve noticed that students tend to pay attention.

I asked for his mantra, and he smiled softly before answering: “I do not expect the media to create positive black male images.”

He was quoting the late activist Huey Newton, co-founder of the Black Panthers, who specified “white media.”

“Why is that your mantra?” I asked.

Isaiah shrugged. “When I die, no matter how much I have accomplished, my obituary will talk about my mistakes.”

The room fell silent. I stood and looked at him for a moment, searching for the words.

“I don’t want that to be true,” I finally said.

He nodded. “I know, but you know that it is.”

In my experience, you cannot teach journalism without discussing media coverage about issues of race. If you don’t bring it up, your students will, armed with multiple examples of unfair coverage.

Early coverage on Tamir’s death focused on past criminal records of the boy’s parents, which had nothing to do with his borrowing a friend’s air gun and hiding it from his mother, who forbade toy guns. He was playing with it in a city park when the police cruiser swept up. Seconds later, Tamir Rice was on the ground.

He was just a boy, but I will never forget how some of the coverage made it sound like he was growing in the grave, becoming taller and heavier, and more menacing.

Every semester, we talk about Tamir Rice.

After Isaiah explained the significance of his mantra, he talked about Shane Piche, another 26-year-old man, in upstate New York. Piche was a school bus driver who pleaded guilty earlier this year to third-degree rape of a 14-year-old girl. He was in the news again this week because of his sentencing.

Instead, Piche was sentenced to 10 years of probation and, as The New York Times reported, “assigned the lowest-level status on New York’s sex offender registry.” That means families won’t be alerted if Piche moves into their neighborhood.

I can’t stop thinking about Isaiah. The look on his face as he talked about that white man’s freedom. The certainty in his voice as he described how he, a black man in America, will be remembered one day.

Connie Schultz is a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist and professional in residence at Kent State University’s school of journalism. She is the author of two books, including “…and His Lovely Wife,” which chronicled the successful race of her husband, Sherrod Brown, for the U.S. Senate. To find out more about Connie Schultz (con.schultz@yahoo.com) and read her past columns, please visit the Creators Syndicate webpage at www.creators.com.

IMAGE: Former Georgia House of Representatives Minority Leader Stacey Abrams.

#EndorseThis: Colbert Schools Trump (And Mnuchin) On Why Athletes Are Kneeling

#EndorseThis: Colbert Schools Trump (And Mnuchin) On Why Athletes Are Kneeling

Once more Stephen Colbert steps up to the challenge of educating President Trump about an issue he has clearly misunderstood.

As Colbert explains, Trump is all wrong when he tells credulous supporters that football players are kneeling during the national anthem in protest against the flag. “Those players are protesting against racial injustice, they’re not protesting the American flag. Saying that kneeling is a protest against the flag is like saying Gandhi’s hunger strikes were a protest against snacking.”

The Late Show host also offers a few pro tips for Trump on respecting the American flag (hint: don’t hug it!). He does a killer impression of weirdo Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin. And he offers a clue as to why NASCAR owners probably don’t have to worry about drivers protesting police misconduct.